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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Life of Lord Byron, Vol. IV, by Thomas Moore
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Life of Lord Byron, Vol. IV
+ With His Letters and Journals
+
+Author: Thomas Moore
+
+Release Date: August 19, 2005 [EBook #16549]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LIFE OF LORD BYRON, VOL. IV ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Taavi Kalju and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+LIFE
+
+OF
+
+LORD BYRON:
+
+WITH HIS LETTERS AND JOURNALS.
+
+BY THOMAS MOORE, ESQ.
+
+IN SIX VOLUMES.--VOL. IV.
+
+NEW EDITION.
+
+
+LONDON: JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET. 1854.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS OF VOL. IV
+
+
+LETTERS AND JOURNALS OF LORD BYRON, WITH NOTICES OF HIS LIFE, from
+April, 1817, to October, 1820.
+
+
+
+
+NOTICES
+
+OF THE
+
+LIFE OF LORD BYRON.
+
+
+
+
+LETTER 272. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, April 9. 1817.
+
+ "Your letters of the 18th and 20th are arrived. In my own I have
+ given you the rise, progress, decline, and fall, of my recent
+ malady. It is gone to the devil: I won't pay him so bad a
+ compliment as to say it came from him;--he is too much of a
+ gentleman. It was nothing but a slow fever, which quickened its
+ pace towards the end of its journey. I had been bored with it some
+ weeks--with nocturnal burnings and morning perspirations; but I am
+ quite well again, which I attribute to having had neither medicine
+ nor doctor thereof.
+
+ "In a few days I set off for Rome: such is my purpose. I shall
+ change it very often before Monday next, but do you continue to
+ direct and address to _Venice_, as heretofore. If I go, letters
+ will be forwarded: I say '_if_,' because I never know what I shall
+ do till it is done; and as I mean most firmly to set out for Rome,
+ it is not unlikely I may find myself at St. Petersburg.
+
+ "You tell me to 'take care of myself;'--faith, and I will. I won't
+ be posthumous yet, if I can help it. Notwithstanding, only think
+ what a 'Life and Adventures,' while I am in full scandal, would be
+ worth, together with the 'membra' of my writing-desk, the sixteen
+ beginnings of poems never to be finished! Do you think I would not
+ have shot myself last year, had I not luckily recollected that Mrs.
+ C * * and Lady N * *, and all the old women in England would have
+ been delighted;--besides the agreeable 'Lunacy,' of the 'Crowner's
+ Quest,' and the regrets of two or three or half a dozen? Be assured
+ that I _would live_ for two reasons, or more;--there are one or two
+ people whom I have to put out of the world, and as many into it,
+ before I can 'depart in peace;' if I do so before, I have not
+ fulfilled my mission. Besides, when I turn thirty, I will turn
+ devout; I feel a great vocation that way in Catholic churches, and
+ when I hear the organ.
+
+ "So * * is writing again! Is there no Bedlam in Scotland? nor
+ thumb-screw? nor gag? nor hand-cuff? I went upon my knees to him
+ almost, some years ago, to prevent him from publishing a political
+ pamphlet, which would have given him a livelier idea of 'Habeas
+ Corpus' than the world will derive from his present production upon
+ that suspended subject, which will doubtless be followed by the
+ suspension of other of his Majesty's subjects.
+
+ "I condole with Drury Lane and rejoice with * *,--that is, in a
+ modest way,--on the tragical end of the new tragedy.
+
+ "You and Leigh Hunt have quarrelled then, it seems? I introduce him
+ and his poem to you, in the hope that (malgré politics) the union
+ would be beneficial to both, and the end is eternal enmity; and yet
+ I did this with the best intentions: I introduce * * *, and * * *
+ runs away with your money: my friend Hobhouse quarrels, too, with
+ the Quarterly: and (except the last) I am the innocent Istmhus
+ (damn the word! I can't spell it, though I have crossed that of
+ Corinth a dozen times) of these enmities.
+
+ "I will tell you something about Chillon.--A Mr. _De Luc_, ninety
+ years old, a Swiss, had it read to him, and is pleased with it,--so
+ my sister writes. He said that he was _with Rousseau_ at _Chillon_,
+ and that the description is perfectly correct. But this is not all:
+ I recollected something of the name, and find the following passage
+ in 'The Confessions,' vol. iii. page 247. liv. viii.:--
+
+ "'De tous ces amusemens celui qui me plût davantage fut une
+ promenade autour du Lac, que je fis en bateau avec _De Luc_ père,
+ sa bru, ses _deux fils_, et ma Therése. Nous mimes sept jours à
+ cette tournée par le plus beau temps du monde. J'en gardai le vif
+ souvenir des sites qui m'avoient frappé à l'autre extrémité du Lac,
+ et dont je fis la description, quelques années après, dans la
+ Nouvelle Heloise'
+
+ "This nonagenarian, De Luc, must be one of the 'deux fils.' He is
+ in England--infirm, but still in faculty. It is odd that he should
+ have lived so long, and not wanting in oddness that he should have
+ made this voyage with Jean Jacques, and afterwards, at such an
+ interval, read a poem by an Englishman (who had made precisely the
+ same circumnavigation) upon the same scenery.
+
+ "As for 'Manfred,' it is of no use sending _proofs_; nothing of
+ that kind comes. I sent the whole at different times. The two first
+ Acts are the best; the third so so; but I was blown with the first
+ and second heats. You must call it 'a Poem,' for it is _no Drama_,
+ and I do not choose to have it called by so * * a name--a 'Poem in
+ dialogue,' or--Pantomime, if you will; any thing but a green-room
+ synonyme; and this is your motto--
+
+ "'There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,
+ Than are dreamt of in your philosophy.'
+
+ "Yours ever, &c.
+
+ "My love and thanks to Mr. Gifford."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 273. TO MR. MOORE.
+
+ "Venice, April 11. 1817.
+
+ "I shall continue to write to you while the fit is on me, by way of
+ penance upon you for your former complaints of long silence. I dare
+ say you would blush, if you could, for not answering. Next week I
+ set out for Rome. Having seen Constantinople, I should like to look
+ at t'other fellow. Besides, I want to see the Pope, and shall take
+ care to tell him that I vote for the Catholics and no Veto.
+
+ "I sha'n't go to Naples. It is but the second best sea-view, and I
+ have seen the first and third, viz. Constantinople and Lisbon, (by
+ the way, the last is but a river-view; however, they reckon it
+ after Stamboul and Naples, and before Genoa,) and Vesuvius is
+ silent, and I have passed by Ætna. So I shall e'en return to Venice
+ in July; and if you write, I pray you to address to Venice, which
+ is my head, or rather my _heart_, quarters.
+
+ "My late physician, Dr. Polidori, is here on his way to England,
+ with the present Lord G * * and the widow of the late earl. Dr.
+ Polidori has, just now, no more patients, because his patients are
+ no more. He had lately three, who are now all dead--one embalmed.
+ Horner and a child of Thomas Hope's are interred at Pisa and Rome.
+ Lord G * * died of an inflammation of the bowels: so they took them
+ out, and sent them (on account of their discrepancies), separately
+ from the carcass, to England. Conceive a man going one way, and his
+ intestines another, and his immortal soul a third!--was there ever
+ such a distribution? One certainly has a soul; but how it came to
+ allow itself to be enclosed in a body is more than I can imagine. I
+ only know if once mine gets out, I'll have a bit of a tussle before
+ I let it get in again to that or any other.
+
+ "And so poor dear Mr. Maturin's second tragedy has been neglected
+ by the discerning public! * * will be d----d glad of this, and
+ d----d without being glad, if ever his own plays come upon 'any
+ stage.'
+
+ "I wrote to Rogers the other day, with a message for you. I hope
+ that he flourishes. He is the Tithonus of poetry--immortal
+ already. You and I must wait for it.
+
+ "I hear nothing--know nothing. You may easily suppose that the
+ English don't seek me, and I avoid them. To be sure, there are but
+ few or none here, save passengers. Florence and Naples are their
+ Margate and Ramsgate, and much the same sort of company too, by all
+ accounts, which hurts us among the Italians.
+
+ "I want to hear of Lalla Rookh--are you out? Death and fiends! why
+ don't you tell me where you are, what you are, and how you are? I
+ shall go to Bologna by Ferrara, instead of Mantua: because I would
+ rather see the cell where they caged Tasso, and where he became mad
+ and * *, than his own MSS. at Modena, or the Mantuan birthplace of
+ that harmonious plagiary and miserable flatterer, whose cursed
+ hexameters were drilled into me at Harrow. I saw Verona and Vicenza
+ on my way here--Padua too.
+
+ "I go alone,--but alone, because I mean to return here. I only want
+ to see Rome. I have not the least curiosity about Florence, though
+ I must see it for the sake of the Venus, &c. &c.; and I wish also
+ to see the Fall of Terni. I think to return to Venice by Ravenna
+ and Rimini, of both of which I mean to take notes for Leigh Hunt,
+ who will be glad to hear of the scenery of his Poem. There was a
+ devil of a review of him in the Quarterly, a year ago, which he
+ answered. All answers are imprudent: but, to be sure, poetical
+ flesh and blood must have the last word--that's certain. I
+ thought, and think, very highly of his Poem; but I warned him of
+ the row his favourite antique phraseology would bring him into.
+
+ "You have taken a house at Hornsey: I had much rather you had taken
+ one in the Apennines. If you think of coming out for a summer, or
+ so, tell me, that I may be upon the hover for you.
+
+ "Ever," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 274. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, April 14. 1817.
+
+ "By the favour of Dr. Polidori, who is here on his way to England
+ with the present Lord G * *, (the late earl having gone to England
+ by another road, accompanied by his bowels in a separate coffer,) I
+ remit to you, to deliver to Mrs. Leigh, _two miniatures_;
+ previously you will have the goodness to desire Mr. Love (as a
+ peace-offering between him and me) to set them in plain gold, with
+ my arms complete, and 'Painted by Prepiani--Venice, 1817,' on the
+ back. I wish also that you would desire Holmes to make a copy of
+ _each_--that is, both--for myself, and that you will retain the
+ said copies till my return. One was done while I was very unwell;
+ the other in my health, which may account for their dissimilitude.
+ I trust that they will reach their destination in safety.
+
+ "I recommend the Doctor to your good offices with your government
+ friends; and if you can be of any use to him in a literary point of
+ view, pray be so.
+
+ "To-day, or rather yesterday, for it is past midnight, I have been
+ up to the battlements of the highest tower in Venice, and seen it
+ and its view, in all the glory of a clear Italian sky. I also went
+ over the Manfrini Palace, famous for its pictures. Amongst them,
+ there is a portrait of _Ariosto_ by _Titian_, surpassing all my
+ anticipation of the power of painting or human expression: it is
+ the poetry of portrait, and the portrait of poetry. There was also
+ one of some learned lady, centuries old, whose name I forget, but
+ whose features must always be remembered. I never saw greater
+ beauty, or sweetness, or wisdom:--it is the kind of face to go mad
+ for, because it cannot walk out of its frame. There is also a
+ famous dead Christ and live Apostles, for which Buonaparte offered
+ in vain five thousand louis; and of which, though it is a capo
+ d'opera of Titian, as I am no connoisseur, I say little, and
+ thought less, except of one figure in it. There are ten thousand
+ others, and some very fine Giorgiones amongst them, &c. &c. There
+ is an original Laura and Petrarch, very hideous both. Petrarch has
+ not only the dress, but the features and air of an old woman, and
+ Laura looks by no means like a young one, or a pretty one. What
+ struck me most in the general collection was the extreme
+ resemblance of the style of the female faces in the mass of
+ pictures, so many centuries or generations old, to those you see
+ and meet every day among the existing Italians. The queen of Cyprus
+ and Giorgione's wife, particularly the latter, are Venetians as it
+ were of yesterday; the same eyes and expression, and, to my mind,
+ there is none finer.
+
+ "You must recollect, however, that I know nothing of painting; and
+ that I detest it, unless it reminds me of something I have seen, or
+ think it possible to see, for which reason I spit upon and abhor
+ all the Saints and subjects of one half the impostures I see in the
+ churches and palaces; and when in Flanders, I never was so
+ disgusted in my life, as with Rubens and his eternal wives and
+ infernal glare of colours, as they appeared to me; and in Spain I
+ did not think much of Murillo and Velasquez. Depend upon it, of all
+ the arts, it is the most artificial and unnatural, and that by
+ which the nonsense of mankind is most imposed upon. I never yet saw
+ the picture or the statue which came a league within my conception
+ or expectation; but I have seen many mountains, and seas, and
+ rivers, and views, and two or three women, who went as far beyond
+ it,--besides some horses; and a lion (at Veli Pacha's) in the
+ Morea; and a tiger at supper in Exeter Change.
+
+ "When you write, continue to address to me at _Venice_. Where do
+ you suppose the books you sent to me are? At _Turin_! This comes of
+ '_the Foreign Office_' which is foreign enough, God knows, for any
+ good it can be of to me, or any one else, and be d----d to it, to
+ its last clerk and first charlatan, Castlereagh.
+
+ "This makes my hundredth letter at least.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, April 14. 1817.
+
+ "The present proofs (of the whole) begin only at the 17th page; but
+ as I had corrected and sent back the first Act, it does not
+ signify.
+
+ "The third Act is certainly d----d bad, and, like the Archbishop of
+ Grenada's homily (which savoured of the palsy), has the dregs of my
+ fever, during which it was written. It must on _no account_ be
+ published in its present state. I will try and reform it, or
+ rewrite it altogether; but the impulse is gone, and I have no
+ chance of making any thing out of it. I would not have it published
+ as it is on any account. The speech of Manfred to the Sun is the
+ only part of this act I thought good myself; the rest is certainly
+ as bad as bad can be, and I wonder what the devil possessed me.
+
+ "I am very glad indeed that you sent me Mr. Gifford's opinion
+ without _deduction_. Do you suppose me such a booby as not to be
+ very much obliged to him? or that in fact I was not, and am not,
+ convinced and convicted in my conscience of this same overt act of
+ nonsense?
+
+ "I shall try at it again: in the mean time, lay it upon the shelf
+ (the whole Drama, I mean): but pray correct your copies of the
+ first and second Acts from the original MS.
+
+ "I am not coming to England; but going to Rome in a few days. I
+ return to Venice in _June_; so, pray, address all letters, &c. to
+ me _here_, as usual, that is, to _Venice_. Dr. Polidori this day
+ left this city with Lord G * * for England. He is charged with
+ some books to your care (from me), and two miniatures also to the
+ same address, _both_ for my sister.
+
+ "Recollect not to publish, upon pain of I know not what, until I
+ have tried again at the third Act. I am not sure that I _shall_
+ try, and still less that I shall succeed, if I do; but I am very
+ sure, that (as it is) it is unfit for publication or perusal; and
+ unless I can make it out to my own satisfaction, I won't have any
+ part published.
+
+ "I write in haste, and after having lately written very often.
+ Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 276. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Foligno, April 26. 1817.
+
+ "I wrote to you the other day from Florence, inclosing a MS.
+ entitled 'The Lament of Tasso.' It was written in consequence of my
+ having been lately at Ferrara. In the last section of this MS. _but
+ one_ (that is, the penultimate), I think that I have omitted a line
+ in the copy sent to you from Florence, viz. after the line--
+
+ "And woo compassion to a blighted name,
+
+ insert,
+
+ "Sealing the sentence which my foes proclaim.
+
+ The _context_ will show you _the sense_, which is not clear in this
+ quotation. _Remember, I write this in the supposition that you have
+ received my Florentine packet._
+
+ "At Florence I remained but a day, having a hurry for Rome, to
+ which I am thus far advanced. However, I went to the two galleries,
+ from which one returns drunk with beauty. The Venus is more for
+ admiration than love; but there are sculpture and painting, which
+ for the first time at all gave me an idea of what people mean by
+ their _cant_, and what Mr. Braham calls 'entusimusy' (_i.e._
+ enthusiasm) about those two most artificial of the arts. What
+ struck me most were, the mistress of Raphael, a portrait; the
+ mistress of Titian, a portrait; a Venus of Titian in the Medici
+ gallery--_the_ Venus; Canova's Venus also in the other gallery:
+ Titian's mistress is also in the other gallery (that is, in the
+ Pitti Palace gallery): the Parcæ of Michael Angelo, a picture: and
+ the Antinous, the Alexander, and one or two not very decent groups
+ in marble; the Genius of Death, a sleeping figure, &c. &c.
+
+ "I also went to the Medici chapel--fine frippery in great slabs of
+ various expensive stones, to commemorate fifty rotten and forgotten
+ carcasses. It is unfinished, and will remain so.
+
+ "The church of 'Santa Croce' contains much illustrious nothing. The
+ tombs of Machiavelli, Michael Angelo, Galileo Galilei, and Alfieri,
+ make it the Westminster Abbey of Italy. I did not admire any of
+ these tombs--beyond their contents. That of Alfieri is heavy, and
+ all of them seem to me overloaded. What is necessary but a bust and
+ name? and perhaps a date? the last for the unchronological, of whom
+ I am one. But all your allegory and eulogy is infernal, and worse
+ than the long wigs of English numskulls upon Roman bodies in the
+ statuary of the reigns of Charles II., William, and Anne.
+
+ "When you write, write to _Venice_, as usual; I mean to return
+ there in a fortnight. I shall not be in England for a long time.
+ This afternoon I met Lord and Lady Jersey, and saw them for some
+ time: all well; children grown and healthy; she very pretty, but
+ sunburnt; he very sick of travelling; bound for Paris. There are
+ not many English on the move, and those who are, mostly homewards.
+ I shall not return till business makes me, being much better where
+ I am in health, &c. &c.
+
+ "For the sake of my personal comfort, I pray you send me
+ immediately _to Venice_--_mind, Venice_--viz. _Waites'
+ tooth-powder_, _red_, a quantity; _calcined magnesia_, of the best
+ quality, a quantity; and all this by safe, sure, and speedy means;
+ and, by the Lord! do it.
+
+ "I have done nothing at Manfred's third Act. You must wait; I'll
+ have at it in a week or two, or so. Yours ever," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 277. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Rome, May 5. 1817.
+
+ "By this post, (or next at farthest) I send you in two _other_
+ covers, the new third Act of 'Manfred.' I have re-written the
+ greater part, and returned what is not altered in the _proof_ you
+ sent me. The Abbot is become a good man, and the Spirits are
+ brought in at the death. You will find I think, some good poetry
+ in this new act, here and there; and if so, print it, without
+ sending me farther proofs, _under Mr. Gifford's correction_, if he
+ will have the goodness to overlook it. Address all answers to
+ Venice, as usual; I mean to return there in ten days.
+
+ "'The Lament of Tasso,' which I sent from Florence, has, I trust,
+ arrived: I look upon it as a 'these be good rhymes,' as Pope's papa
+ said to him when he was a boy. For the two--it and the Drama--you
+ will disburse to me (_via_ Kinnaird) _six_ hundred guineas. You
+ will perhaps be surprised that I set the same price upon this as
+ upon the Drama; but, besides that I look upon it as _good_, I won't
+ take less than three hundred guineas for any thing. The two
+ together will make you a larger publication than the 'Siege' and
+ 'Parisina;' so you may think yourself let off very easy: that is to
+ say, if these poems are good for any thing, which I hope and
+ believe.
+
+ "I have been some days in Rome the Wonderful. I am seeing sights,
+ and have done nothing else, except the new third Act for you. I
+ have this morning seen a live pope and a dead cardinal: Pius VII.
+ has been burying Cardinal Bracchi, whose body I saw in state at the
+ Chiesa Nuova. Rome has delighted me beyond every thing, since
+ Athens and Constantinople. But I shall not remain long this visit.
+ Address to Venice.
+
+ "Ever, &c.
+
+ "P.S. I have got my saddle-horses here, and have ridden, and am
+ riding, all about the country."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From the foregoing letters to Mr. Murray, we may collect some curious
+particulars respecting one of the most original and sublime of the noble
+poet's productions, the Drama of Manfred. His failure (and to an extent
+of which the reader shall be enabled presently to judge), in the
+completion of a design which he had, through two Acts, so magnificently
+carried on,--the impatience with which, though conscious of this
+failure, he as usual hurried to the press, without deigning to woo, or
+wait for, a happier moment of inspiration,--his frank docility in, at
+once, surrendering up his third Act to reprobation, without urging one
+parental word in its behalf,--the doubt he evidently felt, whether, from
+his habit of striking off these creations at a heat, he should be able
+to rekindle his imagination on the subject,--and then, lastly, the
+complete success with which, when his mind _did_ make the spring, he at
+once cleared the whole space by which he before fell short of
+perfection,--all these circumstances, connected with the production of
+this grand poem, lay open to us features, both of his disposition and
+genius, in the highest degree interesting, and such as there is a
+pleasure, second only to that of perusing the poem itself, in
+contemplating.
+
+As a literary curiosity, and, still more, as a lesson to genius, never
+to rest satisfied with imperfection or mediocrity, but to labour on till
+even failures are converted into triumphs, I shall here transcribe the
+third Act, in its original shape, as first sent to the publisher:--
+
+ACT III.--SCENE I.
+
+A Hall in the Castle of Manfred.
+
+ MANFRED and HERMAN.
+
+_Man._ What is the hour?
+
+_Her._ It wants but one till sunset,
+And promises a lovely twilight.
+
+_Man._ Say,
+Are all things so disposed of in the tower
+As I directed?
+
+_Her._ All, my lord, are ready:
+Here is the key and casket.
+
+_Man._ It is well:
+Thou may'st retire. [_Exit_ HERMAN.
+
+_Man._ (_alone._) There is a calm upon me--
+Inexplicable stillness! which till now
+Did not belong to what I knew of life.
+If that I did not know philosophy
+To be of all our vanities the motliest,
+The merest word that ever fool'd the ear
+From out the schoolman's jargon, I should deem
+The golden secret, the sought 'Kalon,' found,
+And seated in my soul. It will not last,
+But it is well to have known it, though but once:
+It hath enlarged my thoughts with a new sense,
+And I within my tablets would note down
+That there is such a feeling. Who is there?
+
+ _Re-enter_ HERMAN.
+
+_Her._ My lord, the Abbot of St. Maurice craves
+To greet your presence.
+
+ _Enter the_ ABBOT OF ST. MAURICE.
+
+_Abbot._ Peace be with Count Manfred!
+
+_Man._ Thanks, holy father! welcome to these walls;
+Thy presence honours them, and blesseth those
+Who dwell within them.
+
+_Abbot._ Would it were so, Count!
+But I would fain confer with thee alone.
+
+_Man._ Herman, retire. What would my reverend guest?
+
+ [_Exit_ HERMAN.
+
+_Abbot._ Thus, without prelude:--Age and zeal, my office,
+And good intent, must plead my privilege;
+Our near, though not acquainted neighbourhood,
+May also be my herald. Rumours strange,
+And of unholy nature, are abroad,
+And busy with thy name--a noble name
+For centuries; may he who bears it now
+Transmit it unimpair'd.
+
+_Man._ Proceed,--I listen.
+
+_Abbot._ 'Tis said thou boldest converse with the things
+Which are forbidden to the search of man;
+That with the dwellers of the dark abodes,
+The many evil and unheavenly spirits
+Which walk the valley of the shade of death,
+Thou communest. I know that with mankind,
+Thy fellows in creation, thou dost rarely
+Exchange thy thoughts, and that thy solitude
+Is as an anchorite's, were it but holy.
+
+_Man._ And what are they who do avouch these things?
+
+_Abbot._ My pious brethren--the scared peasantry--
+Even thy own vassals--who do look on thee
+With most unquiet eyes. Thy life's in peril.
+
+_Man._ Take it.
+
+_Abbot._ I come to save, and not destroy--
+I would not pry into thy secret soul;
+But if these things be sooth, there still is time
+For penitence and pity: reconcile thee
+With the true church, and through the church to heaven.
+
+_Man._ I hear thee. This is my reply; Whate'er
+I may have been, or am, doth rest between
+Heaven and myself.--I shall not choose a mortal
+To be my mediator. Have I sinn'd
+Against your ordinances? prove and punish![1]
+
+_Abbot._ Then, hear and tremble! For the headstrong wretch
+Who in the mail of innate hardihood
+Would shield himself, and battle for his sins,
+There is the stake on earth, and beyond earth eternal--
+
+_Man._ Charity, most reverend father,
+Becomes thy lips so much more than this menace,
+That I would call thee back to it; but say,
+What wouldst thou with me?
+
+_Abbot._ It may be there are
+Things that would shake thee--but I keep them back,
+And give thee till to-morrow to repent.
+Then if thou dost not all devote thyself
+To penance, and with gift of all thy lands
+To the monastery--
+
+_Man._ I understand thee,--well!
+
+_Abbot._ Expect no mercy; I have warned thee.
+
+_Man._ (_opening the casket._) Stop--
+There is a gift for thee within this casket.
+
+ [MANFRED _opens the casket, strikes a light, and burns some
+ incense._
+
+Ho! Ashtaroth!
+
+ _The_ DEMON ASHTAROTH _appears, singing as follows:--_
+
+ The raven sits
+ On the raven-stone,
+ And his black wing flits
+ O'er the milk-white bone;
+ To and fro, as the night-winds blow,
+ The carcass of the assassin swings;
+ And there alone, on the raven-stone[2],
+ The raven flaps his dusky wings.
+
+ The fetters creak--and his ebon beak
+ Croaks to the close of the hollow sound;
+ And this is the tune by the light of the moon
+ To which the witches dance their round--
+ Merrily, merrily, cheerily, cheerily,
+ Merrily, speeds the ball:
+ The dead in their shrouds, and the demons in clouds,
+ Flock to the witches' carnival.
+
+_Abbot._ I fear thee not--hence--hence--
+Avaunt thee, evil one!--help, ho! without there!
+
+_Man._ Convey this man to the Shreckhorn--to its peak--
+To its extremest peak--watch with him there
+From now till sunrise; let him gaze, and know
+He ne'er again will be so near to heaven.
+But harm him not; and, when the morrow breaks,
+Set him down safe in his cell--away with him!
+
+_Ash._ Had I not better bring his brethren too,
+Convent and all, to bear him company?
+
+_Man._ No, this will serve for the present. Take him up.
+
+_Ash._ Come, friar! now an exorcism or two,
+And we shall fly the lighter.
+
+ ASHTAROTH _disappears with the_ ABBOT, _singing as follows:--_
+
+ A prodigal son and a maid undone,
+ And a widow re-wedded within the year;
+ And a worldly monk and a pregnant nun,
+ Are things which every day appear.
+
+ MANFRED _alone._
+
+_Man._ Why would this fool break in on me, and force
+My art to pranks fantastical?--no matter,
+It was not of my seeking. My heart sickens,
+And weighs a fix'd foreboding on my soul;
+But it is calm--calm as a sullen sea
+After the hurricane; the winds are still,
+But the cold waves swell high and heavily,
+And there is danger in them. Such a rest
+Is no repose. My life hath been a combat.
+And every thought a wound, till I am scarr'd
+In the immortal part of me--What now?
+
+ _Re-enter_ HERMAN.
+
+_Her._ My lord, you bade me wait on you at sunset:
+He sinks behind the mountain.
+
+_Man._ Doth he so?
+I will look on him.
+
+ [MANFRED _advances to the window of the hall._
+
+ Glorious orb![3] the idol
+Of early nature, and the vigorous race
+Of undiseased mankind, the giant sons
+Of the embrace of angels, with a sex
+More beautiful than they, which did draw down
+The erring spirits who can ne'er return.--
+Most glorious orb! that wert a worship, ere
+The mystery of thy making was reveal'd!
+Thou earliest minister of the Almighty,
+Which gladden'd, on their mountain tops, the hearts
+Of the Chaldean shepherds, till they pour'd
+Themselves in orisons! Thou material God!
+And representative of the Unknown--
+Who chose thee for his shadow! Thou chief star!
+Centre of many stars! which mak'st our earth
+Endurable, and temperest the hues
+And hearts of all who walk within thy rays!
+Sire of the seasons! Monarch of the climes,
+And those who dwell in them! for, near or far,
+Our inborn spirits have a tint of thee,
+Even as our outward aspects;--thou dost rise,
+And shine, and set in glory. Fare thee well!
+I ne'er shall see thee more. As my first glance
+Of love and wonder was for thee, then take
+My latest look: thou wilt not beam on one
+To whom the gifts of life and warmth have been
+Of a more fatal nature. He is gone:
+I follow. [_Exit_ MANFRED.
+
+
+SCENE II.
+
+_The Mountains--The Castle of Manfred at some distance--A Terrace before
+a Tower--Time, Twilight._
+
+ HERMAN, MANUEL, _and other dependants of_ MANFRED.
+
+_Her._ 'Tis strange enough; night after night, for years,
+He hath pursued long vigils in this tower,
+Without a witness. I have been within it,--
+So have we all been oft-times; but from it,
+Or its contents, it were impossible
+To draw conclusions absolute of aught
+His studies tend to. To be sure, there is
+One chamber where none enter; I would give
+The fee of what I have to come these three years,
+To pore upon its mysteries.
+
+_Manuel._ 'Twere dangerous;
+Content thyself with what thou know'st already.
+
+_Her._ Ah! Manuel! thou art elderly and wise,
+And couldst say much; thou hast dwelt within the castle--
+How many years is't?
+
+_Manuel._ Ere Count Manfred's birth,
+I served his father, whom he nought resembles.
+
+_Her._ There be more sons in like predicament.
+But wherein do they differ?
+
+_Manuel._ I speak not
+Of features or of form, but mind and habits:
+Count Sigismund was proud,--but gay and free,--
+A warrior and a reveller; he dwelt not
+With books and solitude, nor made the night
+A gloomy vigil, but a festal time,
+Merrier than day; he did not walk the rocks
+And forests like a wolf, nor turn aside
+From men and their delights.
+
+_Her._ Beshrew the hour,
+But those were jocund times! I would that such
+Would visit the old walls again; they look
+As if they had forgotten them.
+
+_Manuel._ These walls
+Must change their chieftain first. Oh! I have seen
+Some strange things in these few years.[4]
+
+_Her._ Come, be friendly;
+Relate me some, to while away our watch:
+I've heard thee darkly speak of an event
+Which happened hereabouts, by this same tower.
+
+_Manuel._ That was a night indeed! I do remember
+'Twas twilight, as it may be now, and such
+Another evening;--yon red cloud, which rests
+On Eigher's pinnacle, so rested then,--
+So like that it might be the same; the wind
+Was faint and gusty, and the mountain snows
+Began to glitter with the climbing moon;
+Count Manfred was, as now, within his tower,--
+How occupied, we knew not, but with him
+The sole companion of his wanderings
+And watchings--her, whom of all earthly things
+That lived, the only thing he seemed to love,--
+As he, indeed, by blood was bound to do,
+The lady Astarte, his--
+
+_Her._ Look--look--the tower--
+The tower's on fire. Oh, heavens and earth! what sound,
+What dreadful sound is that? [_A crash like thunder._
+
+_Manuel._ Help, help, there!--to the rescue of the Count,--
+The Count's in danger,--what ho! there! approach!
+
+ _The Servants, Vassals, and Peasantry approach, stupified with
+ terror._
+
+If there be any of you who have heart
+And love of human kind, and will to aid
+Those in distress--pause not--but follow me--
+The portal's open, follow. [MANUEL _goes in._
+
+_Her._ Come--who follows?
+What, none of ye?--ye recreants! shiver then
+Without. I will not see old Manuel risk
+His few remaining years unaided. [HERMAN _goes in._
+
+_Vassal._ Hark!--
+No--all is silent--not a breath--the flame
+Which shot forth such a blaze is also gone;
+What may this mean? Let's enter!
+
+_Peasant._ Faith, not I,--
+Not that, if one, or two, or more, will join,
+I then will stay behind; but, for my part,
+I do not see precisely to what end.
+
+_Vassal._ Cease your vain prating--come.
+
+_Manuel._ (_speaking within._) 'Tis all in vain--
+He's dead.
+
+_Her._ (_within._) Not so--even now methought he moved;
+But it is dark--so bear him gently out--
+Softly--how cold he is! take care of his temples
+In winding down the staircase.
+
+ _Re-enter_ MANUEL _and_ HERMAN, _bearing_ MANFRED _in their arms._
+
+_Manuel._ Hie to the castle, some of ye, and bring
+What aid you can. Saddle the barb, and speed
+For the leech to the city--quick! some water there!
+
+_Her._ His cheek is black--but there is a faint beat
+Still lingering about the heart. Some water.
+
+ [_They sprinkle_ MANFRED _with water; after a pause, he gives
+ some signs of life._
+
+_Manuel._ He seems to strive to speak--come--cheerly, Count!
+He moves his lips--canst hear him? I am old,
+And cannot catch faint sounds.
+
+ [HERMAN _inclining his head and listening._
+
+_Her._ I hear a word
+Or two--but indistinctly--what is next?
+What's to be done? let's bear him to the castle.
+
+ [MANFRED _motions with his hand not to remove him._
+
+_Manuel._ He disapproves--and 'twere of no avail--
+He changes rapidly.
+
+_Her._ 'Twill soon be over.
+
+_Manuel._ Oh! what a death is this! that I should live
+To shake my gray hairs over the last chief
+Of the house of Sigismund.--And such a death!
+Alone--we know not how--unshrived--untended--
+With strange accompaniments and fearful signs--
+I shudder at the sight--but must not leave him.
+
+_Manfred._ (_speaking faintly and slowly._) Old man! 'tis not so difficult
+ to die. [MANFRED _having said this expires._
+
+_Her._ His eyes are fixed and lifeless.--He is gone.--
+
+_Manuel._ Close them.--My old hand quivers.--He departs--
+Whither? I dread to think--but he is gone!
+
+
+[Footnote 1: It will be perceived that, as far as this, the original
+matter of the third Act has been retained.]
+
+[Footnote 2: "Raven-stone (Rabenstein), a translation of the German word
+for the gibbet, which in Germany and Switzerland is permanent, and made
+of stone."]
+
+[Footnote 3: This fine soliloquy, and a great part of the subsequent
+scene, have, it is hardly necessary to remark been retained in the
+present form of the Drama.]
+
+[Footnote 4: Altered in the present form, to "some strange things in
+them, Herman."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 278. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Rome, May 9. 1817.
+
+ "Address all answers to Venice; for there I shall return in fifteen
+ days, God willing.
+
+ "I sent you from Florence 'The Lament of Tasso,' and from Rome the
+ third Act of Manfred, both of which, I trust, will duly arrive. The
+ terms of these two I mentioned in my last, and will repeat in this,
+ it is three hundred for each, or _six_ hundred guineas for the
+ two--that is, if you like, and they are good for any thing.
+
+ "At last one of the parcels is arrived. In the notes to Childe
+ Harold there is a blunder of yours or mine: you talk of arrival at
+ _St. Gingo_, and, immediately after, add--'on the height is the
+ Château of Clarens.' This is sad work: Clarens is on the _other_
+ side of the Lake, and it is quite impossible that I should have so
+ bungled. Look at the MS.; and at any rate rectify it.
+
+ "The 'Tales of my Landlord' I have read with great pleasure, and
+ perfectly understand now why my sister and aunt are so very
+ positive in the very erroneous persuasion that they must have been
+ written by me. If you knew me as well as they do, you would have
+ fallen, perhaps, into the same mistake. Some day or other, I will
+ explain to you _why_--when I have time; at present, it does not
+ much matter; but you must have thought this blunder of theirs very
+ odd, and so did I, till I had read the book. Croker's letter to you
+ is a very great compliment; I shall return it to you in my next.
+
+ "I perceive you are publishing a Life of Raffael d'Urbino: it may
+ perhaps interest you to hear that a set of German artists here
+ allow their _hair_ to grow, and trim it into _his fashion_, thereby
+ drinking the cummin of the disciples of the old philosopher; if
+ they would cut their hair, convert it into brushes, and paint like
+ him, it would be more '_German_ to the matter.'
+
+ "I'll tell you a story: the other day, a man here--an
+ English--mistaking the statues of Charlemagne and Constantine,
+ which are _equestrian_, for those of Peter and Paul, asked another
+ _which_ was Paul of these same horsemen?--to which the reply
+ was,--'I thought, sir, that St. Paul had never got on _horseback_
+ since his _accident_?'
+
+ "I'll tell you another: Henry Fox, writing to some one from Naples
+ the other day, after an illness, adds--'and I am so changed, that
+ my _oldest creditors_ would hardly know me.'
+
+ "I am delighted with Rome--as I would be with a bandbox, that is,
+ it is a fine thing to see, finer than Greece; but I have not been
+ here long enough to affect it as a residence, and I must go back to
+ Lombardy, because I am wretched at being away from Marianna. I have
+ been riding my saddle-horses every day, and been to Albano, its
+ Lakes, and to the top of the Alban Mount, and to Frescati, Aricia,
+ &c. &c. with an &c. &c. &c. about the city, and in the city: for
+ all which--vide Guide-book. As a whole, ancient and modern, it
+ beats Greece, Constantinople, every thing--at least that I have
+ ever seen. But I can't describe, because my first impressions are
+ always strong and confused, and my memory _selects_ and reduces
+ them to order, like distance in the landscape, and blends them
+ better, although they may be less distinct. There must be a sense
+ or two more than we have, us mortals; for * * * * * where there is
+ much to be grasped we are always at a loss, and yet feel that we
+ ought to have a higher and more extended comprehension.
+
+ "I have had a letter from Moore, who is in some alarm about his
+ poem. I don't see why.
+
+ "I have had another from my poor dear Augusta, who is in a sad fuss
+ about my late illness; do, pray, tell her (the truth) that I am
+ better than ever, and in importunate health, growing (if not grown)
+ large and ruddy, and congratulated by impertinent persons on my
+ robustious appearance, when I ought to be pale and interesting.
+
+ "You tell me that George Byron has got a son, and Augusta says, a
+ daughter; which is it?--it is no great matter: the father is a good
+ man, an excellent officer, and has married a very nice little
+ woman, who will bring him more babes than income; howbeit she had a
+ handsome dowry, and is a very charming girl;--but he may as well
+ get a ship.
+
+ "I have no thoughts of coming amongst you yet awhile, so that I can
+ fight off business. If I could but make a tolerable sale of
+ Newstead, there would be no occasion for my return; and I can
+ assure you very sincerely, that I am much happier (or, at least,
+ have been so) out of your island than in it.
+
+ "Yours ever.
+
+ "P.S. There are few English here, but several of my acquaintance;
+ amongst others, the Marquis of Lansdowne, with whom I dine
+ to-morrow. I met the Jerseys on the road at Foligno--all well.
+
+ "Oh--I forgot--the Italians have printed Chillon, &c. a
+ _piracy_,--a pretty little edition, prettier than yours--and
+ published, as I found to my great astonishment on arriving here;
+ and what is odd, is, that the English is quite correctly printed.
+ Why they did it, or who did it, I know not; but so it is;--I
+ suppose, for the English people. I will send you a copy."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 279. TO MR. MOORE.
+
+ "Rome, May 12. 1817.
+
+ "I have received your letter here, where I have taken a cruise
+ lately; but I shall return back to Venice in a few days, so that if
+ you write again, address there, as usual. I am not for returning
+ to England so soon as you imagine; and by no means at all as a
+ residence. If you cross the Alps in your projected expedition, you
+ will find me somewhere in Lombardy, and very glad to see you. Only
+ give me a word or two beforehand, for I would readily diverge some
+ leagues to meet you.
+
+ "Of Rome I say nothing; it is quite indescribable, and the
+ Guide-book is as good as any other. I dined yesterday with Lord
+ Lansdowne, who is on his return. But there are few English here at
+ present; the winter is _their_ time. I have been on horseback most
+ of the day, all days since my arrival, and have taken it as I did
+ Constantinople. But Rome is the elder sister, and the finer. I went
+ some days ago to the top of the Alban Mount, which is superb. As
+ for the Coliseum, Pantheon, St. Peter's, the Vatican, Palatine, &c.
+ &c.--as I said, vide Guide-book. They are quite inconceivable, and
+ must _be seen_. The Apollo Belvidere is the image of Lady Adelaide
+ Forbes--I think I never saw such a likeness.
+
+ "I have seen the Pope alive, and a cardinal dead,--both of whom
+ looked very well indeed. The latter was in state in the Chiesa
+ Nuova, previous to his interment.
+
+ "Your poetical alarms are groundless; go on and prosper. Here is
+ Hobhouse just come in, and my horses at the door, so that I must
+ mount and take the field in the Campus Martius, which, by the way,
+ is all built over by modern Rome.
+
+ "Yours very and ever, &c.
+
+ "P.S. Hobhouse presents his remembrances, and is eager, with all
+ the world, for your new poem."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 280. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, May 30. 1817.
+
+ "I returned from Rome two days ago, and have received your letter;
+ but no sign nor tidings of the parcel sent through Sir C. Stuart,
+ which you mention. After an interval of months, a packet of
+ 'Tales,' &c. found me at Rome; but this is all, and may be all that
+ ever will find me. The post seems to be the only sure conveyance;
+ and _that only for letters_. From Florence I sent you a poem on
+ Tasso, and from Rome the new third Act of 'Manfred,' and by Dr.
+ Polidori two portraits for my sister. I left Rome and made a rapid
+ journey home. You will continue to direct here as usual. Mr.
+ Hobhouse is gone to Naples: I should have run down there too for a
+ week, but for the quantity of English whom I heard of there. I
+ prefer hating them at a distance; unless an earthquake, or a good
+ real irruption of Vesuvius, were ensured to reconcile me to their
+ vicinity.
+
+ "The day before I left Rome I saw three robbers guillotined. The
+ ceremony--including the _masqued_ priests; the half-naked
+ executioners; the bandaged criminals; the black Christ and his
+ banner; the scaffold; the soldiery; the slow procession, and the
+ quick rattle and heavy fall of the axe; the splash of the blood,
+ and the ghastliness of the exposed heads--is altogether more
+ impressive than the vulgar and ungentlemanly dirty 'new drop,' and
+ dog-like agony of infliction upon the sufferers of the English
+ sentence. Two of these men behaved calmly enough, but the first of
+ the three died with great terror and reluctance. What was very
+ horrible, he would not lie down; then his neck was too large for
+ the aperture, and the priest was obliged to drown his exclamations
+ by still louder exhortations. The head was off before the eye could
+ trace the blow; but from an attempt to draw back the head,
+ notwithstanding it was held forward by the hair, the first head was
+ cut off close to the ears: the other two were taken off more
+ cleanly. It is better than the oriental way, and (I should think)
+ than the axe of our ancestors. The pain seems little, and yet the
+ effect to the spectator, and the preparation to the criminal, is
+ very striking and chilling. The first turned me quite hot and
+ thirsty, and made me shake so that I could hardly hold the
+ opera-glass (I was close, but was determined to see, as one should
+ see every thing, once, with attention); the second and third (which
+ shows how dreadfully soon things grow indifferent), I am ashamed to
+ say, had no effect on me as a horror, though I would have saved
+ them if I could. Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 281. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, June 4. 1817.
+
+ "I have received the proofs of the 'Lament of Tasso,' which makes
+ me hope that you have also received the reformed third Act of
+ Manfred, from Rome, which I sent soon after my arrival there. My
+ date will apprise you of my return home within these few days. For
+ me, I have received _none_ of your packets, except, after long
+ delay, the 'Tales of my Landlord,' which I before acknowledged. I
+ do not at all understand the _why nots_, but so it is; no Manuel,
+ no letters, no tooth-powder, no _extract_ from Moore's Italy
+ concerning Marino Faliero, no NOTHING--as a man hallooed out at one
+ of Burdett's elections, after a long ululatus of 'No Bastille! No
+ governor-ities! No--'God knows who or what;--but his _ne plus
+ ultra_ was, 'No nothing!'--and my receipts of your packages amount
+ to about his meaning. I want the extract from _Moore's_ Italy very
+ much, and the tooth-powder, and the magnesia; I don't care so much
+ about the poetry, or the letters, or Mr. Maturin's by-Jasus
+ tragedy. Most of the things sent by the post have come--I mean
+ proofs and letters; therefore send me Marino Faliero by the post,
+ in a letter.
+
+ "I was delighted with Rome, and was on horseback all round it many
+ hours daily, besides in it the rest of my time, bothering over its
+ marvels. I excursed and skirred the country round to Alba, Tivoli,
+ Frescati, Licenza, &c. &c.; besides, I visited twice the Fall of
+ Terni, which beats every thing. On my way back, close to the temple
+ by its banks, I got some famous trout out of the river
+ Clitumnus--the prettiest little stream in all poesy, near the first
+ post from Foligno and Spoletto.--I did not stay at Florence, being
+ anxious to get home to Venice, and having already seen the
+ galleries and other sights. I left my commendatory letters the
+ evening before I went, so I saw nobody.
+
+ "To-day, Pindemonte, the celebrated poet of Verona, called on me;
+ he is a little thin man, with acute and pleasing features; his
+ address good and gentle; his appearance altogether very
+ philosophical; his age about sixty, or more. He is one of their
+ best going. I gave him _Forsyth_, as he speaks, or reads rather, a
+ little English, and will find there a favourable account of
+ himself. He enquired after his old Cruscan friends, Parsons,
+ Greathead, Mrs. Piozzi, and Merry, all of whom he had known in his
+ youth. I gave him as bad an account of them as I could, answering,
+ as the false 'Solomon Lob' does to 'Totterton' in the farce, 'all
+ gone dead,' and damned by a satire more than twenty years ago; that
+ the name of their extinguisher was Gifford; that they were but a
+ sad set of scribes after all, and no great things in any other way.
+ He seemed, as was natural, very much pleased with this account of
+ his old acquaintances, and went away greatly gratified with that
+ and Mr. Forsyth's sententious paragraph of applause in his own
+ (Pindemonte's) favour. After having been a little libertine in his
+ youth, he is grown devout, and takes prayers, and talks to himself,
+ to keep off the devil; but for all that, he is a very nice little
+ old gentleman.
+
+ "I forgot to tell you that at Bologna (which is celebrated for
+ producing popes, painters, and sausages) I saw an anatomical
+ gallery, where there is a deal of waxwork, in which * *.
+
+ "I am sorry to hear of your row with Hunt; but suppose him to be
+ exasperated by the Quarterly and your refusal to _deal_; and when
+ one is angry and edites a paper, I should think the temptation too
+ strong for literary nature, which is not always human. I can't
+ conceive in what, and for what, he abuses you: what have you done?
+ you are not an author, nor a politician, nor a public character; I
+ know no scrape you have tumbled into. I am the more sorry for this
+ because I introduced you to Hunt, and because I believe him to be a
+ good man; but till I know the particulars, I can give no opinion.
+
+ "Let me know about Lalla Rookh, which must be out by this time.
+
+ "I restore the proofs, but the _punctuation_ should be corrected. I
+ feel too lazy to have at it myself; so beg and pray Mr. Gifford for
+ me.--Address to Venice. In a few days I go to my _villeggiatura_,
+ in a cassino near the Brenta, a few miles only on the main land. I
+ have determined on another year, and _many years_ of residence if I
+ can compass them. Marianna is with me, hardly recovered of the
+ fever, which has been attacking all Italy last winter. I am afraid
+ she is a little hectic; but I hope the best.
+
+ "Ever, &c.
+
+ "P.S. Torwaltzen has done a bust of me at Rome for Mr. Hobhouse,
+ which is reckoned very good. He is their best after Canova, and by
+ some preferred to him.
+
+ "I have had a letter from Mr. Hodgson. He is very happy, has got a
+ living, but not a child: if he had stuck to a curacy, babes would
+ have come of course, because he could not have maintained them.
+
+ "Remember me to all friends, &c. &c.
+
+ "An Austrian officer, the other day, being in love with a Venetian,
+ was ordered, with his regiment, into Hungary. Distracted between
+ love and duty, he purchased a deadly drug, which dividing with his
+ mistress, both swallowed. The ensuing pains were terrific, but the
+ pills were purgative, and not poisonous, by the contrivance of the
+ unsentimental apothecary; so that so much suicide was all thrown
+ away. You may conceive the previous confusion and the final
+ laughter; but the intention was good on all sides."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 282. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, June 8. 1817.
+
+ "The present letter will be delivered to you by two Armenian
+ friars, on their way, by England, to Madras. They will also convey
+ some copies of the grammar, which I think you agreed to take. If
+ you can be of any use to them, either amongst your naval or East
+ Indian acquaintances, I hope you will so far oblige me, as they and
+ their order have been remarkably attentive and friendly towards me
+ since my arrival at Venice. Their names are Father Sukias Somalian
+ and Father Sarkis Theodorosian. They speak Italian, and probably
+ French, or a little English. Repeating earnestly my recommendatory
+ request, believe me, very truly, yours,
+
+ "BYRON.
+
+ "Perhaps you can help them to their passage, or give or get them
+ letters for India."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 283. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "La Mira, near Venice, June 14. 1817.
+
+ "I write to you from the banks of the Brenta, a few miles from
+ Venice, where I have colonised for six months to come. Address, as
+ usual, to Venice.
+
+ "Three months after date (17th March),--like the unnegotiable bill
+ despondingly received by the reluctant tailor,--your despatch has
+ arrived, containing the extract from Moore's Italy and Mr.
+ Maturin's bankrupt tragedy. It is the absurd work of a clever man.
+ I think it might have done upon the stage, if he had made Manuel
+ (by some trickery, in a masque or vizor) fight his own battle,
+ instead of employing Molineux as his champion; and, after the
+ defeat of Torismond, have made him spare the son of his enemy, by
+ some revulsion of feeling, not incompatible with a character of
+ extravagant and distempered emotions. But as it is, what with the
+ Justiza, and the ridiculous conduct of the whole _dram. pers._ (for
+ they are all as mad as Manuel, who surely must have had more
+ interest with a corrupt bench than a distant relation and heir
+ presumptive, somewhat suspect of homicide,) I do not wonder at its
+ failure. As a play, it is impracticable; as a poem, no great
+ things. Who was the 'Greek that grappled with glory naked?' the
+ Olympic wrestlers? or Alexander the Great, when he ran stark round
+ the tomb of t'other fellow? or the Spartan who was fined by the
+ Ephori for fighting without his armour? or who? And as to 'flaying
+ off life like a garment,' helas! that's in Tom Thumb--see king
+ Arthur's soliloquy:
+
+ "'Life's a mere rag, not worth a prince's wearing;
+ I'll cast it off.'
+
+ And the stage-directions--'Staggers among the bodies;'--the slain
+ are too numerous, as well as the blackamoor knights-penitent being
+ one too many: and De Zelos is such a shabby Monmouth Street
+ villain, without any redeeming quality--Stap my vitals! Maturin
+ seems to be declining into Nat. Lee. But let him try again; he has
+ talent, but not much taste. I 'gin to fear, or to hope, that
+ Sotheby, after all, is to be the Eschylus of the age, unless Mr.
+ Shiel be really worthy his success. The more I see of the stage,
+ the less I would wish to have any thing to do with it; as a proof
+ of which, I hope you have received the third Act of Manfred, which
+ will at least prove that I wish to steer very clear of the
+ possibility of being put into scenery. I sent it from _Rome_.
+
+ "I returned the proof of Tasso. By the way, have you never received
+ a translation of St. Paul which I sent you, _not_ for publication,
+ before I went to Rome?
+
+ "I am at present on the Brenta. Opposite is a Spanish marquis,
+ ninety years old; next his casino is a Frenchman's,--besides the
+ natives; so that, as somebody said the other day, we are exactly
+ one of Goldoni's comedies (La Vedova Scaltra), where a Spaniard,
+ English, and Frenchman are introduced: but we are all very good
+ neighbours, Venetians, &c. &c. &c.
+
+ "I am just getting on horseback for my evening ride, and a visit to
+ a physician, who has an agreeable family, of a wife and four
+ unmarried daughters, all under eighteen, who are friends of Signora
+ S * *, and enemies to nobody. There are, and are to be, besides,
+ conversaziones and I know not what, a Countess Labbia's and I know
+ not whom. The weather is mild; the thermometer 110 in the _sun_
+ this day, and 80 odd in the shade. Yours, &c.
+
+ "N."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 284. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "La Mira, near Venice, June 17. 1817.
+
+ "It gives me great pleasure to hear of Moore's success, and the
+ more so that I never doubted that it would be complete. Whatever
+ good you can tell me of him and his poem will be most acceptable: I
+ feel very anxious indeed to receive it. I hope that he is as happy
+ in his fame and reward as I wish him to be; for I know no one who
+ deserves both more--if any so much.
+
+ "Now to business; * * * * * * I say unto you, verily, it is not so;
+ or, as the foreigner said to the waiter, after asking him to bring
+ a glass of water, to which the man answered, 'I will, sir,'--'You
+ will!--G----d d----n,--I say, you _mush_!' And I will submit this
+ to the decision of any person or persons to be appointed by both,
+ on a fair examination of the circumstances of this as compared
+ with the preceding publications. So there's for you. There is
+ always some row or other previously to all our publications: it
+ should seem that, on approximating, we can never quite get over the
+ natural antipathy of author and bookseller, and that more
+ particularly the ferine nature of the latter must break forth.
+
+ "You are out about the third Canto: I have not done, nor designed,
+ a line of continuation to that poem. I was too short a time at Rome
+ for it, and have no thought of recommencing.
+
+ "I cannot well explain to you by letter what I conceive to be the
+ origin of Mrs. Leigh's notion about 'Tales of my Landlord;' but it
+ is some points of the characters of Sir E. Manley and Burley, as
+ well as one or two of the jocular portions, on which it is founded,
+ probably.
+
+ "If you have received Dr. Polidori as well as a parcel of books,
+ and you can be of use to him, be so. I never was much more
+ disgusted with any human production than with the eternal nonsense,
+ and tracasseries, and emptiness, and ill humour, and vanity of that
+ young person; but he has some talent, and is a man of honour, and
+ has dispositions of amendment, in which he has been aided by a
+ little subsequent experience, and may turn out well. Therefore, use
+ your government interest for him, for he is improved and
+ improvable.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 285. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "La Mira, near Venice, June 18. 1817.
+
+ "Enclosed is a letter to _Dr._ Holland from Pindemonte. Not knowing
+ the Doctor's address, I am desired to enquire, and, perhaps, being
+ a literary man, you will know or discover his haunt near some
+ populous churchyard. I have written to you a scolding letter--I
+ believe, upon a misapprehended passage in your letter--but never
+ mind: it will do for next time, and you will surely deserve it.
+ Talking of doctors reminds me once more to recommend to you one who
+ will not recommend himself,--the Doctor Polidori. If you can help
+ him to a publisher, do; or, if you have any sick relation, I would
+ advise his advice: all the patients he had in Italy are dead--Mr. *
+ *'s son, Mr. Horner, and Lord G * *, whom he embowelled with great
+ success at Pisa.
+
+ "Remember me to Moore, whom I congratulate. How is Rogers? and what
+ is become of Campbell and all t'other fellows of the Druid order? I
+ got Maturin's Bedlam at last, but no other parcel; I am in fits for
+ the tooth-powder, and the magnesia. I want some of Burkitt's
+ _soda_-powders. Will you tell Mr. Kinnaird that I have written him
+ two letters on pressing business, (about Newstead, &c.) to which I
+ humbly solicit his attendance. I am just returned from a gallop
+ along the banks of the Brenta--time, sunset. Yours,
+
+ "B."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 286. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "La Mira, near Venice, July 1. 1817.
+
+ "Since my former letter, I have been working up my impressions into
+ a _fourth_ Canto of Childe Harold, of which I have roughened off
+ about rather better than thirty stanzas, and mean to go on; and
+ probably to make this 'Fytte' the concluding one of the poem, so
+ that you may propose against the autumn to draw out the
+ conscription for 1818. You must provide moneys, as this new
+ resumption bodes you certain disbursements. Somewhere about the end
+ of September or October, I propose to be under way (_i.e._ in the
+ press); but I have no idea yet of the probable length or calibre of
+ the Canto, or what it will be good for; but I mean to be as
+ mercenary as possible, an example (I do not mean of any individual
+ in particular, and least of all, any person or persons of our
+ mutual acquaintance) which I should have followed in my youth, and
+ I might still have been a prosperous gentleman.
+
+ "No tooth-powder, no letters, no recent tidings of you.
+
+ "Mr. Lewis is at Venice, and I am going up to stay a week with him
+ there--as it is one of his enthusiasms also to like the city.
+
+ "I stood in Venice on the 'Bridge of Sighs,' &c. &c.
+
+ "The 'Bridge of Sighs' (_i.e._ Ponte de'i Sospiri) is that which
+ divides, or rather joins, the palace of the Doge to the prison of
+ the state. It has two passages: the criminal went by the one to
+ judgment, and returned by the other to death, being strangled in a
+ chamber adjoining, where there was a mechanical process for the
+ purpose.
+
+ "This is the first stanza of our new Canto; and now for a line of
+ the second:--
+
+ "In Venice, Tasso's echoes are no more,
+ And silent rows the songless gondolier,
+ Her palaces, &c. &c.
+
+ "You know that formerly the gondoliers sung always, and Tasso's
+ Gierusalemme was their ballad. Venice is built on seventy-two
+ islands.
+
+ "There! there's a brick of your new Babel! and now, sirrah! what
+ say you to the sample?
+
+ "Yours, &c.
+
+ "P.S. I shall write again by and by."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 287. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "La Mira, near Venice, July 8. 1817
+
+ "If you can convey the enclosed letter to its address, or discover
+ the person to whom it is directed, you will confer a favour upon
+ the Venetian creditor of a deceased Englishman. This epistle is a
+ dun to his executor, for house-rent. The name of the insolvent
+ defunct is, or was, _Porter Valter_, according to the account of
+ the plaintiff, which I rather suspect ought to be _Walter Porter_,
+ according to our mode of collocation. If you are acquainted with
+ any dead man of the like name a good deal in debt, pray dig him up,
+ and tell him that 'a pound of his fair flesh' or the ducats are
+ required, and that 'if you deny them, fie upon your law!'
+
+ "I hear nothing more from you about Moore's poem, Rogers, or other
+ literary phenomena; but to-morrow, being post-day, will bring
+ perhaps some tidings. I write to you with people talking Venetian
+ all about, so that you must not expect this letter to be all
+ English.
+
+ "The other day, I had a squabble on the highway, as follows: I was
+ riding pretty quickly from Dolo home about eight in the evening,
+ when I passed a party of people in a hired carriage, one of whom,
+ poking his head out of the window, began bawling to me in an
+ inarticulate but insolent manner. I wheeled my horse round, and
+ overtaking, stopped the coach, and said, 'Signor, have you any
+ commands for me?' He replied, impudently as to manner, 'No.' I then
+ asked him what he meant by that unseemly noise, to the discomfiture
+ of the passers-by. He replied by some piece of impertinence, to
+ which I answered by giving him a violent slap in the face. I then
+ dismounted, (for this passed at the window, I being on horseback
+ still,) and opening the door desired him to walk out, or I would
+ give him another. But the first had settled him except as to words,
+ of which he poured forth a profusion in blasphemies, swearing that
+ he would go to the police and avouch a battery sans provocation. I
+ said he lied, and was a * *, and if he did not hold his tongue,
+ should be dragged out and beaten anew. He then held his tongue. I
+ of course told him my name and residence, and defied him to the
+ death, if he were a gentleman, or not a gentleman, and had the
+ inclination to be genteel in the way of combat. He went to the
+ police, but there having been bystanders in the
+ road,--particularly a soldier, who had seen the business,--as well
+ as my servant, notwithstanding the oaths of the coachman and five
+ insides besides the plaintiff, and a good deal of paying on all
+ sides, his complaint was dismissed, he having been the
+ aggressor;--and I was subsequently informed that, had I not given
+ him a blow, he might have been had into durance.
+
+ "So set down this,--'that in Aleppo once' I 'beat a Venetian;' but
+ I assure you that he deserved it, for I am a quiet man, like
+ Candide, though with somewhat of his fortune in being forced to
+ forego my natural meekness every now and then.
+
+ "Yours, &c. B."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 288. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, July 9, 1817.
+
+ "I have got the sketch and extracts from Lalla Rookh. The plan, as
+ well as the extracts, I have seen, please me very much indeed, and
+ I feel impatient for the whole.
+
+ "With regard to the critique on 'Manfred,' you have been in such a
+ devil of a hurry, that you have only sent me the half: it breaks
+ off at page 294. Send me the rest; and also page 270., where there
+ is 'an account of the supposed origin of this dreadful story,'--in
+ which, by the way, whatever it may be, the conjecturer is out, and
+ knows nothing of the matter. I had a better origin than he can
+ devise or divine, for the soul of him.
+
+ "You say nothing of Manfred's luck in the world; and I care not.
+ He is one of the best of my misbegotten, say what they will.
+
+ "I got at last an extract, but _no parcels_. They will come, I
+ suppose, some time or other. I am come up to Venice for a day or
+ two to bathe, and am just going to take a swim in the Adriatic; so,
+ good evening--the post waits. Yours, &c.
+
+ "B.
+
+ "P.S. Pray, was Manfred's speech to _the Sun_ still retained in Act
+ third? I hope so: it was one of the best in the thing, and better
+ than the Colosseum. I have done _fifty-six_ of Canto fourth, Childe
+ Harold; so down with your ducats."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 289. TO MR. MOORE.
+
+ "La Mira, Venice, July 10. 1817.
+
+ "Murray, the Mokanna of booksellers, has contrived to send me
+ extracts from Lalla Rookh by the post. They are taken from some
+ magazine, and contain a short outline and quotations from the two
+ first Poems. I am very much delighted with what is before me, and
+ very thirsty for the rest. You have caught the colours as if you
+ had been in the rainbow, and the tone of the East is perfectly
+ preserved. I am glad you have changed the title from 'Persian
+ Tale.'
+
+ "I suspect you have written a devilish fine composition, and I
+ rejoice in it from my heart; because 'the Douglas and the Percy
+ both together are confident against a world in arms.' I hope you
+ won't be affronted at my looking on us as 'birds of a feather;'
+ though on whatever subject you had written, I should have been very
+ happy in your success.
+
+ "There is a simile of an orange-tree's 'flowers and fruits,' which
+ I should have liked better if I did not believe it to be a
+ reflection on * * *.
+
+ "Do you remember Thurlow's poem to Sam--'_When_ Rogers;' and that
+ d----d supper of Rancliffe's that ought to have been a _dinner_?
+ 'Ah, Master Shallow, we have heard the chimes at midnight.' But
+
+ "My boat is on the shore,
+ And my bark is on the sea;
+ But, before I go, Tom Moore,
+ Here's a double health to thee!
+
+ "Here's a sigh to those who love me,
+ And a smile to those who hate;
+ And whatever sky's above me,
+ Here's a heart for every fate.
+
+ "Though the ocean roar around me,
+ Yet it still shall bear me on;
+ Though a desert should surround me,
+ It hath springs that may be won.
+
+ "Were't the last drop in the well,
+ As I gasp'd upon the brink,
+ Ere my fainting spirit fell,
+ 'Tis to thee that I would drink.
+
+ "With that water, as this wine,
+ The libation I would pour,
+ Should be--peace with thine and mine,
+ And a health to thee, Tom Moore.
+
+ "This should have been written fifteen moons ago--the first stanza
+ was. I am just come out from an hour's swim in the Adriatic; and I
+ write to you with a black-eyed Venetian girl before me, reading
+ Boccacio.
+
+ "Last week I had a row on the road (I came up to Venice from my
+ casino, a few miles on the Paduan road, this blessed day, to bathe)
+ with a fellow in a carriage, who was impudent to my horse. I gave
+ him a swingeing box on the ear, which sent him to the police, who
+ dismissed his complaint. Witnesses had seen the transaction. He
+ first shouted, in an unseemly way, to frighten my palfry. I wheeled
+ round, rode up to the window, and asked him what he meant. He
+ grinned, and said some foolery, which produced him an immediate
+ slap in the face, to his utter discomfiture. Much blasphemy ensued,
+ and some menace, which I stopped by dismounting and opening the
+ carriage door, and intimating an intention of mending the road with
+ his immediate remains, if he did not hold his tongue. He held it.
+
+ "Monk Lewis is here--'how pleasant!'[5] He is a very good fellow,
+ and very much yours. So is Sam--so is every body--and amongst the
+ number,
+
+ "Yours ever,
+
+ "B.
+
+ "P.S. What think you of Manfred?"
+
+[Footnote 5: An allusion (such as often occurs in these letters) to an
+anecdote with which he had been amused.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 290. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "La Mira, near Venice, July 15. 1817.
+
+ "I have finished (that is, written--the file comes afterwards)
+ ninety and eight stanzas of the fourth Canto, which I mean to be
+ the concluding one. It will probably be about the same length as
+ the _third_, being already of the dimensions of the first or second
+ Cantos. I look upon parts of it as very good, that is, if the three
+ former are good, but this we shall see; and at any rate, good or
+ not, it is rather a different style from the last--less
+ metaphysical--which, at any rate, will be a variety. I sent you the
+ shaft of the column as a specimen the other day, _i.e._ the first
+ stanza. So you may be thinking of its arrival towards autumn, whose
+ winds will not be the only ones to be raised, _if so be as how
+ that_ it is ready by that time.
+
+ "I lent Lewis, who is at Venice, (in or on the Canalaccio, the
+ Grand Canal,) your extracts from Lalla Rookh and Manuel[6], and,
+ out of contradiction, it may be, he likes the last, and is not much
+ taken with the first, of these performances. Of Manuel, I think,
+ with the exception of a few capers, it is as heavy a nightmare as
+ was ever bestrode by indigestion.
+
+ "Of the extracts I can but judge as extracts, and I prefer the
+ 'Peri' to the 'Silver Veil.' He seems not so much at home in his
+ versification of the 'Silver Veil,' and a little embarrassed with
+ his horrors; but the conception of the character of the impostor
+ is fine, and the plan of great scope for his genius,--and I doubt
+ not that, as a whole, it will be very Arabesque and beautiful.
+
+ "Your late epistle is not the most abundant in information, and has
+ not yet been succeeded by any other; so that I know nothing of your
+ own concerns, or of any concerns, and as I never hear from any body
+ but yourself who does not tell me something as disagreeable as
+ possible, I should not be sorry to hear from you: and as it is not
+ very probable,--if I can, by any device or possible arrangement
+ with regard to my personal affairs, so arrange it,--that I shall
+ return soon, or reside ever in England, all that you tell me will
+ be all I shall know or enquire after, as to our beloved realm of
+ Grub Street, and the black brethren and blue sisterhood of that
+ extensive suburb of Babylon. Have you had no new babe of literature
+ sprung up to replace the dead, the distant, the tired, and the
+ _re_tired? no prose, no verse, no _nothing_?"
+
+[Footnote 6: A tragedy, by the Rev. Mr. Maturin.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 291. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, July 20. 1817.
+
+ "I write to give you notice that I have completed the _fourth_ and
+ _ultimate_ Canto of Childe Harold. It consists of 126 stanzas, and
+ is consequently the longest of the four. It is yet to be copied and
+ polished; and the notes are to come, of which it will require more
+ than the _third_ Canto, as it necessarily treats more of works of
+ art than of nature. It shall be sent towards autumn;--and now for
+ our barter. What do you bid? eh? you shall have samples, an' it so
+ please you: but I wish to know what I am to expect (as the saying
+ is) in these hard times, when poetry does not let for half its
+ value. If you are disposed to do what Mrs. Winifred Jenkins calls
+ 'the handsome thing,' I may perhaps throw you some odd matters to
+ the lot,--translations, or slight originals; there is no saying
+ what may be on the anvil between this and the booking season.
+ Recollect that it is the _last_ Canto, and completes the work;
+ whether as good as the others, I cannot judge, in course--least of
+ all as yet,--but it shall be as little worse as I can help. I may,
+ perhaps, give some little gossip in the notes as to the present
+ state of Italian literati and literature, being acquainted with
+ some of their _capi_--men as well as books;--but this depends upon
+ my humour at the time. So, now, pronounce: I say nothing.
+
+ "When you have got the whole _four_ Cantos, I think you might
+ venture on an edition of the whole poem in quarto, with spare
+ copies of the two last for the purchasers of the old edition of the
+ first two. There is a hint for you, worthy of the Row; and now,
+ perpend--pronounce.
+
+ "I have not received a word from you of the fate of 'Manfred' or
+ 'Tasso,' which seems to me odd, whether they have failed or
+ succeeded.
+
+ "As this is a scrawl of business, and I have lately written at
+ length and often on other subjects, I will only add that I am,"
+ &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 292. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "La Mira, near Venice, August 7, 1817
+
+ "Your letter of the 18th, and, what will please you, as it did me,
+ the parcel sent by the good-natured aid and abetment of Mr. Croker,
+ are arrived.--Messrs. Lewis and Hobhouse are here: the former in
+ the same house, the latter a few hundred yards distant.
+
+ "You say nothing of Manfred, from which its failure may be
+ inferred; but I think it odd you should not say so at once. I know
+ nothing, and hear absolutely nothing, of any body or any thing in
+ England; and there are no English papers, so that all you say will
+ be news--of any person, or thing, or things. I am at present very
+ anxious about Newstead, and sorry that Kinnaird is leaving England
+ at this minute, though I do not tell him so, and would rather he
+ should have _his_ pleasure, although it may not in this instance
+ tend to my profit.
+
+ "If I understand rightly, you have paid into Morland's 1500
+ _pounds_: as the agreement in the paper is two thousand _guineas_,
+ there will remain therefore _six_ hundred _pounds_, and not five
+ hundred, the odd hundred being the extra to make up the specie. Six
+ hundred and thirty pounds will bring it to the like for Manfred and
+ Tasso, making a total of twelve hundred and thirty, I believe, for
+ I am not a good calculator. I do not wish to press you, but I tell
+ you fairly that it will be a convenience to me to have it paid as
+ soon as it can be made convenient to yourself.
+
+ "The new and last Canto is 130 stanzas in length; and may be made
+ more or less. I have fixed no price, even in idea, and have no
+ notion of what it may be good for. There are no metaphysics in it;
+ at least, I think not. Mr. Hobhouse has promised me a copy of
+ Tasso's Will, for notes; and I have some curious things to say
+ about Ferrara, and Parisina's story, and perhaps a farthing
+ candle's worth of light upon the present state of Italian
+ literature. I shall hardly be ready by October; but that don't
+ matter. I have all to copy and correct, and the notes to write.
+
+ "I do not know whether Scott will like it; but I have called him
+ the '_Ariosto_ of the North' in my _text_. _If he should not, say
+ so in time._
+
+ "An Italian translation of 'Glenarvon' came lately to be printed at
+ Venice. The censor (Sr. Petrotini) refused to sanction the
+ publication till he had seen me on the subject. I told him that I
+ did not recognise the slightest relation between that book and
+ myself; but that, whatever opinions might be upon that subject, _I_
+ would never prevent or oppose the publication of _any_ book, in
+ _any_ language, on my own private account; and desired him (against
+ his inclination) to permit the poor translator to publish his
+ labours. It is going forwards in consequence. You may say this,
+ with my compliments, to the author.
+
+ "Yours."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 293. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, August 12. 1817.
+
+ "I have been very sorry to hear of the death of Madame de Staël,
+ not only because she had been very kind to me at Copet, but because
+ now I can never requite her. In a general point of view, she will
+ leave a great gap in society and literature.
+
+ "With regard to death, I doubt that we have any right to pity the
+ dead for their own sakes.
+
+ "The copies of Manfred and Tasso are arrived, thanks to Mr.
+ Croker's cover. You have destroyed the whole effect and moral of
+ the poem by omitting the last line of Manfred's speaking; and why
+ this was done, I know not. Why you persist in saying nothing of the
+ thing itself, I am equally at a loss to conjecture. If it is for
+ fear of telling me something disagreeable, you are wrong; because
+ sooner or later I must know it, and I am not so new, nor so raw,
+ nor so inexperienced, as not to be able to bear, not the mere
+ paltry, petty disappointments of authorship, but things more
+ serious,--at least I hope so, and that what you may think
+ irritability is merely mechanical, and only acts like galvanism on
+ a dead body, or the muscular motion which survives sensation.
+
+ "If it is that you are out of humour, because I wrote to you a
+ sharp letter, recollect that it was partly from a misconception of
+ your letter, and partly because you did a thing you had no right to
+ do without consulting me.
+
+ "I have, however, heard good of Manfred from two other quarters,
+ and from men who would not be scrupulous in saying what they
+ thought, or what was said; and so 'good morrow to you, good Master
+ Lieutenant.'
+
+ "I wrote to you twice about the fourth Canto, which you will answer
+ at your pleasure. Mr. Hobhouse and I have come up for a day to the
+ city; Mr. Lewis is gone to England; and I am
+
+ "Yours."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 294. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "La Mira, near Venice, August 21. 1817.
+
+ "I take you at your word about Mr. Hanson, and will feel obliged if
+ you will _go_ to him, and request Mr. Davies also to visit him by
+ my desire, and repeat that I trust that neither Mr. Kinnaird's
+ absence nor mine will prevent his taking all proper steps to
+ accelerate and promote the sale of Newstead and Rochdale, upon
+ which the whole of my future personal comfort depends. It is
+ impossible for me to express how much any delays upon these points
+ would inconvenience me; and I do not know a greater obligation that
+ can be conferred upon me than the pressing these things upon
+ Hanson, and making him act according to my wishes. I wish you would
+ _speak out_, at least to _me_, and tell me what you allude to by
+ your cold way of mentioning him. All mysteries at such a distance
+ are not merely tormenting but mischievous, and may be prejudicial
+ to my interests; so, pray expound, that I may consult with Mr.
+ Kinnaird when he arrives; and remember that I prefer the most
+ disagreeable certainties to hints and innuendoes. The devil take
+ every body: I never can get any person to be explicit about any
+ thing or any body, and my whole life is passed in conjectures of
+ what people mean: you all talk in the style of C * * L * *'s
+ novels.
+
+ "It is not Mr. St. John, but _Mr. St. Aubyn_, son of Sir John St.
+ Aubyn. _Polidori_ knows him, and introduced him to me. He is of
+ Oxford, and has got my parcel. The Doctor will ferret him out, or
+ ought. The parcel contains many letters, some of Madame de Staël's,
+ and other people's, besides MSS., &c. By ----, if I find the
+ gentleman, and he don't find the parcel, I will say something he
+ won't like to hear.
+
+ "You want a 'civil and delicate declension' for the medical
+ tragedy? Take it--
+
+ "Dear Doctor, I have read your play,
+ Which is a good one in its way,--
+ Purges the eyes and moves the bowels,
+ And drenches handkerchiefs like towels
+ With tears, that, in a flux of grief,
+ Afford hysterical relief
+ To shatter'd nerves and quicken'd pulses,
+ Which your catastrophe convulses.
+ "I like your moral and machinery;
+ Your plot, too, has such scope for scenery!
+ Your dialogue is apt and smart;
+ The play's concoction full of art;
+ Your hero raves, your heroine cries,
+ All stab, and every body dies.
+ In short, your tragedy would be
+ The very thing to hear and see:
+ And for a piece of publication,
+ If I decline on this occasion,
+ It is not that I am not sensible
+ To merits in themselves ostensible,
+ But--and I grieve to speak it--plays
+ Are drugs, mere drugs, sir--now-a-days.
+ I had a heavy loss by 'Manuel,'--
+ Too lucky if it prove not annual,--
+ And S * *, with his 'Orestes,'
+ (Which, by the by, the author's best is,)
+ Has lain so very long on hand
+ That I despair of all demand.
+ I've advertised, but see my books,
+ Or only watch my shopman's looks;--
+ Still Ivan, Ina, and such lumber,
+ My back-shop glut, my shelves encumber.
+ "There's Byron too, who once did better,
+ Has sent me, folded in a letter,
+ A sort of--it's no more a drama
+ Than Darnley, Ivan, or Kehama;
+ So alter'd since last year his pen is,
+ I think he's lost his wits at Venice.
+ In short, sir, what with one and t'other,
+ I dare not venture on another.
+ I write in haste; excuse each blunder;
+ The coaches through the street so thunder!
+ My room's so full--we've Gifford here
+ Reading MS., with Hookham Frere,
+ Pronouncing on the nouns and particles
+ Of some of our forthcoming Articles.
+ "The Quarterly--Ah, sir, if you
+ Had but the genius to review!--
+ A smart critique upon St. Helena,
+ Or if you only would but tell in a
+ Short compass what--but, to resume:
+ As I was saying, sir, the room--
+ The room's so full of wits and bards,
+ Crabbes, Campbells, Crokers, Freres, and Wards,
+ And others, neither bards nor wits:--
+ My humble tenement admits
+ All persons in the dress of gent.,
+ From Mr. Hammond to Dog Dent.
+ "A party dines with me to-day,
+ All clever men, who make their way;
+ They're at this moment in discussion
+ On poor De Staël's late dissolution.
+ Her book, they say, was in advance--
+ Pray Heaven, she tell the truth of France!
+ "Thus run our time and tongues away.--
+ But, to return, sir, to your play:
+ Sorry, sir, but I cannot deal,
+ Unless 'twere acted by O'Neill.
+ My hands so full, my head so busy,
+ I'm almost dead, and always dizzy;
+ And so, with endless truth and hurry,
+ Dear Doctor, I am yours,
+
+ "JOHN MURRAY.
+
+ "P.S. I've done the fourth and last Canto, which amounts to 133
+ stanzas. I desire you to name a price; if you don't, _I_ will; so I
+ advise you in time.
+
+ "Yours, &c.
+
+ "There will be a good many notes."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Among those minor misrepresentations of which it was Lord Byron's fate
+to be the victim, advantage was, at this time, taken of his professed
+distaste to the English, to accuse him of acts of inhospitality, and
+even rudeness, towards some of his fellow-countrymen. How far different
+was his treatment of all who ever visited him, many grateful
+testimonies might be collected to prove; but I shall here content
+myself with selecting a few extracts from an account given me by Mr.
+Henry Joy of a visit which, in company with another English gentleman,
+he paid to the noble poet this summer, at his villa on the banks of the
+Brenta. After mentioning the various civilities they had experienced
+from Lord Byron; and, among others, his having requested them to name
+their own day for dining with him,--"We availed ourselves," says Mr.
+Joy, "of this considerate courtesy by naming the day fixed for our
+return to Padua, when our route would lead us to his door; and we were
+welcomed with all the cordiality which was to be expected from so
+friendly a bidding. Such traits of kindness in such a man deserve to be
+recorded on account of the numerous slanders thrown upon him by some of
+the tribes of tourists, who resented, as a personal affront, his
+resolution to avoid their impertinent inroads upon his retirement. So
+far from any appearance of indiscriminate aversion to his countrymen,
+his enquiries about his friends in England (_quorum pars magna fuisti_)
+were most anxious and particular.
+
+"He expressed some opinions," continues my informant, "on matters of
+taste, which cannot fail to interest his biographer. He contended that
+Sculpture, as an art, was vastly superior to Painting;--a preference
+which is strikingly illustrated by the fact that, in the fourth Canto of
+Childe Harold, he gives the most elaborate and splendid account of
+several statues, and none of any pictures; although Italy is,
+emphatically, the land of painting, and her best statues are derived
+from Greece. By the way, he told us that there were more objects of
+interest in Rome alone than in all Greece from one extremity to the
+other. After regaling us with an excellent dinner, (in which, by the by,
+a very English joint of roast beef showed that he did not extend his
+antipathies to all John-Bullisms,) he took me in his carriage some miles
+of our route towards Padua, after apologising to my fellow-traveller for
+the separation, on the score of his anxiety to hear all he could of his
+friends in England; and I quitted him with a confirmed impression of the
+strong ardour and sincerity of his attachment to those by whom he did
+not fancy himself slighted or ill treated."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 295. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Sept. 4. 1817.
+
+ "Your letter of the 15th has conveyed with its contents the
+ impression of a seal, to which the 'Saracen's Head' is a seraph,
+ and the 'Bull and Mouth' a delicate device. I knew that calumny had
+ sufficiently _blackened_ me of later days, but not that it had
+ given the features as well as complexion of a negro. Poor Augusta
+ is not less, but rather more, shocked than myself, and says 'people
+ seem to have lost their recollection strangely' when they engraved
+ such a 'blackamoor.' Pray don't seal (at least to me) with such a
+ caricature of the human numskull altogether; and if you don't break
+ the seal-cutter's head, at least crack his libel (or likeness, if
+ it should be a likeness) of mine.
+
+ "Mr. Kinnaird is not yet arrived, but expected. He has lost by the
+ way all the tooth-powder, as a letter from Spa informs me.
+
+ "By Mr. Rose I received safely, though tardily, magnesia and
+ tooth-powder, and * * * *. Why do you send me such trash--worse
+ than trash, the Sublime of Mediocrity? Thanks for Lalla, however,
+ which is good; and thanks for the Edinburgh and Quarterly, both
+ very amusing and well-written. Paris in 1815, &c.--good. Modern
+ Greece--good for nothing; written by some one who has never been
+ there, and not being able to manage the Spenser stanza, has
+ invented a thing of his own, consisting of two elegiac stanzas, an
+ heroic line, and an Alexandrine, twisted on a string. Besides, why
+ '_modern_?' You may say _modern Greeks_, but surely _Greece_ itself
+ is rather more ancient than ever it was. Now for business.
+
+ "You offer 1500 guineas for the new Canto: I won't take it. I ask
+ two thousand five hundred guineas for it, which you will either
+ give or not, as you think proper. It concludes the poem, and
+ consists of 144 stanzas. The notes are numerous, and chiefly
+ written by Mr. Hobhouse, whose researches have been indefatigable;
+ and who, I will venture to say, has more real knowledge of Rome and
+ its environs than any Englishman who has been there since Gibbon.
+ By the way, to prevent any mistakes, I think it necessary to state
+ the fact that _he_, Mr. Hobhouse, has no interest whatever in the
+ price or profit to be derived from the copyright of either poem or
+ notes directly or indirectly; so that you are not to suppose that
+ it is by, for, or through him, that I require more for this Canto
+ than the preceding.--No: but if Mr. Eustace was to have had two
+ thousand for a poem on Education; if Mr. Moore is to have three
+ thousand for Lalla, &c.; if Mr. Campbell is to have three thousand
+ for his prose on poetry--I don't mean to disparage these gentlemen
+ in their labours--but I ask the aforesaid price for mine. You will
+ tell me that their productions are considerably _longer_: very
+ true, and when they shorten them, I will lengthen mine, and ask
+ less. You shall submit the MS. to Mr. Gifford, and any other two
+ gentlemen to be named by you, (Mr. Frere, or Mr. Croker, or
+ whomever you please, except such fellows as your * *s and * *s,)
+ and if they pronounce this Canto to be inferior as a _whole_ to the
+ preceding, I will not appeal from their award, but burn the
+ manuscript, and leave things as they are.
+
+ "Yours very truly.
+
+ "P.S. In answer to a former letter, I sent you a short statement of
+ what I thought the state of our present copyright account, viz. six
+ hundred _pounds_ still (or lately) due on Childe Harold, and six
+ hundred _guineas_, Manfred and Tasso, making a total of twelve
+ hundred and thirty pounds. If we agree about the new poem, I shall
+ take the liberty to reserve the choice of the manner in which it
+ should be published, viz. a quarto, certes."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 296. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "La Mira, Sept. 12. 1817.
+
+ "I set out yesterday morning with the intention of paying my
+ respects, and availing myself of your permission to walk over the
+ premises.[7] On arriving at Padua, I found that the march of the
+ Austrian troops had engrossed so many horses[8], that those I could
+ procure were hardly able to crawl; and their weakness, together
+ with the prospect of finding none at all at the post-house of
+ Monselice, and consequently either not arriving that day at Este,
+ or so late as to be unable to return home the same evening, induced
+ me to turn aside in a second visit to Arqua, instead of proceeding
+ onwards; and even thus I hardly got back in time.
+
+ "Next week I shall be obliged to be in Venice to meet Lord Kinnaird
+ and his brother, who are expected in a few days. And this
+ interruption, together with that occasioned by the continued march
+ of the Austrians for the next few days, will not allow me to fix
+ any precise period for availing myself of your kindness, though I
+ should wish to take the earliest opportunity. Perhaps, if absent,
+ you will have the goodness to permit one of your servants to show
+ me the grounds and house, or as much of either as may be
+ convenient; at any rate, I shall take the first occasion possible
+ to go over, and regret very much that I was yesterday prevented.
+
+ "I have the honour to be your obliged," &c.
+
+[Footnote 7: A country-house on the Euganean hills, near Este, which Mr.
+Hoppner, who was then the English Consul-General at Venice, had for some
+time occupied, and which Lord Byron afterwards rented of him, but never
+resided in it.]
+
+[Footnote 8: So great was the demand for horses, on the line of march of
+the Austrians, that all those belonging to private individuals were put
+in requisition for their use, and Lord Byron himself received an order
+to send his for the same purpose. This, however, he positively refused
+to do, adding, that if an attempt were made to take them by force, he
+would shoot them through the head in the middle of the road, rather than
+submit to such an act of tyranny upon a foreigner who was merely a
+temporary resident in the country. Whether his answer was ever reported
+to the higher authorities I know not; but his horses were suffered to
+remain unmolested in his stables.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 297. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "September 15. 1817.
+
+ "I enclose a sheet for correction, if ever you get to another
+ edition. You will observe that the blunder in printing makes it
+ appear as if the Château was _over_ St. Gingo, instead of being on
+ the opposite shore of the Lake, over Clarens. So, separate the
+ paragraphs, otherwise my _to_pography will seem as inaccurate as
+ your _ty_pography on this occasion.
+
+ "The other day I wrote to convey my proposition with regard to the
+ fourth and concluding Canto. I have gone over and extended it to
+ one hundred and fifty stanzas, which is almost as long as the two
+ first were originally, and longer by itself than any of the smaller
+ poems except 'The Corsair.' Mr. Hobhouse has made some very
+ valuable and accurate notes of considerable length, and you may be
+ sure that I will do for the text all that I can to finish with
+ decency. I look upon Childe Harold as my best; and as I begun, I
+ think of concluding with it. But I make no resolutions on that
+ head, as I broke my former intention with regard to 'The Corsair.'
+ However, I fear that I shall never do better; and yet, not being
+ thirty years of age, for some moons to come, one ought to be
+ progressive as far as intellect goes for many a good year. But I
+ have had a devilish deal of tear and wear of mind and body in my
+ time, besides having published too often and much already. God
+ grant me some judgment to do what may be most fitting in that and
+ every thing else, for I doubt my own exceedingly.
+
+ "I have read 'Lalla Rookh,' but not with sufficient attention yet,
+ for I ride about, and lounge, and ponder, and--two or three other
+ things; so that my reading is very desultory, and not so attentive
+ as it used to be. I am very glad to hear of its popularity, for
+ Moore is a very noble fellow in all respects, and will enjoy it
+ without any of the bad feelings which success--good or
+ evil--sometimes engenders in the men of rhyme. Of the poem, itself,
+ I will tell you my opinion when I have mastered it: I say of the
+ _poem_, for I don't like the _prose_ at all; and in the mean time,
+ the 'Fire-worshippers' is the best, and the 'Veiled Prophet' the
+ worst, of the volume.
+
+ "With regard to poetry in general[9], I am convinced, the more I
+ think of it, that he and _all_ of us--Scott, Southey, Wordsworth,
+ Moore, Campbell, I,--are all in the wrong, one as much as another;
+ that we are upon a wrong revolutionary poetical system, or systems,
+ not worth a damn in itself, and from which none but Rogers and
+ Crabbe are free; and that the present and next generations will
+ finally be of this opinion. I am the more confirmed in this by
+ having lately gone over some of our classics, particularly _Pope_,
+ whom I tried in this way,--I took Moore's poems and my own and some
+ others, and went over them side by side with Pope's, and I was
+ really astonished (I ought not to have been so) and mortified at
+ the ineffable distance in point of sense, learning, effect, and
+ even _imagination_, passion, and _invention_, between the little
+ Queen Anne's man, and us of the Lower Empire. Depend upon it, it is
+ all Horace then, and Claudian now, among us; and if I had to begin
+ again, I would mould myself accordingly. Crabbe's the man, but he
+ has got a coarse and impracticable subject, and * * * is retired
+ upon half-pay, and has done enough, unless he were to do as he did
+ formerly."
+
+[Footnote 9: On this paragraph, in the MS. copy of the above letter, I
+find the following note, in the handwriting of Mr. Gifford:--
+
+"There is more good sense, and feeling, and judgment in this passage,
+than in any other I ever read, or Lord Byron wrote."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 298. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "September 17. 1817.
+
+ "Mr. Hobhouse purposes being in England in November; he will bring
+ the fourth Canto with him, notes and all; the text contains one
+ hundred and fifty stanzas, which is long for that measure.
+
+ "With regard to the 'Ariosto of the North,' surely their themes,
+ chivalry, war, and love, were as like as can be; and as to the
+ compliment, if you knew what the Italians think of Ariosto, you
+ would not hesitate about that. But as to their 'measures,' you
+ forget that Ariosto's is an octave stanza, and Scott's any thing
+ but a stanza. If you think Scott will dislike it, say so, and I
+ will expunge. I do not call him the '_Scotch_ Ariosto,' which would
+ be sad _provincial_ eulogy, but the 'Ariosto of the _North_,
+ meaning of all _countries_ that are _not_ the _South_. * *
+
+ "As I have recently troubled you rather frequently, I will
+ conclude, repeating that I am
+
+ "Yours ever," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 299. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "October 12. 1817.
+
+ "Mr. Kinnaird and his brother, Lord Kinnaird, have been here, and
+ are now gone again. All your missives came, except the
+ tooth-powder, of which I request further supplies, at all
+ convenient opportunities; as also of magnesia and soda-powders,
+ both great luxuries here, and neither to be had good, or indeed
+ hardly at all, of the natives. * * *
+
+ "In * *'s Life, I perceive an attack upon the then Committee of
+ D.L. Theatre for acting Bertram, and an attack upon Maturin's
+ Bertram for being acted. Considering all things, this is not very
+ grateful nor graceful on the part of the worthy autobiographer;
+ and I would answer, if I had _not_ obliged him. Putting my own
+ pains to forward the views of * * out of the question, I know that
+ there was every disposition, on the part of the Sub-Committee, to
+ bring forward any production of his, were it feasible. The play he
+ offered, though poetical, did not appear at all practicable, and
+ Bertram did;--and hence this long tirade, which is the last chapter
+ of his vagabond life.
+
+ "As for Bertram, Maturin may defend his own begotten, if he likes
+ it well enough; I leave the Irish clergyman and the new Orator
+ Henley to battle it out between them, satisfied to have done the
+ best I could for _both_. I may say this to _you_, who know it.
+
+ "Mr. * * may console himself with the fervour,--the almost
+ religious fervour of his and W * *'s disciples, as he calls it. If
+ he means that as any proof of their merits, I will find him as much
+ 'fervour' in behalf of Richard Brothers and Joanna Southcote as
+ ever gathered over his pages or round his fire-side.
+
+ "My answer to your proposition about the fourth Canto you will have
+ received, and I await yours;--perhaps we may not agree. I have
+ since written a poem (of 84 octave stanzas), humorous, in or after
+ the excellent manner of Mr. Whistlecraft (whom I take to be Frere),
+ on a Venetian anecdote which amused me:--but till I have your
+ answer, I can say nothing more about it.
+
+ "Mr. Hobhouse does not return to England in November, as he
+ intended, but will winter here and as he is to convey the poem, or
+ poems,--for there may perhaps be more than the two mentioned,
+ (which, by the way, I shall not perhaps include in the same
+ publication or agreement,) I shall not be able to publish so soon
+ as expected; but I suppose there is no harm in the delay.
+
+ "I have _signed_ and sent your former _copyrights_ by Mr. Kinnaird,
+ but _not_ the _receipt_, because the money is not yet paid. Mr.
+ Kinnaird has a power of attorney to sign for me, and will, when
+ necessary.
+
+ "Many thanks for the Edinburgh Review, which is very kind about
+ Manfred, and defends its originality, which I did not know that any
+ body had attacked. I _never read_, and do not know that I ever saw,
+ the 'Faustus of Marlow,' and had, and have, no dramatic works by me
+ in English, except the recent things you sent me; but I heard Mr.
+ Lewis translate verbally some scenes of _Goethe's Faust_ (which
+ were, some good, and some bad) last summer;--which is all I know of
+ the history of that magical personage; and as to the germs of
+ Manfred, they may be found in the Journal which I sent to Mrs.
+ Leigh (part of which you saw) when I went over first the Dent de
+ Jaman, and then the Wengen or Wengeberg Alp and Sheideck, and made
+ the giro of the Jungfrau, Shreckhorn, &c. &c. shortly before I left
+ Switzerland. I have the whole scene of Manfred before me as if it
+ was but yesterday, and could point it out, spot by spot, torrent
+ and all.
+
+ "Of the Prometheus of Æschylus I was passionately fond as a boy (it
+ was one of the Greek plays we read thrice a year at
+ Harrow);--indeed that and the 'Medea' were the only ones, except
+ the 'Seven before Thebes,' which ever much pleased me. As to the
+ 'Faustus of Marlow,' I never read, never saw, nor heard of it--at
+ least, thought of it, except that I think Mr. Gifford mentioned, in
+ a note of his which you sent me, something about the catastrophe;
+ but not as having any thing to do with mine, which may or may not
+ resemble it, for any thing I know.
+
+ "The Prometheus, if not exactly in my plan, has always been so much
+ in my head, that I can easily conceive its influence over all or
+ any thing that I have written;--but I deny Marlow and his progeny,
+ and beg that you will do the same.
+
+ "If you can send me the paper in question[10], which the Edinburgh
+ Review mentions, _do_. The review in the magazine you say was
+ written by Wilson? it had all the air of being a poet's, and was a
+ very good one. The Edinburgh Review I take to be Jeffrey's own by
+ its friendliness. I wonder they thought it worth while to do so, so
+ soon after the former; but it was evidently with a good motive.
+
+ "I saw Hoppner the other day, whose country-house at Este I have
+ taken for two years. If you come out next summer, let me know in
+ time. Love to Gifford.
+
+ "Yours ever truly.
+
+ "Crabbe, Malcolm, Hamilton, and Chantrey,
+ Are all partakers of my pantry.
+
+ These two lines are omitted in your letter to the doctor, after--
+
+ "All clever men who make their way."
+
+[Footnote 10: A paper in the Edinburgh Magazine, in which it was
+suggested that the general conception of Manfred, and much of what is
+excellent in the manner of its execution, had been borrowed from "The
+Tragical History of Dr. Faustus," of Marlow.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 300. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, October 23. 1817.
+
+ "Your two letters are before me, and our bargain is so far
+ concluded. How sorry I am to hear that Gifford is unwell! Pray tell
+ me he is better: I hope it is nothing but _cold_. As you say his
+ illness originates in cold, I trust it will get no further.
+
+ "Mr. Whistlecraft has no greater admirer than myself: I have
+ written a story in 89 stanzas, in imitation of him, called _Beppo_,
+ (the short name for Giuseppe, that is, the _Joe_ of the Italian
+ Joseph,) which I shall throw you into the balance of the fourth
+ Canto, to help you round to your money; but you perhaps had better
+ publish it anonymously; but this we will see to by and by.
+
+ "In the Notes to Canto fourth, Mr. Hobhouse has pointed out
+ _several errors_ of _Gibbon_. You may depend upon H.'s research and
+ accuracy. You may print it in what shape you please.
+
+ "With regard to a future large edition, you may print all, or any
+ thing, except 'English Bards,' to the republication of which at
+ _no_ time will I consent. I would not reprint them on any
+ consideration. I don't think them good for much, even in point of
+ poetry; and, as to other things, you are to recollect that I gave
+ up the publication on account of the _Hollands_, and I do not think
+ that any time or circumstances can neutralise the suppression. Add
+ to which, that, after being on terms with almost all the bards and
+ critics of the day, it would be savage at any time, but worst of
+ all _now_, to revive this foolish lampoon.
+
+ "The review of Manfred came very safely, and I am much pleased with
+ it. It is odd that they should say (that is somebody in a magazine
+ whom the Edinburgh controverts) that it was taken from Marlow's
+ Faust, which I never read nor saw. An American, who came the other
+ day from Germany, told Mr. Hobhouse that Manfred was taken from
+ Goethe's Faust. The devil may take both the Faustuses, German and
+ English--I have taken neither.
+
+ "Will you send to _Hanson_, and say that he has not written since
+ 9th September?--at least I have had no letter since, to my great
+ surprise.
+
+ "Will you desire Messrs. Morland to send out whatever additional
+ sums have or may be paid in credit immediately, and always to their
+ Venice correspondents? It is two months ago that they sent me out
+ an additional credit for _one thousand pounds_. I was very glad of
+ it, but I don't know how the devil it came; for I can only make out
+ 500 of Hanson's payment, and I had thought the other 500 came from
+ you; but it did not, it seems, as, by yours of the 7th instant,
+ you have only just paid the 1230_l._ balance.
+
+ "Mr. Kinnaird is on his way home with the assignments. I can fix no
+ time for the arrival of Canto fourth, which depends on the journey
+ of Mr. Hobhouse home; and I do not think that this will be
+ immediate.
+
+ "Yours in great haste and very truly,
+
+ "B.
+
+ "P.S. Morlands have not yet written to my bankers apprising the
+ payment of your balances: pray desire them to do so.
+
+ "Ask them about the _previous_ thousand--of which I know 500 came
+ from Hanson's--and make out the other 500--that is, whence it
+ came."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 301. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, November 15. 1817.
+
+ "Mr. Kinnaird has probably returned to England by this time, and
+ will have conveyed to you any tidings you may wish to have of us
+ and ours. I have come back to Venice for the winter. Mr. Hobhouse
+ will probably set off in December, but what day or week I know not.
+ He is my opposite neighbour at present.
+
+ "I wrote yesterday in some perplexity, and no very good humour, to
+ Mr. Kinnaird, to inform me about Newstead and the Hansons, of which
+ and whom I hear nothing since his departure from this place, except
+ in a few unintelligible words from an unintelligible woman.
+
+ "I am as sorry to hear of Dr. Polidori's accident as one can be
+ for a person for whom one has a dislike, and something of contempt.
+ When he gets well, tell me, and how he gets on in the sick line.
+ Poor fellow! how came he to fix there?
+
+ "I fear the Doctor's skill at Norwich
+ Will hardly salt the Doctor's porridge.
+
+ Methought he was going to the Brazils to give the Portuguese physic
+ (of which they are fond to desperation) with the Danish consul.
+
+ "Your new Canto has expanded to one hundred and sixty-seven
+ stanzas. It will be long, you see; and as for the notes by
+ Hobhouse, I suspect they will be of the heroic size. You must keep
+ Mr. * * in good humour, for he is devilish touchy yet about your
+ Review and all which it inherits, including the editor, the
+ Admiralty, and its bookseller. I used to think that _I_ was a good
+ deal of an author in _amour propre_ and _noli me tangere_; but
+ these prose fellows are worst, after all, about their little
+ comforts.
+
+ "Do you remember my mentioning, some months ago, the Marquis
+ Moncada--a Spaniard of distinction and fourscore years, my summer
+ neighbour at La Mira? Well, about six weeks ago, he fell in love
+ with a Venetian girl of family, and no fortune or character; took
+ her into his mansion; quarrelled with all his former friends for
+ giving him advice (except me who gave him none), and installed her
+ present concubine and future wife and mistress of himself and
+ furniture. At the end of a month, in which she demeaned herself as
+ ill as possible, he found out a correspondence between her and
+ some former keeper, and after nearly strangling, turned her out of
+ the house, to the great scandal of the keeping part of the town,
+ and with a prodigious éclat, which has occupied all the canals and
+ coffee-houses in Venice. He said she wanted to poison him; and she
+ says--God knows what; but between them they have made a great deal
+ of noise. I know a little of both the parties: Moncada seemed a
+ very sensible old man, a character which he has not quite kept up
+ on this occasion; and the woman is rather showy than pretty. For
+ the honour of religion, she was bred in a convent, and for the
+ credit of Great Britain, taught by an Englishwoman.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 302. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, December 3. 1817.
+
+ "A Venetian lady, learned and somewhat stricken in years, having,
+ in her intervals of love and devotion, taken upon her to translate
+ the Letters and write the Life of Lady Mary Wortley Montague,--to
+ which undertaking there are two obstacles, firstly, ignorance of
+ English, and, secondly, a total dearth of information on the
+ subject of her projected biography, has applied to me for facts or
+ falsities upon this promising project. Lady Montague lived the last
+ twenty or more years of her life in or near Venice, I believe; but
+ here they know nothing, and remember nothing, for the story of
+ to-day is succeeded by the scandal of to-morrow; and the wit, and
+ beauty, and gallantry, which might render your countrywoman
+ notorious in her own country, must have been _here_ no great
+ distinction--because the first is in no request, and the two latter
+ are common to all women, or at least the last of them. If you can
+ therefore tell me any thing, or get any thing told, of Lady Wortley
+ Montague, I shall take it as a favour, and will transfer and
+ translate it to the 'Dama' in question. And I pray you besides to
+ send me, by some quick and safe voyager, the edition of her
+ Letters, and the stupid Life, by _Dr. Dallaway_, published by her
+ proud and foolish family.
+
+ "The death of the Princess Charlotte has been a shock even here,
+ and must have been an earthquake at home. The Courier's list of
+ some three hundred heirs to the crown (including the house of
+ Wirtemberg, with that * * *, P----, of disreputable memory, whom I
+ remember seeing at various balls during the visit of the
+ Muscovites, &c. in 1814) must be very consolatory to all true
+ lieges, as well as foreigners, except Signor Travis, a rich Jew
+ merchant of this city, who complains grievously of the length of
+ British mourning, which has countermanded all the silks which he
+ was on the point of transmitting, for a year to come. The death of
+ this poor girl is melancholy in every respect, dying at twenty or
+ so, in childbed--of a _boy_ too, a present princess and future
+ queen, and just as she began to be happy, and to enjoy herself, and
+ the hopes which she inspired.
+
+ "I think, as far as I can recollect, she is the first royal defunct
+ in childbed upon record in _our_ history. I feel sorry in every
+ respect--for the loss of a female reign, and a woman hitherto
+ harmless; and all the lost rejoicings, and addresses, and
+ drunkenness, and disbursements, of John Bull on the occasion.
+
+ "The Prince will marry again, after divorcing his wife, and Mr.
+ Southey will write an elegy now, and an ode then; the Quarterly
+ will have an article against the press, and the Edinburgh an
+ article, _half_ and _half_, about reform and right of divorce; the
+ British will give you Dr. Chalmers's funeral sermon much commended,
+ with a place in the stars for deceased royalty; and the Morning
+ Post will have already yelled forth its 'syllables of dolour.'
+
+ "Woe, woe, Nealliny!--the young Nealliny!
+
+ "It is some time since I have heard from you: are you in bad
+ humour? I suppose so. I have been so myself, and it is your turn
+ now, and by and by mine will come round again. Yours truly,
+
+ "B.
+
+ "P.S. Countess Albrizzi, come back from Paris, has brought me a
+ medal of himself, a present from Denon to me, and a likeness of Mr.
+ Rogers (belonging to her), by Denon also."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 303. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "Venice, December 15. 1817.
+
+ "I should have thanked you before, for your favour a few days ago,
+ had I not been in the intention of paying my respects, personally,
+ this evening, from which I am deterred by the recollection that you
+ will probably be at the Count Goess's this evening, which has made
+ me postpone my intrusion.
+
+ "I think your Elegy a remarkably good one, not only as a
+ composition, but both the politics and poetry contain a far greater
+ portion of truth and generosity than belongs to the times, or to
+ the professors of these opposite pursuits, which usually agree only
+ in one point, as extremes meet. I do not know whether you wished me
+ to retain the copy, but I shall retain it till you tell me
+ otherwise; and am very much obliged by the perusal.
+
+ "My own sentiments on Venice, &c., such as they are, I had already
+ thrown into verse last summer, in the fourth Canto of Childe
+ Harold, now in preparation for the press; and I think much more
+ highly of them, for being in coincidence with yours.
+
+ "Believe me yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 304. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, January 8. 1818.
+
+ "My dear Mr. Murray,
+ You're in a damn'd hurry
+ To set up this ultimate Canto;
+ But (if they don't rob us)
+ You'll see Mr. Hobhouse
+ Will bring it safe in his portmanteau.
+
+ "For the Journal you hint of,
+ As ready to print off,
+ No doubt you do right to commend it;
+ But as yet I have writ off
+ The devil a bit of
+ Our 'Beppo;'--when copied, I'll send it.
+
+ "Then you've * * * Tour,--
+ No great things, so be sure,
+ You could hardly begin with a less work;
+ For the pompous rascallion,
+ Who don't speak Italian
+ Nor French, must have scribbled by guess-work.
+
+ "You can make any loss up
+ With 'Spence' and his gossip,
+ A work which must surely succeed;
+ Then Queen Mary's Epistle-craft,
+ With the new 'Fytte' of 'Whistlecraft,'
+ Must make people purchase and read.
+
+ "Then you've General Gordon,
+ Who girded his sword on,
+ To serve with a Muscovite master,
+ And help him to polish
+ A nation so owlish,
+ They thought shaving their beards a disaster.
+
+ "For the man, '_poor and shrewd_[11],'
+ With whom you'd conclude
+ A compact without more delay,
+ Perhaps some such pen is
+ Still extant in Venice;
+ But please, sir, to mention _your pay_."
+
+
+[Footnote 11: "Vide your letter."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 305. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, January 19. 1818.
+
+ "I send you the Story[12] in three other separate covers. It won't
+ do for your Journal, being full of political allusions. _Print
+ alone, without name_; alter nothing; get a scholar to see that the
+ _Italian phrases_ are correctly published, (your printing, by the
+ way, always makes me ill with its eternal blunders, which are
+ incessant,) and God speed you. Hobhouse left Venice a fortnight
+ ago, saving two days. I have heard nothing of or from him.
+
+ "Yours, &c.
+
+ "He has the whole of the MSS.; so put up prayers in your back shop,
+ or in the printer's 'Chapel.'"
+
+[Footnote 12: Beppo.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 306. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, January 27. 1818.
+
+ "My father--that is, my Armenian father, Padre Pasquali--in the
+ name of all the other fathers of our Convent, sends you the
+ enclosed, greeting.
+
+ "Inasmuch as it has pleased the translators of the long-lost and
+ lately-found portions of the text of Eusebius to put forth the
+ enclosed prospectus, of which I send six copies, you are hereby
+ implored to obtain subscribers in the two Universities, and among
+ the learned, and the unlearned who would unlearn their
+ ignorance--This _they_ (the Convent) request, _I_ request, and _do
+ you_ request.
+
+ "I sent you Beppo some weeks agone. You must publish it alone; it
+ has politics and ferocity, and won't do for your isthmus of a
+ Journal.
+
+ "Mr. Hobhouse, if the Alps have not broken his neck, is, or ought
+ to be, swimming with my commentaries and his own coat of mail in
+ his teeth and right hand, in a cork jacket, between Calais and
+ Dover.
+
+ "It is the height of the Carnival, and I am in the extreme and
+ agonies of a new intrigue with I don't exactly know whom or what,
+ except that she is insatiate of love, and won't take money, and has
+ light hair and blue eyes, which are not common here, and that I met
+ her at the Masque, and that when her mask is off, I am as wise as
+ ever. I shall make what I can of the remainder of my youth."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 307. TO MR. MOORE.
+
+ "Venice, February 2. 1818.
+
+ "Your letter of December 8th arrived but this day, by some delay,
+ common but inexplicable. Your domestic calamity is very grievous,
+ and I feel with you as much as I _dare_ feel at all. Throughout
+ life, your loss must be my loss, and your gain my gain; and, though
+ my heart may ebb, there will always be a drop for you among the
+ dregs.
+
+ "I know how to feel with you, because (selfishness being always the
+ substratum of our damnable clay) I am quite wrapt up in my own
+ children. Besides my little legitimate, I have made unto myself an
+ _il_legitimate since (to say nothing of one before[13]), and I look
+ forward to one of these as the pillar of my old age, supposing that
+ I ever reach--which I hope I never shall--that desolating period. I
+ have a great love for my little Ada, though perhaps she may torture
+ me, like * * *.
+
+ "Your offered address will be as acceptable as you can wish. I
+ don't much care what the wretches of the world think of me--all
+ _that's_ past. But I care a good deal what _you_ think of me, and,
+ so, say what you like. You _know_ that I am not sullen; and, as to
+ being _savage_, such things depend on circumstances. However, as to
+ being in good humour in _your_ society, there is no great merit in
+ that, because it would be an effort, or an insanity, to be
+ otherwise.
+
+ "I don't know what Murray may have been saying or quoting.[14] I
+ called Crabbe and Sam the fathers of present Poesy; and said, that
+ I thought--except them--_all_ of '_us youth_' were on a wrong tack.
+ But I never said that we did not sail well. Our fame will be hurt
+ by _admiration_ and _imitation_. When I say _our_, I mean _all_
+ (Lakers included), except the postscript of the Augustans. The next
+ generation (from the quantity and facility of imitation) will
+ tumble and break their necks off our Pegasus, who runs away with
+ us; but we keep the _saddle_, because we broke the rascal and can
+ ride. But though easy to mount, he is the devil to guide; and the
+ next fellows must go back to the riding-school and the manège, and
+ learn to ride the 'great horse.'
+
+ "Talking of horses, by the way, I have transported my own, four in
+ number, to the Lido (_beach_ in English), a strip of some ten miles
+ along the Adriatic, a mile or two from the city; so that I not only
+ get a row in my gondola, but a spanking gallop of some miles daily
+ along a firm and solitary beach, from the fortress to Malamocco,
+ the which contributes considerably to my health and spirits.
+
+ "I have hardly had a wink of sleep this week past. We are in the
+ agonies of the Carnival's last days, and I must be up all night
+ again, as well as to-morrow. I have had some curious masking
+ adventures this Carnival; but, as they are not yet over, I shall
+ not say on. I will work the mine of my youth to the last veins of
+ the ore, and then--good night. I have lived, and am content.
+
+ "Hobhouse went away before the Carnival began, so that he had
+ little or no fun. Besides, it requires some time to be
+ thoroughgoing with the Venetians; but of all this anon, in some
+ other letter.
+
+ "I must dress for the evening. There is an opera and ridotto, and I
+ know not what, besides balls; and so, ever and ever yours,
+
+ "B.
+
+ "P.S. I send this without revision, so excuse errors. I delight in
+ the fame and fortune of Lalla, and again congratulate you on your
+ well-merited success."
+
+[Footnote 13: This possibly may have been the subject of the Poem given
+in p. 152. of the first volume.]
+
+[Footnote 14: Having seen by accident the passage in one of his letters
+to Mr. Murray, in which he denounces, as false and worthless, the
+poetical system on which the greater number of his contemporaries, as
+well as himself, founded their reputation, I took an opportunity, in the
+next letter I wrote to him, of jesting a little on this opinion, and his
+motives for it. It was, no doubt (I ventured to say), excellent policy
+in him, who had made sure of his own immortality in this style of
+writing, thus to _throw overboard_ all _us poor devils_, who were
+embarked with him. He was, in fact, I added, behaving towards us much in
+the manner of the methodist preacher who said to his congregation--"You
+may think, at the Last Day, to get to heaven by laying hold on my
+skirts; but I'll cheat you all, for I'll wear a spencer, I'll wear a
+spencer!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Of his daily rides on the Lido, which he mentions in this letter, the
+following account, by a gentleman who lived a good deal with him at
+Venice, will be found not a little interesting:--
+
+"Almost immediately after Mr. Hobhouse's departure, Lord Byron proposed
+to me to accompany him in his rides on the Lido. One of the long narrow
+islands which separate the Lagune, in the midst of which Venice stands,
+from the Adriatic, is more particularly distinguished by this name. At
+one extremity is a fortification, which, with the Castle of St. Andrea
+on an island on the opposite side, defends the nearest entrance to the
+city from the sea. In times of peace this fortification is almost
+dismantled, and Lord Byron had hired here of the Commandant an
+unoccupied stable, where he kept his horses. The distance from the city
+was not very considerable; it was much less than to the Terra Firma,
+and, as far as it went, the spot was not ineligible for riding.
+
+"Every day that the weather would permit, Lord Byron called for me in
+his gondola, and we found the horses waiting for us outside of the fort.
+We rode as far as we could along the sea-shore, and then on a kind of
+dyke, or embankment, which has been raised where the island was very
+narrow, as far as another small fort about half way between the
+principal one which I have already mentioned, and the town or village of
+Malamocco, which is near the other extremity of the island,--the
+distance between the two forts being about three miles.
+
+"On the land side of the embankment, not far from the smaller fort, was
+a boundary stone which probably marked some division of property,--all
+the side of the island nearest the Lagune being divided into gardens for
+the cultivation of vegetables for the Venetian markets. At the foot of
+this stone Lord Byron repeatedly told me that I should cause him to be
+interred, if he should die in Venice, or its neighbourhood, during my
+residence there; and he appeared to think, as he was not a Catholic,
+that, on the part of the government, there could be no obstacle to his
+interment in an unhallowed spot of ground by the sea-side. At all
+events, I was to overcome whatever difficulties might be raised on this
+account. I was, by no means, he repeatedly told me, to allow his body to
+be removed to England, nor permit any of his family to interfere with
+his funeral.
+
+"Nothing could be more delightful than these rides on the Lido were to
+me. We were from half to three quarters of an hour crossing the water,
+during which his conversation was always most amusing and interesting.
+Sometimes he would bring with him any new book he had received, and read
+to me the passages which most struck him. Often he would repeat to me
+whole stanzas of the poems he was engaged in writing, as he had composed
+them on the preceding evening; and this was the more interesting to me,
+because I could frequently trace in them some idea which he had started
+in our conversation of the preceding day, or some remark, the effect of
+which he had been evidently trying upon me. Occasionally, too, he spoke
+of his own affairs, making me repeat all I had heard with regard to
+him, and desiring that I would not spare him, but let him know the worst
+that was said."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 308. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, Feb. 20. 1818.
+
+ "I have to thank Mr. Croker for the arrival, and you for the
+ contents, of the parcel which came last week, much quicker than any
+ before, owing to Mr. Croker's kind attention and the official
+ exterior of the bags; and all safe, except much friction amongst
+ the magnesia, of which only two bottles came entire; but it is all
+ very well, and I am exceedingly obliged to you.
+
+ "The books I have read, or rather am reading. Pray, who may be the
+ Sexagenarian, whose gossip is very amusing? Many of his sketches I
+ recognise, particularly Gifford, Mackintosh, Drummond, Dutens, H.
+ Walpole, Mrs. Inchbald, Opie, &c., with the Scotts, Loughborough,
+ and most of the divines and lawyers, besides a few shorter hints of
+ authors, and a few lines about a certain '_noble author_,'
+ characterised as malignant and sceptical, according to the good old
+ story, 'as it was in the beginning, is now, but _not_ always shall
+ be:' do you know such a person, Master Murray? eh?--And pray, of
+ the booksellers, which be _you_? the dry, the dirty, the honest,
+ the opulent, the finical, the splendid, or the coxcomb bookseller?
+ Stap my vitals, but the author grows scurrilous in his grand
+ climacteric!
+
+ "I remember to have seen Porson at Cambridge, in the hall of our
+ college, and in private parties, but not frequently; and I never
+ can recollect him except as drunk or brutal, and generally both: I
+ mean in an evening, for in the hall he dined at the Dean's table,
+ and I at the Vice-master's, so that I was not near him; and he then
+ and there appeared sober in his demeanour, nor did I ever hear of
+ excess or outrage on his part in public,--commons, college, or
+ chapel; but I have seen him in a private party of undergraduates,
+ many of them fresh men and strangers, take up a poker to one of
+ them, and heard him use language as blackguard as his action. I
+ have seen Sheridan drunk, too, with all the world; but his
+ intoxication was that of Bacchus, and Porson's that of Silenus. Of
+ all the disgusting brutes, sulky, abusive, and intolerable, Porson
+ was the most bestial, as far as the few times that I saw him went,
+ which were only at William Bankes's (the Nubian discoverer's)
+ rooms. I saw him once go away in a rage, because nobody knew the
+ name of the 'Cobbler of Messina,' insulting their ignorance with
+ the most vulgar terms of reprobation. He was tolerated in this
+ state amongst the young men for his talents, as the Turks think a
+ madman inspired, and bear with him. He used to recite, or rather
+ vomit, pages of all languages, and could hiccup Greek like a Helot;
+ and certainly Sparta never shocked her children with a grosser
+ exhibition than this man's intoxication.
+
+ "I perceive, in the book you sent me, a long account of him, which
+ is very savage. I cannot judge, as I never saw him sober, except in
+ _hall_ or combination-room; and then I was never near enough to
+ hear, and hardly to see him. Of his drunken deportment, I can be
+ sure, because I saw it.
+
+ "With the Reviews I have been much entertained. It requires to be
+ as far from England as I am to relish a periodical paper properly:
+ it is like soda-water in an Italian summer. But what cruel work you
+ make with Lady * * * *! You should recollect that she is a woman;
+ though, to be sure, they are now and then very provoking; still, as
+ authoresses, they can do no great harm; and I think it a pity so
+ much good invective should have been laid out upon her, when there
+ is such a fine field of us Jacobin gentlemen for you to work upon.
+
+ "I heard from Moore lately, and was sorry to be made aware of his
+ domestic loss. Thus it is--'medio de fonte leporum'--in the acmé of
+ his fame and his happiness comes a drawback as usual.
+
+ "Mr. Hoppner, whom I saw this morning, has been made the father of
+ a very fine boy[15].--Mother and child doing very well indeed. By
+ this time Hobhouse should be with you, and also certain packets,
+ letters, &c. of mine, sent since his departure.--I am not at all
+ well in health within this last eight days. My remembrances to
+ Gifford and all friends.
+
+ "Yours, &c.
+
+ "B.
+
+ "P.S. In the course of a month or two, Hanson will have probably to
+ send off a clerk with conveyances to sign (Newstead being sold in
+ November last for ninety-four thousand five hundred pounds), in
+ which case I supplicate supplies of articles as usual, for which,
+ desire Mr. Kinnaird to settle from funds in their bank, and deduct
+ from my account with him.
+
+ "P.S. To-morrow night I am going to see 'Otello,' an opera from our
+ 'Othello,' and one of Rossini's best, it is said. It will be
+ curious to see in Venice the Venetian story itself represented,
+ besides to discover what they will make of Shakspeare in music."
+
+[Footnote 15: On the birth of this child, who was christened John
+William Rizzo, Lord Byron wrote the four following lines, which are in
+no other respect remarkable than that they were thought worthy of being
+metrically translated into no less than ten different languages; namely,
+Greek, Latin, Italian (also in the Venetian dialect), German, French,
+Spanish, Illyrian, Hebrew, Armenian, and Samaritan:--
+
+ "His father's sense, his mother's grace
+ In him, I hope, will always fit so;
+ With (still to keep him in good case)
+ The health and appetite of Rizzo."
+
+The original lines, with the different versions just mentioned, were
+printed, in a small neat volume (which now lies before me), in the
+seminary of Padua.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 309. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "Venice, February 28. 1818.
+
+ "My dear Sir,
+
+ "Our friend, il Conte M., threw me into a cold sweat last night, by
+ telling me of a menaced version of Manfred (in Venetian, I hope, to
+ complete the thing) by some Italian, who had sent it to you for
+ correction, which is the reason why I take the liberty of troubling
+ you on the subject. If you have any means of communication with the
+ man, would you permit me to convey to him the offer of any price he
+ may obtain or think to obtain for his project, provided he will
+ throw his translation into the fire[16], and promise not to
+ undertake any other of that or any other of _my_ things: I will
+ send his money immediately on this condition.
+
+ "As I did not write _to_ the Italians, nor _for_ the Italians, nor
+ _of_ the Italians, (except in a poem not yet published, where I
+ have said all the good I know or do not know of them, and none of
+ the harm,) I confess I wish that they would let me alone, and not
+ drag me into their arena as one of the gladiators, in a silly
+ contest which I neither understand nor have ever interfered with,
+ having kept clear of all their literary parties, both here and at
+ Milan, and elsewhere.--I came into Italy to feel the climate and be
+ quiet, if possible. Mossi's translation I would have prevented, if
+ I had known it, or could have done so; and I trust that I shall yet
+ be in time to stop this new gentleman, of whom I heard yesterday
+ for the first time. He will only hurt himself, and do no good to
+ his party, for in _party_ the whole thing originates. Our modes of
+ thinking and writing are so unutterably different, that I can
+ conceive no greater absurdity than attempting to make any approach
+ between the English and Italian poetry of the present day. I like
+ the people very much, and their literature very much, but I am not
+ the least ambitious of being the subject of their discussions
+ literary and personal (which appear to be pretty much the same
+ thing, as is the case in most countries); and if you can aid me in
+ impeding this publication, you will add to much kindness already
+ received from you by yours Ever and truly,
+
+ "BYRON.
+
+ "P.S. How is _the_ son, and mamma? Well, I dare say."
+
+[Footnote 16: Having ascertained that the utmost this translator could
+expect to make by his manuscript was two hundred francs, Lord Byron
+offered him that sum, if he would desist from publishing. The Italian,
+however, held out for more; nor could he be brought to terms, till it
+was intimated to him pretty plainly from Lord Byron that, should the
+publication be persisted in, he would horsewhip him the very first time
+they met. Being but little inclined to suffer martyrdom in the cause,
+the translator accepted the two hundred francs, and delivered up his
+manuscript, entering at the same time into a written engagement never to
+translate any other of the noble poet's works.
+
+Of the qualifications of this person as a translator of English poetry,
+some idea may be formed from the difficulty he found himself under
+respecting the meaning of a line in the Incantation in Manfred,--"And
+the wisp on the morass,"--which he requested of Mr. Hoppner to expound
+to him, not having been able to find in the dictionaries to which he had
+access any other signification of the word "wisp" than "a bundle of
+straw."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 310. TO MR. ROGERS.
+
+ "Venice, March 3. 1828.
+
+ "I have not, as you say, 'taken to wife the Adriatic.' I heard of
+ Moore's loss from himself in a letter which was delayed upon the
+ road three months. I was sincerely sorry for it, but in such cases
+ what are words?
+
+ "The villa you speak of is one at Este, which Mr. Hoppner
+ (Consul-general here) has transferred to me. I have taken it for
+ two years as a place of Villeggiatura. The situation is very
+ beautiful, indeed, among the Euganean hills, and the house very
+ fair. The vines are luxuriant to a great degree, and all the fruits
+ of the earth abundant. It is close to the old castle of the Estes,
+ or Guelphs, and within a few miles of Arqua, which I have visited
+ twice, and hope to visit often.
+
+ "Last summer (except an excursion to Rome) I passed upon the
+ Brenta. In Venice I winter, transporting my horses to the Lido,
+ bordering the Adriatic (where the fort is), so that I get a gallop
+ of some miles daily along the strip of beach which reaches to
+ Malamocco, when in health; but within these few weeks I have been
+ unwell. At present I am getting better. The Carnival was short, but
+ a good one. I don't go out much, except during the time of masques;
+ but there are one or two conversazioni, where I go regularly, just
+ to keep up the system; as I had letters to their givers; and they
+ are particular on such points; and now and then, though very
+ rarely, to the Governor's.
+
+ "It is a very good place for women. I like the dialect and their
+ manner very much. There is a _naïveté_ about them which is very
+ winning, and the romance of the place is a mighty adjunct; the _bel
+ sangue_ is not, however, now amongst the _dame_ or higher orders;
+ but all under _i fazzioli_, or kerchiefs (a white kind of veil
+ which the lower orders wear upon their heads);--the _vesta
+ zendale_, or old national female costume, is no more. The city,
+ however, is decaying daily, and does not gain in population.
+ However, I prefer it to any other in Italy; and here have I pitched
+ my staff, and here do I purpose to reside for the remainder of my
+ life, unless events, connected with business not to be transacted
+ out of England, compel me to return for that purpose; otherwise I
+ have few regrets, and no desires to visit it again for its own
+ sake. I shall probably be obliged to do so, to sign papers for my
+ affairs, and a proxy for the Whigs, and to see Mr. Waite, for I
+ can't find a good dentist here, and every two or three years one
+ ought to consult one. About seeing my children I must take my
+ chance. One I shall have sent here; and I shall be very happy to
+ see the legitimate one, when God pleases, which he perhaps will
+ some day or other. As for my mathematical * * *, I am as well
+ without her.
+
+ "Your account of your visit to Fonthill is very striking: could you
+ beg of _him_ for _me_ a copy in MS. of the remaining _Tales_?[17] I
+ think I deserve them, as a strenuous and public admirer of the
+ first one. I will return it when read, and make no ill use of the
+ copy, if granted. Murray would send me out any thing safely. If
+ ever I return to England, I should like very much to see the
+ author, with his permission. In the mean time, you could not oblige
+ me more than by obtaining me the perusal I request, in French or
+ English,--all's one for that, though I prefer Italian to either. I
+ have a French copy of Vathek which I bought at Lausanne. I can read
+ French with great pleasure and facility, though I neither speak nor
+ write it. Now Italian I _can_ speak with some fluency, and write
+ sufficiently for my purposes, but I don't like their _modern_ prose
+ at all; it is very heavy, and so different from Machiavelli.
+
+ "They say Francis is Junius;--I think it looks like it. I remember
+ meeting him at Earl Grey's at dinner. Has not he lately married a
+ young woman; and was not he Madame Talleyrand's _cavaliere
+ servente_ in India years ago?
+
+ "I read my death in the papers, which was not true. I see they are
+ marrying the remaining singleness of the royal family. They have
+ brought out Fazio with great and deserved success at Covent Garden:
+ that's a good sign. I tried, during the directory, to have it done
+ at Drury Lane, but was overruled. If you think of coming into this
+ country, you will let me know perhaps beforehand. I suppose Moore
+ won't move. Rose is here. I saw him the other night at Madame
+ Albrizzi's; he talks of returning in May. My love to the Hollands.
+
+ "Ever, &c.
+
+ "P.S. They have been crucifying Othello into an opera (_Otello_, by
+ Rossini): the music good, but lugubrious; but as for the words, all
+ the real scenes with Iago cut out, and the greatest nonsense
+ instead; the handkerchief turned into a _billet-doux_, and the
+ first singer would not _black_ his face, for some exquisite reasons
+ assigned in the preface. Singing, dresses, and music, very good."
+
+[Footnote 17: A continuation of Vathek, by the author of that very
+striking and powerful production. The "Tales" of which this unpublished
+sequel consists are, I understand, those supposed to have been related
+by the Princes in the Hall of Eblis.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 311. TO MR. MOORE.
+
+ "Venice, March 16. 1818.
+
+ "My dear Tom,
+
+ "Since my last, which I hope that you have received, I have had a
+ letter from our friend Samuel. He talks of Italy this summer--won't
+ you come with him? I don't know whether you would like our Italian
+ way of life or not.
+
+ "They are an odd people. The other day I was telling a girl, 'You
+ must not come to-morrow, because Margueritta is coming at such a
+ time,'--(they are both about five feet ten inches high, with great
+ black eyes and fine figures--fit to breed gladiators from--and I
+ had some difficulty to prevent a battle upon a rencontre once
+ before,)--'unless you promise to be friends, and'--the answer was
+ an interruption, by a declaration of war against the other, which
+ she said would be a 'Guerra di Candia.' Is it not odd, that the
+ lower order of Venetians should still allude proverbially to that
+ famous contest, so glorious and so fatal to the Republic?
+
+ "They have singular expressions, like all the Italians. For
+ example, 'Viscere'--as we would say, 'My love,' or 'My heart,' as
+ an expression of tenderness. Also, 'I would go for you into the
+ midst of a hundred _knives_.'--'_Mazza ben_,' excessive
+ attachment,--literally, 'I wish you well even to killing.' Then
+ they say (instead of our way, 'Do you think I would do you so much
+ harm?') 'Do you think I would _assassinate_ you in such a
+ manner?'--'Tempo _perfido_,' bad weather; 'Strade _perfide_,' bad
+ roads,--with a thousand other allusions and metaphors, taken from
+ the state of society and habits in the middle ages.
+
+ "I am not so sure about _mazza_, whether it don't mean _massa_,
+ _i.e._ a great deal, a _mass_, instead of the interpretation I have
+ given it. But of the other phrases I am sure.
+
+ "Three o' th' clock--I must 'to bed, to bed, to bed,' as mother S *
+ * (that tragical friend of the mathematical * * *) says.
+
+ "Have you ever seen--I forget what or whom--no matter. They tell me
+ Lady Melbourne is very unwell. I shall be so sorry. She was my
+ greatest _friend_, of the feminine gender:--when I say 'friend,' I
+ mean _not_ mistress, for that's the antipode. Tell me all about you
+ and every body--how Sam is--how you like your neighbours, the
+ Marquis and Marchesa, &c. &c.
+
+ "Ever," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 312. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, March 25. 1818.
+
+ "I have your letter, with the account of 'Beppo,' for which I sent
+ you four new stanzas a fortnight ago, in case you print, or
+ reprint.
+
+ "Croker's is a good guess; but the style is not English, it is
+ Italian;--Berni is the original of _all_. Whistlecraft was _my_
+ immediate _model_! Rose's 'Animali' I never saw till a few days
+ ago,--they are excellent. But (as I said above) Berni is the father
+ of that kind of writing, which, I think, suits our language, too,
+ very well;--we shall see by the experiment. If it does, I shall
+ send you a volume in a year or two, for I know the Italian way of
+ life well, and in time may know it yet better; and as for the verse
+ and the passions, I have them still in tolerable vigour.
+
+ "If you think that it will do you and the work, or works, any good,
+ you may put my name to it; _but first consult the knowing ones_. It
+ will, at any rate, show them that I can write cheerfully, and repel
+ the charge of monotony and mannerism.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 313. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, April 11. 1818.
+
+ "Will you send me by letter, packet, or parcel, half a dozen of the
+ coloured prints from Holmes's miniature (the latter done shortly
+ before I left your country, and the prints about a year ago); I
+ shall be obliged to you, as some people here have asked me for the
+ like. It is a picture of my upright self done for Scrope B. Davies,
+ Esq.[18]
+
+ "Why have you not sent me an answer, and list of subscribers to the
+ translation of the Armenian _Eusebius_? of which I sent you printed
+ copies of the prospectus (in French) two moons ago. Have you had
+ the letter?--I shall send you another:--you must not neglect my
+ Armenians. Tooth-powder, magnesia, tincture of myrrh,
+ tooth-brushes, diachylon plaster, Peruvian bark, are my personal
+ demands.
+
+ "Strahan, Tonson, Lintot of the times,
+ Patron and publisher of rhymes,
+ For thee the bard up Pindus climbs,
+ My Murray.
+
+ "To thee, with hope and terror dumb,
+ The unfledged MS. authors come;
+ Thou printest all--and sellest some--
+ My Murray.
+
+ "Upon thy table's baize so green
+ The last new Quarterly is seen,
+ But where is thy new Magazine,
+ My Murray?
+
+ "Along thy sprucest bookshelves shine
+ The works thou deemest most divine--
+ The 'Art of Cookery,' and mine,
+ My Murray.
+
+ "Tours, Travels, Essays, too, I wist,
+ And Sermons to thy mill bring grist!
+ And then thou hast the 'Navy List,'
+ My Murray.
+
+ "And Heaven forbid I should conclude
+ Without 'the Board of Longitude,'
+ Although this narrow paper would,
+ My Murray!"
+
+
+[Footnote 18: There follows, in this place, among other matter, a long
+string of verses, in various metres, to the amount of about sixty lines,
+so full of light gaiety and humour, that it is with some reluctance I
+suppress them. They might, however, have the effect of giving pain in
+quarters where even the author himself would not have deliberately
+inflicted it;--from a pen like his, touches may be wounds, and without
+being actually intended as such.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 314. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, April 12. 1818.
+
+ "This letter will be delivered by Signor Gioe. Bata. Missiaglia,
+ proprietor of the Apollo library, and the principal publisher and
+ bookseller now in Venice. He sets out for London with a view to
+ business and correspondence with the English booksellers: and it is
+ in the hope that it may be for your mutual advantage that I furnish
+ him with this letter of introduction to you. If you can be of use
+ to him, either by recommendation to others, or by any personal
+ attention on your own part, you will oblige him and gratify me. You
+ may also perhaps both be able to derive advantage, or establish
+ some mode of literary communication, pleasing to the public, and
+ beneficial to one another.
+
+ "At any rate, be civil to him for my sake, as well as for the
+ honour and glory of publishers and authors now and to come for
+ evermore.
+
+ "With him I also consign a great number of MS. letters written in
+ English, French, and Italian, by various English established in
+ Italy during the last century:--the names of the writers, Lord
+ Hervey, Lady M.W. Montague, (hers are but few--some billets-doux in
+ French to Algarotti, and one letter in English, Italian, and all
+ sorts of jargon, to the same,) Gray, the poet (one letter), Mason
+ (two or three), Garrick, Lord Chatham, David Hume, and many of
+ lesser note,--all addressed to Count Algarotti. Out of these, I
+ think, with discretion, an amusing miscellaneous volume of letters
+ might be extracted, provided some good editor were disposed to
+ undertake the selection, and preface, and a few notes, &c.
+
+ "The proprietor of these is a friend of mine, _Dr. Aglietti_,--a
+ great name in Italy,--and if you are disposed to publish, it will
+ be for _his benefit_, and it is to and for him that you will name a
+ price, if you take upon you the work. _I_ would _edite_ it myself,
+ but am too far off, and too lazy to undertake it; but I wish that
+ it could be done. The letters of Lord Hervey, in Mr. Rose's[19]
+ opinion and mine, are good; and the _short_ French love letters
+ _certainly_ are Lady M.W. Montague's--the _French_ not good, but
+ the sentiments beautiful. Gray's letter good; and Mason's
+ tolerable. The whole correspondence must be _well weeded_; but this
+ being done, a small and pretty popular volume might be made of
+ it.--There are many ministers' letters--Gray, the ambassador at
+ Naples, Horace Mann, and others of the same kind of animal.
+
+ "I thought of a preface, defending Lord Hervey against Pope's
+ attack, but Pope--_quoad_ Pope, the poet--against all the world, in
+ the unjustifiable attempts begun by Warton and carried on at this
+ day by the new school of critics and scribblers, who think
+ themselves poets because they do _not_ write like Pope. I have no
+ patience with such cursed humbug and bad taste; your whole
+ generation are not worth a Canto of the Rape of the Lock, or the
+ Essay on Man, or the Dunciad, or 'any thing that is his.'--But it
+ is three in the matin, and I must go to bed. Yours alway," &c.
+
+[Footnote 19: Among Lord Byron's papers, I find some verses addressed to
+him, about this time, by Mr. W. Rose, with the following note annexed to
+them:--"These verses were sent to me by W.S. Rose, from Abaro, in the
+spring of 1818. They are good and true; and Rose is a fine fellow, and
+one of the few English who understand _Italy_, without which Italian is
+nothing." The verses begin thus:
+
+ "Byron[20], while you make gay what circle fits ye,
+ Bandy Venetian slang with the Benzòn,
+ Or play at company with the Albrizzi,
+ The self-pleased pedant, and patrician crone,
+ Grimanis, Mocenigos, Balbis, Rizzi,
+ Compassionate our cruel case,--alone,
+ Our pleasure an academy of frogs,
+ Who nightly serenade us from the bogs," &c. &c.
+]
+
+[Footnote 20: "I have _hunted_ out a precedent for this unceremonious
+address."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 315. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, April 17. 1818.
+
+ "A few days ago, I wrote to you a letter, requesting you to desire
+ Hanson to desire his messenger to come on from Geneva to Venice,
+ because I won't go from Venice to Geneva; and if this is not done,
+ the messenger may be damned, with him who mis-sent him. Pray
+ reiterate my request.
+
+ "With the proofs returned, I sent two additional stanzas for Canto
+ fourth: did they arrive?
+
+ "Your Monthly reviewer has made a mistake: _Cavaliere_, alone, is
+ well enough; but '_Cavalier' servente_' has always the _e_ mute in
+ conversation, and omitted in writing; so that it is not for the
+ sake of metre; and pray let Griffiths know this, with my
+ compliments. I humbly conjecture that I know as much of Italian
+ society and language as any of his people; but, to make assurance
+ doubly sure, I asked, at the Countess Benzona's last night, the
+ question of more than one person in _the office_, and of these
+ 'cavalieri serventi' (in the plural, recollect) I found that they
+ all accorded in pronouncing for 'cavalier' servente' in the
+ _singular_ number. I wish Mr. * * * * (or whoever Griffiths'
+ scribbler may be) would not talk of what he don't understand. Such
+ fellows are not fit to be intrusted with Italian, even in a
+ quotation.
+
+ "Did you receive two additional stanzas, to be inserted towards the
+ close of Canto fourth? Respond, that (if not) they may be sent.
+
+ "Tell Mr. * * and Mr. Hanson that they may as well expect Geneva to
+ come to me, as that I should go to Geneva. The messenger may go on
+ or return, as he pleases; I won't stir: and I look upon it as a
+ piece of singular absurdity in those who know me imagining that I
+ should;--not to say _malice_, in attempting unnecessary torture.
+ If, on the occasion, my interests should suffer, it is their
+ neglect that is to blame; and they may all be d----d together.
+
+ "It is ten o'clock and time to dress.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 316. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "April 23. 1818.
+
+ "The time is past in which I could feel for the dead,--or I should
+ feel for the death of Lady Melbourne, the best, and kindest, and
+ ablest female I ever knew, old or young. But 'I have supped full of
+ horrors,' and events of this kind have only a kind of numbness
+ worse than pain,--like a violent blow on the elbow or the head.
+ There is one link less between England and myself.
+
+ "Now to business. I presented you with Beppo, as part of the
+ contract for Canto fourth,--considering the price you are to pay
+ for the same, and intending to eke you out in case of public
+ caprice or my own poetical failure. If you choose to suppress it
+ entirely, at Mr. * * * *'s suggestion, you may do as you please.
+ But recollect it is not to be published in a _garbled_ or
+ _mutilated_ state. I reserve to my friends and myself the right of
+ correcting the press;--if the publication continue, it is to
+ continue in its present form.
+
+ "As Mr. * * says that he did not write this letter, &c. I am ready
+ to believe him; but for the firmness of my former persuasion, I
+ refer to Mr. * * * *, who can inform you how sincerely I erred on
+ this point. He has also the note--or, at least, had it, for I gave
+ it to him with my verbal comments thereupon. As to 'Beppo,' I will
+ not alter or suppress a syllable for any man's pleasure but my own.
+
+ "You may tell them this; and add, that nothing but force or
+ necessity shall stir me one step towards places to which they would
+ wring me.
+
+ "If your literary matters prosper let me know. If 'Beppo' pleases,
+ you shall have more in a year or two in the same mood. And so 'Good
+ morrow to you, good Master Lieutenant.' Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 317. TO MR. MOORE.
+
+ "Palazzo Mocenigo, Canal Grande,
+
+ "Venice, June 1. 1818.
+
+ "Your letter is almost the only news, as yet, of Canto fourth, and
+ it has by no means settled its fate,--at least, does not tell me
+ how the 'Poeshie' has been received by the public. But I suspect,
+ no great things,--firstly, from Murray's 'horrid stillness;'
+ secondly, from what you say about the stanzas running into each
+ other[21], which I take _not_ to be _yours_, but a notion you have
+ been dinned with among the Blues. The fact is, that the terza rima
+ of the Italians, which always _runs_ on and in, may have led me
+ into experiments, and carelessness into conceit--or conceit into
+ carelessness--in either of which events failure will be probable,
+ and my fair woman, 'superne,' end in a fish; so that Childe Harold
+ will be like the mermaid, my family crest, with the fourth Canto
+ for a tail thereunto. I won't quarrel with the public, however, for
+ the 'Bulgars' are generally right; and if I miss now, I may hit
+ another time:--and so, the 'gods give us joy.'
+
+ "You like Beppo, that's right. I have not had the Fudges yet, but
+ live in hopes. I need not say that your successes are mine. By the
+ way, Lydia White is here, and has just borrowed my copy of 'Lalla
+ Rookh.'
+
+ "Hunt's letter is probably the exact piece of vulgar coxcombry you
+ might expect from his situation. He is a good man, with some
+ poetical elements in his chaos; but spoilt by the Christ-Church
+ Hospital and a Sunday newspaper,--to say nothing of the Surrey
+ gaol, which conceited him into a martyr. But he is a good man. When
+ I saw 'Rimini' in MS., I told him that I deemed it good poetry at
+ bottom, disfigured only by a strange style. His answer was, that
+ his style was a system, or _upon system_, or some such cant; and,
+ when a man talks of system, his case is hopeless: so I said no more
+ to him, and very little to any one else.
+
+ "He believes his trash of vulgar phrases tortured into compound
+ barbarisms to be _old_ English; and we may say of it as Aimwell
+ says of Captain Gibbet's regiment, when the Captain calls it an
+ 'old corps,'--'the _oldest_ in Europe, if I may judge by your
+ uniform.' He sent out his 'Foliage' by Percy Shelley * * *, and, of
+ all the ineffable Centaurs that were ever begotten by Self-love
+ upon a Night-mare, I think this monstrous Sagittary the most
+ prodigious. _He_ (Leigh H.) is an honest charlatan, who has
+ persuaded himself into a belief of his own impostures, and talks
+ Punch in pure simplicity of heart, taking himself (as poor
+ Fitzgerald said of _himself_ in the Morning Post) for _Vates_ in
+ both senses, or nonsenses, of the word. Did you look at the
+ translations of his own which he prefers to Pope and Cowper, and
+ says so?--Did you read his skimble-skamble about * * being at the
+ head of his own _profession_, in the _eyes_ of _those_ who followed
+ it? I thought that poetry was an _art_, or an _attribute_, and not
+ a _profession_;--but be it one, is that * * * * * * at the head of
+ _your_ profession in _your_ eyes? I'll be curst if he is of _mine_,
+ or ever shall be. He is the only one of us (but of us he is not)
+ whose coronation I would oppose. Let them take Scott, Campbell,
+ Crabbe, or you, or me, or any of the living, and throne him;--but
+ not this new Jacob Behmen, this * * * * * * whose pride might have
+ kept him true, even had his principles turned as perverted as his
+ _soi-disant_ poetry.
+
+ "But Leigh Hunt is a good man, and a good father--see his Odes to
+ all the Masters Hunt;--a good husband--see his Sonnet to Mrs.
+ Hunt;--a good friend--see his Epistles to different people;--and a
+ great coxcomb and a very vulgar person in every thing about him.
+ But that's not his fault, but of circumstances.[22]
+
+ "I do not know any good model for a life of Sheridan but that of
+ _Savage_. Recollect, however, that the life of such a man may be
+ made far more amusing than if he had been a Wilberforce;--and this
+ without offending the living, or insulting the dead. The Whigs
+ abuse him; however, he never left them, and such blunderers deserve
+ neither credit nor compassion. As for his creditors,--remember,
+ Sheridan _never had_ a shilling, and was thrown, with great powers
+ and passions, into the thick of the world, and placed upon the
+ pinnacle of success, with no other external means to support him in
+ his elevation. Did Fox * * * _pay his_ debts?--or did Sheridan take
+ a subscription? Was the * *'s drunkenness more excusable than his?
+ Were his intrigues more notorious than those of all his
+ contemporaries? and is his memory to be blasted, and theirs
+ respected? Don't let yourself be led away by clamour, but compare
+ him with the coalitioner Fox, and the pensioner Burke, as a man of
+ principle, and with ten hundred thousand in personal views, and
+ with none in talent, for he beat them all _out_ and _out_. Without
+ means, without connection, without character, (which might be false
+ at first, and make him mad afterwards from desperation,) he beat
+ them all, in all he ever attempted. But alas, poor human nature!
+ Good night--or rather, morning. It is four, and the dawn gleams
+ over the Grand Canal, and unshadows the Rialto. I must to bed; up
+ all night--but, as George Philpot says, 'it's life, though, damme,
+ it's life!' Ever yours, B.
+
+ "Excuse errors--no time for revision. The post goes out at noon,
+ and I sha'n't be up then. I will write again soon about your _plan_
+ for a publication."
+
+[Footnote 21: I had said, I think, in my letter to him, that this
+practice of carrying one stanza into another was "something like taking
+on horses another stage without baiting."]
+
+[Footnote 22: I had, in first transcribing the above letter for the
+press, omitted the whole of this caustic, and, perhaps, over-severe
+character of Mr. Hunt; but the tone of that gentleman's book having, as
+far as himself is concerned, released me from all those scruples which
+prompted the suppression, I have considered myself at liberty to restore
+the passage.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+During the greater part of the period which this last series of letters
+comprises, he had continued to occupy the same lodgings in an extremely
+narrow street called the Spezieria, at the house of the linen-draper, to
+whose lady he devoted so much of his thoughts. That he was, for the
+time, attached to this person,--as far as a passion so transient can
+deserve the name of attachment,--is evident from his whole conduct. The
+language of his letters shows sufficiently how much the novelty of this
+foreign tie had caught his fancy; and to the Venetians, among whom such
+arrangements are mere matters of course, the assiduity with which he
+attended his Signora to the theatre, and the ridottos, was a subject of
+much amusement. It was with difficulty, indeed, that he could be
+prevailed upon to absent himself from her so long as to admit of that
+hasty visit to the Immortal City, out of which one of his own noblest
+titles to immortality sprung; and having, in the space of a few weeks,
+drunk in more inspiration from all he saw than, in a less excited state,
+possibly, he might have imbibed in years, he again hurried back, without
+extending his journey to Naples,--having written to the fair Marianna to
+meet him at some distance from Venice.
+
+Besides some seasonable acts of liberality to the husband, who had, it
+seems, failed in trade, he also presented to the lady herself a handsome
+set of diamonds; and there is an anecdote related in reference to this
+gift, which shows the exceeding easiness and forbearance of his
+disposition towards those who had acquired any hold on his heart. A
+casket, which was for sale, being one day offered to him, he was not a
+little surprised on discovering them to be the same jewels which he had,
+not long before, presented to his fair favourite, and which had, by some
+unromantic means, found their way back into the market. Without
+enquiring, however, any further into the circumstances, he generously
+repurchased the casket and presented it to the lady once more,
+good-humouredly taxing her with the very little estimation in which, as
+it appeared, she held his presents.
+
+To whatever extent this unsentimental incident may have had a share in
+dispelling the romance of his passion, it is certain that, before the
+expiration of the first twelvemonth, he began to find his lodgings in
+the Spezieria inconvenient, and accordingly entered into treaty with
+Count Gritti for his Palace on the Grand Canal,--engaging to give for
+it, what is considered, I believe, a large rent in Venice, 200 louis a
+year. On finding, however, that, in the counterpart of the lease brought
+for his signature, a new clause had been introduced, prohibiting him not
+only from underletting the house, in case he should leave Venice, but
+from even allowing any of his own friends to occupy it during his
+occasional absence, he declined closing on such terms; and resenting so
+material a departure from the original engagement, declared in society,
+that he would have no objection to give the same rent, though
+acknowledged to be exorbitant, for any other palace in Venice, however
+inferior, in all respects, to Count Gritti's. After such an
+announcement, he was not likely to remain long unhoused; and the
+Countess Mocenigo having offered him one of her three Palazzi, on the
+Grand Canal, he removed to this house in the summer of the present year,
+and continued to occupy it during the remainder of his stay in Venice.
+
+Highly censurable, in point of morality and decorum, as was his course
+of life while under the roof of Madame * *, it was (with pain I am
+forced to confess) venial in comparison with the strange, headlong
+career of licence to which, when weaned from that connection, he so
+unrestrainedly and, it may be added, defyingly abandoned himself. Of the
+state of his mind on leaving England I have already endeavoured to
+convey some idea, and, among the feelings that went to make up that
+self-centred spirit of resistance which he then opposed to his fate, was
+an indignant scorn of his own countrymen for the wrongs he thought they
+had done him. For a time, the kindly sentiments which he still harboured
+towards Lady Byron, and a sort of vague hope, perhaps, that all would
+yet come right again, kept his mind in a mood somewhat more softened and
+docile, as well as sufficiently under the influence of English opinion
+to prevent his breaking out into such open rebellion against it, as he
+unluckily did afterwards.
+
+By the failure of the attempted mediation with Lady Byron, his last link
+with home was severed; while, notwithstanding the quiet and unobtrusive
+life which he had led at Geneva, there was as yet, he found, no
+cessation of the slanderous warfare against his character;--the same
+busy and misrepresenting spirit which had tracked his every step at home
+having, with no less malicious watchfulness, dogged him into exile. To
+this persuasion, for which he had but too much grounds, was added all
+that an imagination like his could lend to truth,--all that he was left
+to interpret, in his own way, of the absent and the silent,--till, at
+length, arming himself against fancied enemies and wrongs, and, with the
+condition (as it seemed to him) of an outlaw, assuming also the
+desperation, he resolved, as his countrymen would not do justice to the
+better parts of his nature, to have, at least, the perverse satisfaction
+of braving and shocking them with the worst. It is to this feeling, I am
+convinced, far more than to any depraved taste for such a course of
+life, that the extravagances to which he now, for a short time, gave
+loose, are to be attributed. The exciting effect, indeed, of this mode
+of existence while it lasted, both upon his spirits and his genius,--so
+like what, as he himself tells us, was always produced in him by a state
+of contest and defiance,--showed how much of this latter feeling must
+have been mixed with his excesses. The altered character too, of his
+letters in this respect cannot fail, I think, to be remarked by the
+reader,--there being, with an evident increase of intellectual vigour, a
+tone of violence and bravado breaking out in them continually, which
+marks the high pitch of re-action to which he had now wound up his
+temper.
+
+In fact, so far from the powers of his intellect being at all weakened
+or dissipated by these irregularities, he was, perhaps, at no time of
+his life, so actively in the full possession of all its energies; and
+his friend Shelley, who went to Venice, at this period, to see him[23],
+used to say, that all he observed of the workings of Byron's mind,
+during his visit, gave him a far higher idea of its powers than he had
+ever before entertained. It was, indeed, then that Shelley sketched out,
+and chiefly wrote, his poem of "Julian and Maddalo," in the latter of
+which personages he has so picturesquely shadowed forth his noble
+friend[24]; and the allusions to "the Swan of Albion," in his "Lines
+written among the Euganean Hills," were also, I understand, the result
+of the same access of admiration and enthusiasm.
+
+In speaking of the Venetian women, in one of the preceding letters,
+Lord Byron, it will be recollected, remarks, that the beauty for which
+they were once so celebrated is no longer now to be found among the
+"Dame," or higher orders, but all under the "fazzioli," or kerchiefs, of
+the lower. It was, unluckily, among these latter specimens of the "bel
+sangue" of Venice that he now, by a suddenness of descent in the scale
+of refinement, for which nothing but the present wayward state of his
+mind can account, chose to select the companions of his disengaged
+hours;--and an additional proof that, in this short, daring career of
+libertinism, he was but desperately seeking relief for a wronged and
+mortified spirit, and
+
+ "What to us seem'd guilt might be but woe,"--
+
+is that, more than once, of an evening, when his house has been in the
+possession of such visitants, he has been known to hurry away in his
+gondola, and pass the greater part of the night upon the water, as if
+hating to return to his home. It is, indeed, certain, that to this least
+defensible portion of his whole life he always looked back, during the
+short remainder of it, with painful self-reproach; and among the causes
+of the detestation which he afterwards felt for Venice, this
+recollection of the excesses to which he had there abandoned himself was
+not the least prominent.
+
+The most distinguished and, at last, the reigning favourite of all this
+unworthy Harem was a woman named Margarita Cogni, who has been already
+mentioned in one of these letters, and who, from the trade of her
+husband, was known by the title of the Fornarina. A portrait of this
+handsome virago, drawn by Harlowe when at Venice, having fallen into the
+hands of one of Lord Byron's friends after the death of that artist, the
+noble poet, on being applied to for some particulars of his heroine,
+wrote a long letter on the subject, from which the following are
+extracts:--
+
+ "Since you desire the story of Margarita Cogni, you shall be told
+ it, though it may be lengthy.
+
+ "Her face is the fine Venetian cast of the old time; her figure,
+ though perhaps too tall, is not less fine--and taken altogether in
+ the national dress.
+
+ "In the summer of 1817, * * * * and myself were sauntering on
+ horseback along the Brenta one evening, when, amongst a group of
+ peasants, we remarked two girls as the prettiest we had seen for
+ some time. About this period, there had been great distress in the
+ country, and I had a little relieved some of the people. Generosity
+ makes a great figure at very little cost in Venetian livres, and
+ mine had probably been exaggerated as an Englishman's. Whether they
+ remarked us looking at them or no, I know not; but one of them
+ called out to me in Venetian, 'Why do not you, who relieve others,
+ think of us also?' I turned round and answered her--'Cara, tu sei
+ troppo bella e giovane per aver' bisogna del' soccorso mio.' She
+ answered, 'If you saw my hut and my food, you would not say so.'
+ All this passed half jestingly, and I saw no more of her for some
+ days.
+
+ "A few evenings after, we met with these two girls again, and they
+ addressed us more seriously, assuring us of the truth of their
+ statement. They were cousins; Margarita married, the other single.
+ As I doubted still of the circumstances, I took the business in a
+ different light, and made an appointment with them for the next
+ evening. In short, in a few evenings we arranged our affairs, and
+ for a long space of time she was the only one who preserved over me
+ an ascendency which was often disputed, and never impaired.
+
+ "The reasons of this were, firstly, her person;--very dark, tall,
+ the Venetian face, very fine black eyes. She was two-and-twenty
+ years old, * * * She was, besides, a thorough Venetian in her
+ dialect, in her thoughts, in her countenance, in every thing, with
+ all their _naïveté_ and pantaloon humour. Besides, she could
+ neither read nor write, and could not plague me with
+ letters,--except twice that she paid sixpence to a public scribe,
+ under the piazza, to make a letter for her, upon some occasion when
+ I was ill and could not see her. In other respects, she was
+ somewhat fierce and 'prepotente,' that is, over-bearing, and used
+ to walk in whenever it suited her, with no very great regard to
+ time, place, nor persons; and if she found any women in her way,
+ she knocked them down.
+
+ "When I first knew her, I was in 'relazione' (liaison) with la
+ Signora * *, who was silly enough one evening at Dolo, accompanied
+ by some of her female friends, to threaten her; for the gossips of
+ the villeggiatura had already found out, by the neighing of my
+ horse one evening, that I used to 'ride late in the night' to meet
+ the Fornarina. Margarita threw back her veil (fazziolo), and
+ replied in very explicit Venetian, '_You_ are _not_ his _wife_: _I_
+ am _not_ his _wife_: you are his Donna, and _I_ am his _Donna_:
+ your husband is a _becco_, and mine is another. For the rest, what
+ _right_ have you to reproach me? If he prefers me to you, is it my
+ fault? If you wish to secure him, tie him to your
+ petticoat-string.--But do not think to speak to me without a reply,
+ because you happen to be richer than I am.' Having delivered this
+ pretty piece of eloquence (which I translate as it was related to
+ me by a bystander), she went on her way, leaving a numerous
+ audience with Madame * *, to ponder at her leisure on the dialogue
+ between them.
+
+ "When I came to Venice for the winter, she followed; and as she
+ found herself out to be a favourite, she came to me pretty often.
+ But she had inordinate self-love, and was not tolerant of other
+ women. At the 'Cavalchina,' the masked ball on the last night of
+ the carnival, where all the world goes, she snatched off the mask
+ of Madame Contarini, a lady noble by birth, and decent in conduct,
+ for no other reason, but because she happened to be leaning on my
+ arm. You may suppose what a cursed noise this made; but this is
+ only one of her pranks.
+
+ "At last she quarrelled with her husband, and one evening ran away
+ to my house. I told her this would not do: she said she would lie
+ in the street, but not go back to him; that he beat her, (the
+ gentle tigress!) spent her money, and scandalously neglected her.
+ As it was midnight I let her stay, and next day there was no moving
+ her at all. Her husband came, roaring and crying, and entreating
+ her to come back:--_not_ she! He then applied to the police, and
+ they applied to me: I told them and her husband to _take_ her; I
+ did not want her; she had come, and I could not fling her out of
+ the window; but they might conduct her through that or the door if
+ they chose it. She went before the commissary, but was obliged to
+ return with that 'becco ettico,' as she called the poor man, who
+ had a phthisic. In a few days she ran away again. After a precious
+ piece of work, she fixed herself in my house, really and truly
+ without my consent; but, owing to my indolence, and not being able
+ to keep my countenance, for if I began in a rage, she always
+ finished by making me laugh with some Venetian pantaloonery or
+ another; and the gipsy knew this well enough, as well as her other
+ powers of persuasion, and exerted them with the usual tact and
+ success of all she-things; high and low, they are all alike for
+ that.
+
+ "Madame Benzoni also took her under her protection, and then her
+ head turned. She was always in extremes, either crying or laughing,
+ and so fierce when angered, that she was the terror of men, women,
+ and children--for she had the strength of an Amazon, with the
+ temper of Medea. She was a fine animal, but quite untameable. _I_
+ was the only person that could at all keep her in any order, and
+ when she saw me really angry (which they tell me is a savage
+ sight), she subsided. But she had a thousand fooleries. In her
+ fazziolo, the dress of the lower orders, she looked beautiful;
+ but, alas! she longed for a hat and feathers; and all I could say
+ or do (and I said much) could not prevent this travestie. I put the
+ first into the fire; but I got tired of burning them, before she
+ did of buying them, so that she made herself a figure--for they did
+ not at all become her.
+
+ "Then she would have her gowns with a _tail_--like a lady,
+ forsooth; nothing would serve her but 'l'abita colla _coua_,' or
+ _cua_, (that is the Venetian for 'la cola,' the tail or train,) and
+ as her cursed pronunciation of the word made me laugh, there was an
+ end of all controversy, and she dragged this diabolical tail after
+ her every where.
+
+ "In the mean time, she beat the women and stopped my letters. I
+ found her one day pondering over one. She used to try to find out
+ by their shape whether they were feminine or no; and she used to
+ lament her ignorance, and actually studied her alphabet, on purpose
+ (as she declared) to open all letters addressed to me and read
+ their contents.
+
+ "I must not omit to do justice to her housekeeping qualities. After
+ she came into my house as 'donna di governo,' the expenses were
+ reduced to less than half, and every body did their duty
+ better--the apartments were kept in order, and every thing and
+ every body else, except herself.
+
+ "That she had a sufficient regard for me in her wild way, I had
+ many reasons to believe. I will mention one. In the autumn, one
+ day, going to the Lido with my gondoliers, we were overtaken by a
+ heavy squall, and the gondola put in peril--hats blown away, boat
+ filling, oar lost, tumbling sea, thunder, rain in torrents, night
+ coming, and wind unceasing. On our return, after a tight struggle,
+ I found her on the open steps of the Mocenigo palace, on the Grand
+ Canal, with her great black eyes flashing through her tears, and
+ the long dark hair, which was streaming, drenched with rain, over
+ her brows and breast. She was perfectly exposed to the storm; and
+ the wind blowing her hair and dress about her thin tall figure, and
+ the lightning flashing round her, and the waves rolling at her
+ feet, made her look like Medea alighted from her chariot, or the
+ Sibyl of the tempest that was rolling around her, the only living
+ thing within hail at that moment except ourselves. On seeing me
+ safe, she did not wait to greet me, as might have been expected,
+ but calling out to me--'Ah! can' della Madonna, xe esto il tempo
+ per andar' al' Lido?' (Ah! dog of the Virgin, is this a time to go
+ to Lido?) ran into the house, and solaced herself with scolding the
+ boatmen for not foreseeing the 'temporale.' I am told by the
+ servants that she had only been prevented from coming in a boat to
+ look after me, by the refusal of all the gondoliers of the canal to
+ put out into the harbour in such a moment; and that then she sat
+ down on the steps in all the thickest of the squall, and would
+ neither be removed nor comforted. Her joy at seeing me again was
+ moderately mixed with ferocity, and gave me the idea of a tigress
+ over her recovered cubs.
+
+ "But her reign drew near a close. She became quite ungovernable
+ some months after, and a concurrence of complaints, some true, and
+ many false--'a favourite has no friends'--determined me to part
+ with her. I told her quietly that she must return home, (she had
+ acquired a sufficient provision for herself and mother, &c. in my
+ service,) and she refused to quit the house. I was firm, and she
+ went threatening knives and revenge. I told her that I had seen
+ knives drawn before her time, and that if she chose to begin, there
+ was a knife, and fork also, at her service on the table, and that
+ intimidation would not do. The next day, while I was at dinner, she
+ walked in, (having broken open a glass door that led from the hall
+ below to the staircase, by way of prologue,) and advancing straight
+ up to the table, snatched the knife from my hand, cutting me
+ slightly in the thumb in the operation. Whether she meant to use
+ this against herself or me, I know not--probably against
+ neither--but Fletcher seized her by the arms, and disarmed her. I
+ then called my boatmen, and desired them to get the gondola ready,
+ and conduct her to her own house again, seeing carefully that she
+ did herself no mischief by the way. She seemed quite quiet, and
+ walked down stairs. I resumed my dinner.
+
+ "We heard a great noise, and went out, and met them on the
+ staircase, carrying her up stairs. She had thrown herself into the
+ canal. That she intended to destroy herself, I do not believe; but
+ when we consider the fear women and men who can't swim have of deep
+ or even of shallow water, (and the Venetians in particular, though
+ they live on the waves,) and that it was also night, and dark, and
+ very cold, it shows that she had a devilish spirit of some sort
+ within her. They had got her out without much difficulty or damage,
+ excepting the salt water she had swallowed, and the wetting she had
+ undergone.
+
+ "I foresaw her intention to refix herself, and sent for a surgeon,
+ enquiring how many hours it would require to restore her from her
+ agitation; and he named the time. I then said, 'I give you that
+ time, and more if you require it; but at the expiration of this
+ prescribed period, if _she_ does not leave the house, _I_ will.'
+
+ "All my people were consternated. They had always been frightened
+ at her, and were now paralysed: they wanted me to apply to the
+ police, to guard myself, &c. &c. like a pack of snivelling servile
+ boobies as they were. I did nothing of the kind, thinking that I
+ might as well end that way as another; besides, I had been used to
+ savage women, and knew their ways.
+
+ "I had her sent home quietly after her recovery, and never saw her
+ since, except twice at the opera, at a distance amongst the
+ audience. She made many attempts to return, but no more violent
+ ones. And this is the story of Margarita Cogni, as far as it
+ relates to me.
+
+ "I forgot to mention that she was very devout, and would cross
+ herself if she heard the prayer time strike.
+
+ "She was quick in reply; as, for instance--One day when she had
+ made me very angry with beating somebody or other, I called her a
+ _cow_ (_cow_, in Italian, is a sad affront). I called her 'Vacca.'
+ She turned round, courtesied, and answered, 'Vacca _tua_,
+ 'celenza' (_i.e._ eccelenza). '_Your_ cow, please your Excellency.'
+ In short, she was, as I said before, a very fine animal, of
+ considerable beauty and energy, with many good and several amusing
+ qualities, but wild as a witch and fierce as a demon. She used to
+ boast publicly of her ascendency over me, contrasting it with that
+ of other women, and assigning for it sundry reasons. True it was,
+ that they all tried to get her away, and no one succeeded till her
+ own absurdity helped them.
+
+ "I omitted to tell you her answer, when I reproached her for
+ snatching Madame Contarini's mask at the Cavalchina. I represented
+ to her that she was a lady of high birth, 'una Dama,' &c. She
+ answered, 'Se ella è dama _mi_ (_io_) son Veneziana;'--'If she is a
+ lady, I am a Venetian.' This would have been fine a hundred years
+ ago, the pride of the nation rising up against the pride of
+ aristocracy: but, alas! Venice, and her people, and her nobles, are
+ alike returning fast to the ocean; and where there is no
+ independence, there can be no real self-respect. I believe that I
+ mistook or mis-stated one of her phrases in my letter; it should
+ have been--'Can' della Madonna cosa vus' tu? esto non é tempo per
+ andar' a Lido?'"
+
+[Footnote 23: The following are extracts from a letter of Shelley's to a
+friend at this time.
+
+ "Venice, August, 1818.
+
+ "We came from Padua hither in a gondola; and the gondolier, among
+ other things, without any hint on our part, began talking of Lord
+ Byron. He said he was a 'Giovanotto Inglese,' with a 'nome
+ stravagante,' who lived very luxuriously, and spent great sums of
+ money.
+
+ "At three o'clock I called on Lord Byron. He was delighted to see
+ me, and our first conversation of course consisted in the object of
+ our visit. He took me in his gondola, across the Laguna, to a long,
+ strandy sand, which defends Venice from the Adriatic. When we
+ disembarked, we found his horses waiting for us, and we rode along
+ the sands, talking. Our conversation consisted in histories of his
+ own wounded feelings, and questions as to my affairs, with great
+ professions of friendship and regard for me. He said that if he had
+ been in England, at the time of the Chancery affair, he would have
+ moved heaven and earth to have prevented such a decision. He talked
+ of literary matters,--his fourth Canto, which he says is very good,
+ and indeed repeated some stanzas, of great energy, to me. When we
+ returned to his palace, which is one if the most magnificent in
+ Venice," &c. &c.
+]
+
+[Footnote 24: In the preface also to this poem, under the fictitious
+name of Count Maddalo, the following just and striking portrait of Lord
+Byron is drawn:--
+
+"He is a person of the most consummate genius, and capable, if he would
+direct his energies to such an end, of becoming the redeemer of his
+degraded country. But it is his weakness to be proud: he derives, from a
+comparison of his own extraordinary mind with the dwarfish intellects
+that surround him, an intense apprehension of the nothingness of human
+life. His passions and his powers are incomparably greater than those of
+other men, and instead of the latter having been employed in curbing the
+former, they have mutually lent each other strength. His ambition preys
+upon itself for want of objects which it can consider worthy of
+exertion. I say that Maddalo is proud, because I can find no other word
+to express the concentred and impatient feelings which consume him; but
+it is on his own hopes and affections only that he seems to trample, for
+in social life no human being can be more gentle, patient, and
+unassuming than Maddalo. He is cheerful, frank, and witty. His more
+serious conversation is a sort of intoxication. He has travelled much;
+and there is an inexpressible charm in his relation of his adventures in
+different countries."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was at this time, as we shall see by the letters I am about to
+produce, and as the features, indeed, of the progeny itself would but
+too plainly indicate, that he conceived, and wrote some part of, his
+poem of 'Don Juan;'--and never did pages more faithfully and, in many
+respects, lamentably, reflect every variety of feeling, and whim, and
+passion that, like the wrack of autumn, swept across the author's mind
+in writing them. Nothing less, indeed, than that singular combination of
+attributes, which existed and were in full activity in his mind at this
+moment, could have suggested, or been capable of, the execution of such
+a work. The cool shrewdness of age, with the vivacity and glowing
+temperament of youth,--the wit of a Voltaire, with the sensibility of a
+Rousseau,--the minute, practical knowledge of the man of society, with
+the abstract and self-contemplative spirit of the poet,--a
+susceptibility of all that is grandest and most affecting in human
+virtue, with a deep, withering experience of all that is most fatal to
+it,--the two extremes, in short, of man's mixed and inconsistent nature,
+now rankly smelling of earth, now breathing of heaven,--such was the
+strange assemblage of contrary elements, all meeting together in the
+same mind, and all brought to bear, in turn, upon the same task, from
+which alone could have sprung this extraordinary poem,--the most
+powerful and, in many respects, painful display of the versatility of
+genius that has ever been left for succeeding ages to wonder at and
+deplore.
+
+I shall now proceed with his correspondence,--having thought some of the
+preceding observations necessary, not only to explain to the reader much
+of what he will find in these letters, but to account to him for much
+that has been necessarily omitted.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 318. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, June 18. 1818.
+
+ "Business and the utter and inexplicable silence of all my
+ correspondents renders me impatient and troublesome. I wrote to Mr.
+ Hanson for a balance which is (or ought to be) in his hands;--no
+ answer. I expected the messenger with the Newstead papers two
+ months ago, and instead of him, I received a requisition to proceed
+ to Geneva, which (from * *, who knows my wishes and opinions about
+ approaching England) could only be irony or insult.
+
+ "I must, therefore, trouble _you_ to pay into my bankers'
+ _immediately_ whatever sum or sums you can make it convenient to do
+ on our agreement; otherwise, I shall be put to the _severest_ and
+ most immediate inconvenience; and this at a time when, by every
+ rational prospect and calculation, I ought to be in the receipt of
+ considerable sums. Pray do not neglect this; you have no idea to
+ what inconvenience you will otherwise put me. * * had some absurd
+ notion about the disposal of this money in annuity (or God knows
+ what), which I merely listened to when he was here to avoid
+ squabbles and sermons; but I have occasion for the principal, and
+ had never any serious idea of appropriating it otherwise than to
+ answer my personal expenses. Hobhouse's wish is, if possible, to
+ force me back to England[25]: he will not succeed; and if he did, I
+ would not stay. I hate the country, and like this; and all foolish
+ opposition, of course, merely adds to the feeling. _Your_ silence
+ makes me doubt the success of Canto fourth. If it has failed, I
+ will make such deduction as you think proper and fair from the
+ original agreement; but I could wish whatever is to be paid were
+ remitted to me, without delay, through the usual channel, by course
+ of post.
+
+ "When I tell you that I have not heard a word from England since
+ very early in May, I have made the eulogium of my friends, or the
+ persons who call themselves so, since I have written so often and
+ in the greatest anxiety. Thank God, the longer I am absent, the
+ less cause I see for regretting the country or its living contents.
+ I am yours," &c.
+
+[Footnote 25: Deeply is it, for many reasons, to be regretted that this
+friendly purpose did not succeed.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 319. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, July 10. 1818.
+
+ "I have received your letter and the credit from Morlands, &c. for
+ whom I have also drawn upon you at sixty days' sight for the
+ remainder, according to your proposition.
+
+ "I am still waiting in Venice, in expectancy of the arrival of
+ Hanson's clerk. What can detain him, I do not know; but I trust
+ that Mr. Hobhouse, and Mr. Kinnaird, when their political fit is
+ abated, will take the trouble to enquire and expedite him, as I
+ have nearly a hundred thousand pounds depending upon the completion
+ of the sale and the signature of the papers.
+
+ "The draft on you is drawn up by Siri and Willhalm. I hope that
+ the form is correct. I signed it two or three days ago, desiring
+ them to forward it to Messrs. Morland and Ransom.
+
+ "Your projected editions for November had better be postponed, as I
+ have some things in project, or preparation, that may be of use to
+ you, though not very important in themselves. I have completed an
+ Ode on Venice, and have two Stories, one serious and one ludicrous
+ (à la Beppo), not yet finished, and in no hurry to be so.
+
+ "You talk of the letter to Hobhouse being much admired, and speak
+ of prose. I think of writing (for your full edition) some Memoirs
+ of my life, to prefix to them, upon the same model (though far
+ enough, I fear, from reaching it) of Gifford, Hume, &c.; and this
+ without any intention of making disclosures or remarks upon living
+ people, which would be unpleasant to them: but I think it might be
+ done, and well done. However, this is to be considered. I have
+ _materials_ in plenty, but the greater part of them could not be
+ used by _me_, nor for these hundred years to come. However, there
+ is enough without these, and merely as a literary man, to make a
+ preface for such an edition as you meditate. But this is by the
+ way: I have not made up my mind.
+
+ "I enclose you a _note_ on the subject of '_Parisina_,' which
+ Hobhouse can dress for you. It is an extract of particulars from a
+ history of Ferrara.
+
+ "I trust you have been attentive to Missiaglia, for the English
+ have the character of neglecting the Italians, at present, which I
+ hope you will redeem.
+
+ "Yours in haste, B."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 320. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, July 17. 1818.
+
+ "I suppose that Aglietti will take whatever you offer, but till his
+ return from Vienna I can make him no proposal; nor, indeed, have
+ you authorised me to do so. The three French notes _are_ by Lady
+ Mary; also another half-English-French-Italian. They are very
+ pretty and passionate; it is a pity that a piece of one of them is
+ lost. Algarotti seems to have treated her ill; but she was much his
+ senior, and all women are used ill--or say so, whether they are or
+ not.
+
+ "I shall be glad of your books and powders. I am still in waiting
+ for Hanson's clerk, but luckily not at Geneva. All my good friends
+ wrote to me to hasten _there_ to meet him, but not one had the good
+ sense or the good nature, to write afterwards to tell me that it
+ would be time and a journey thrown away, as he could not set off
+ for some months after the period appointed. If I _had_ taken the
+ journey on the general suggestion, I never would have spoken again
+ to one of you as long as I existed. I have written to request Mr.
+ Kinnaird, when the foam of his politics is wiped away, to extract a
+ positive answer from that * * * *, and not to keep me in a state of
+ suspense upon the subject. I hope that Kinnaird, who has my power
+ of attorney, keeps a look-out upon the gentleman, which is the more
+ necessary, as I have a great dislike to the idea of coming over to
+ look after him myself.
+
+ "I have several things begun, verse and prose, but none in much
+ forwardness. I have written some six or seven sheets of a Life,
+ which I mean to continue, and send you when finished. It may
+ perhaps serve for your projected editions. If you would tell me
+ exactly (for I know nothing, and have no correspondents except on
+ business) the state of the reception of our late publications, and
+ the feeling upon them, without consulting any delicacies (I am too
+ seasoned to require them), I should know how and in what manner to
+ proceed. I should not like to give them too much, which may
+ probably have been the case already; but, as I tell you, I know
+ nothing.
+
+ "I once wrote from the fulness of my mind and the love of fame,
+ (not as an _end_, but as a _means_, to obtain that influence over
+ men's minds which is power in itself and in its consequences,) and
+ now from habit and from avarice; so that the effect may probably be
+ as different as the inspiration. I have the same facility, and
+ indeed necessity, of composition, to avoid idleness (though
+ idleness in a hot country is a pleasure), but a much greater
+ indifference to what is to become of it, after it has served my
+ immediate purpose. However, I should on no account like to--but I
+ won't go on, like the Archbishop of Granada, as I am very sure that
+ you dread the fate of Gil Blas, and with good reason. Yours, &c.
+
+ "P.S. I have written some very savage letters to Mr. Hobhouse,
+ Kinnaird, to you, and to Hanson, because the silence of so long a
+ time made me tear off my remaining rags of patience. I have seen
+ one or two late English publications which are no great things,
+ except Rob Roy. I shall be glad of Whistlecraft."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 321. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, August 26. 1818.
+
+ "You may go on with your edition, without calculating on the
+ Memoir, which I shall not publish at present. It is nearly
+ finished, but will be too long; and there are so many things,
+ which, out of regard to the living, cannot be mentioned, that I
+ have written with too much detail of that which interested me
+ least; so that my autobiographical Essay would resemble the tragedy
+ of Hamlet at the country theatre, recited 'with the part of Hamlet
+ left out by particular desire.' I shall keep it among my papers; it
+ will be a kind of guide-post in case of death, and prevent some of
+ the lies which would otherwise be told, and destroy some which have
+ been told already.
+
+ "The tales also are in an unfinished state, and I can fix no time
+ for their completion: they are also not in the best manner. You
+ must not, therefore, calculate upon any thing in time for this
+ edition. The Memoir is already above forty-four sheets of very
+ large, long paper, and will be about fifty or sixty; but I wish to
+ go on leisurely; and when finished, although it might do a good
+ deal for you at the time, I am not sure that it would serve any
+ good purpose in the end either, as it is full of many passions and
+ prejudices, of which it has been impossible for me to keep
+ clear:--I have not the patience.
+
+ "Enclosed is a list of books which Dr. Aglietti would be glad to
+ receive by way of price for his MS. letters, if you are disposed to
+ purchase at the rate of fifty pounds sterling. These he will be
+ glad to have as part, and the rest _I_ will give him in money, and
+ you may carry it to the account of books, &c. which is in balance
+ against me, deducting it accordingly. So that the letters are
+ yours, if you like them, at this rate; and he and I are going to
+ hunt for more Lady Montague letters, which he thinks of finding. I
+ write in haste. Thanks for the article, and believe me
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+To the charge brought against Lord Byron by some English travellers of
+being, in general, repulsive and inhospitable to his own countrymen, I
+have already made allusion; and shall now add to the testimony then
+cited in disproof of such a charge some particulars, communicated to me
+by Captain Basil Hall, which exhibit the courtesy and kindliness of the
+noble poet's disposition in their true, natural light.
+
+"On the last day of August, 1818 (says this distinguished writer and
+traveller), I was taken ill with an ague at Venice, and having heard
+enough of the low state of the medical art in that country, I was not a
+little anxious as to the advice I should take. I was not acquainted with
+any person in Venice to whom I could refer, and had only one letter of
+introduction, which was to Lord Byron; but as there were many stories
+floating about of his Lordship's unwillingness to be pestered with
+tourists, I had felt unwilling, before this moment, to intrude myself in
+that shape. Now, however, that I was seriously unwell, I felt sure that
+this offensive character would merge in that of a countryman in
+distress, and I sent the letter by one of my travelling companions to
+Lord Byron's lodgings, with a note, excusing the liberty I was taking,
+explaining that I was in want of medical assistance, and saying I should
+not send to any one till I heard the name of the person who, in his
+Lordship's opinion, was the best practitioner in Venice.
+
+"Unfortunately for me, Lord Byron was still in bed, though it was near
+noon, and still more unfortunately, the bearer of my message scrupled to
+awake him, without first coming back to consult me. By this time I was
+in all the agonies of a cold ague fit, and, therefore, not at all in a
+condition to be consulted upon any thing--so I replied pettishly, 'Oh,
+by no means disturb Lord Byron on my account--ring for the landlord, and
+send for any one he recommends.' This absurd injunction being forthwith
+and literally attended to, in the course of an hour I was under the
+discipline of mine host's friend, whose skill and success it is no part
+of my present purpose to descant upon:--it is sufficient to mention that
+I was irrevocably in his hands long before the following most kind note
+was brought to me, in great haste, by Lord Byron's servant.
+
+ "'Venice, August 31. 1818.
+
+ "'Dear Sir,
+
+ "'Dr. Aglietti is the best physician, not only in Venice, but in
+ Italy: his residence is on the Grand Canal, and easily found; I
+ forget the number, but am probably the only person in Venice who
+ don't know it. There is no comparison between him and any of the
+ other medical people here. I regret very much to hear of your
+ indisposition, and shall do myself the honour of waiting upon you
+ the moment I am up. I write this in bed, and have only just
+ received the letter and note. I beg you to believe that nothing but
+ the extreme lateness of my hours could have prevented me from
+ replying immediately, or coming in person. I have not been called a
+ minute.--I have the honour to be, very truly,
+
+ "'Your most obedient servant,
+
+ "'BYRON.'
+
+"His Lordship soon followed this note, and I heard his voice in the next
+room; but although he waited more than an hour, I could not see him,
+being under the inexorable hands of the doctor. In the course of the
+same evening he again called, but I was asleep. When I awoke I found his
+Lordship's valet sitting by my bedside. 'He had his master's orders,' he
+said, 'to remain with me while I was unwell, and was instructed to say,
+that whatever his Lordship had, or could procure, was at my service, and
+that he would come to me and sit with me, or do whatever I liked, if I
+would only let him know in what way he could be useful.'
+
+"Accordingly, on the next day, I sent for some book, which was brought,
+with a list of his library. I forget what it was which prevented my
+seeing Lord Byron on this day, though he called more than once; and on
+the next, I was too ill with fever to talk to any one.
+
+"The moment I could get out, I took a gondola and went to pay my
+respects, and to thank his Lordship for his attentions. It was then
+nearly three o'clock, but he was not yet up; and when I went again on
+the following day at five, I had the mortification to learn that he had
+gone, at the same hour, to call upon me, so that we had crossed each
+other on the canal; and, to my deep and lasting regret, I was obliged to
+leave Venice without seeing him."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 322. TO MR. MOORE.
+
+ "Venice, September 19. 1818.
+
+ "An English newspaper here would be a prodigy, and an opposition
+ one a monster; and except some ex tracts _from_ extracts in the
+ vile, garbled Paris gazettes, nothing of the kind reaches the
+ Veneto-Lombard public, who are, perhaps, the most oppressed in
+ Europe. My correspondences with England are mostly on business, and
+ chiefly with my * * *, who has no very exalted notion, or extensive
+ conception, of an author's attributes; for he once took up an
+ Edinburgh Review, and, looking at it a minute, said to me, 'So, I
+ see you have got into the magazine,'--which is the only sentence I
+ ever heard him utter upon literary matters, or the men thereof.
+
+ "My first news of your Irish Apotheosis has, consequently, been
+ from yourself. But, as it will not be forgotten in a hurry, either
+ by your friends or your enemies, I hope to have it more in detail
+ from some of the former, and, in the mean time, I wish you joy with
+ all my heart. Such a moment must have been a good deal better than
+ Westminster-abbey,--besides being an assurance of _that_ one day
+ (many years hence, I trust,) into the bargain.
+
+ "I am sorry to perceive, however, by the close of your letter, that
+ even _you_ have not escaped the 'surgit amari,' &c. and that your
+ damned deputy has been gathering such 'dew from the still _vext_
+ Bermoothes'--or rather _vexatious_. Pray, give me some items of the
+ affair, as you say it is a serious one; and, if it grows more so,
+ you should make a trip over here for a few months, to see how
+ things turn out. I suppose you are a violent admirer of England by
+ your staying so long in it. For my own part, I have passed, between
+ the age of one-and-twenty and thirty, half the intervenient years
+ out of it without regretting any thing, except that I ever returned
+ to it at all, and the gloomy prospect before me of business and
+ parentage obliging me, one day, to return to it again,--at least,
+ for the transaction of affairs, the signing of papers, and
+ inspecting of children.
+
+ "I have here my natural daughter, by name Allegra,--a pretty little
+ girl enough, and reckoned like papa.[26] Her mamma is English,--but
+ it is a long story, and--there's an end. She is about twenty
+ months old.
+
+ "I have finished the first Canto (a long one, of about 180 octaves)
+ of a poem in the style and manner of 'Beppo', encouraged by the
+ good success of the same. It is called 'Don Juan', and is meant to
+ be a little quietly facetious upon every thing. But I doubt whether
+ it is not--at least, as far as it has yet gone--too free for these
+ very modest days. However, I shall try the experiment, anonymously,
+ and if it don't take, it will be discontinued. It is dedicated to S
+ * * in good, simple, savage verse, upon the * * * *'s politics, and
+ the way he got them. But the bore of copying it out is intolerable;
+ and if I had an amanuensis he would be of no use, as my writing is
+ so difficult to decipher.
+
+ "My poem's Epic, and is meant to be
+ Divided in twelve books, each book containing
+ With love and war, a heavy gale at sea--
+ A list of ships, and captains, and kings reigning--
+ New characters, &c. &c.
+
+ The above are two stanzas, which I send you as a brick of my Babel,
+ and by which you can judge of the texture of the structure.
+
+ "In writing the Life of Sheridan, never mind the angry lies of the
+ humbug Whigs. Recollect that he was an Irishman and a clever
+ fellow, and that we have had some very pleasant days with him.
+ Don't forget that he was at school at Harrow, where, in my time, we
+ used to show his name--R.B. Sheridan, 1765,--as an honour to the
+ walls. Remember * *. Depend upon it that there were worse folks
+ going, of that gang, than ever Sheridan was.
+
+ "What did Parr mean by 'haughtiness and coldness?' I listened to
+ him with admiring ignorance, and respectful silence. What more
+ could a talker for fame have?--they don't like to be answered. It
+ was at Payne Knight's I met him, where he gave me more Greek than I
+ could carry away. But I certainly meant to (and _did_) treat him
+ with the most respectful deference.
+
+ "I wish you a good night, with a Venetian benediction, 'Benedetto
+ te, e la terra che ti fara!'--'May you be blessed, and the _earth_
+ which you will _make_!'--is it not pretty? You would think it
+ still prettier if you had heard it, as I did two hours ago, from
+ the lips of a Venetian girl, with large black eyes, a face like
+ Faustina's, and the figure of a Juno--tall and energetic as a
+ Pythoness, with eyes flashing, and her dark hair streaming in the
+ moonlight--one of those women who may be made any thing. I am sure
+ if I put a poniard into the hand of this one, she would plunge it
+ where I told her,--and into _me_, if I offended her. I like this
+ kind of animal, and am sure that I should have preferred Medea to
+ any woman that ever breathed. You may, perhaps, wonder that I don't
+ in that case. I could have forgiven the dagger or the bowl, any
+ thing, but the deliberate desolation piled upon me, when I stood
+ alone upon my hearth, with my household gods shivered around me[27]
+ * * Do you suppose I have forgotten or forgiven it? It has
+ comparatively swallowed up in me every other feeling, and I am only
+ a spectator upon earth, till a tenfold opportunity offers. It may
+ come yet. There are others more to be blamed than * * * *, and it
+ is on these that my eyes are fixed unceasingly."
+
+[Footnote 26: This little child had been sent to him by its mother about
+four or five months before, under the care of a Swiss nurse, a young
+girl not above nineteen or twenty years of age, and in every respect
+unfit to have the charge of such an infant, without the superintendence
+of some more experienced person. "The child, accordingly," says my
+informant, "was but ill taken care of;--not that any blame could attach
+to Lord Byron, for he always expressed himself most anxious for her
+welfare, but because the nurse wanted the necessary experience. The poor
+girl was equally to be pitied; for, as Lord Byron's household consisted
+of English and Italian men servants, with whom she could hold no
+converse, and as there was no other female to consult with and assist
+her in her charge, nothing could be more forlorn than her situation
+proved to be."
+
+Soon after the date of the above letter, Mrs. Hoppner, the lady of the
+Consul General, who had, from the first, in compassion both to father
+and child, invited the little Allegra occasionally to her house, very
+kindly proposed to Lord Byron to take charge of her altogether, and an
+arrangement was accordingly concluded upon for that purpose.]
+
+[Footnote 27:
+
+ "I had one only fount of quiet left,
+ And that they poison'd! _My pure household gods
+ Were shivered on my hearth._" MARINO FALIERO.
+]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 323. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, September 24. 1818.
+
+ "In the one hundredth and thirty-second stanza of Canto fourth, the
+ stanza runs in the manuscript--
+
+ "And thou, who never yet of human wrong
+ Left the unbalanced scale, great Nemesis!
+
+ and _not 'lost,'_ which is nonsense, as what losing a scale means,
+ I know not; but _leaving_ an unbalanced scale, or a scale
+ unbalanced, is intelligible.[28] Correct this, I pray,--not for the
+ public, or the poetry, but I do not choose to have blunders made in
+ addressing any of the deities so seriously as this is addressed.
+
+ "Yours, &c.
+
+ "P.S. In the translation from the Spanish, alter
+
+ "In increasing squadrons flew,
+
+ to--
+
+ To a mighty squadron grew.
+
+ "What does 'thy waters _wasted_ them' mean (in the Canto)? _That is
+ not me._[29] Consult the MS. _always_.
+
+ "I have written the first Canto (180 octave stanzas) of a poem in
+ the style of Beppo, and have Mazeppa to finish besides.
+
+ "In referring to the mistake in stanza 132. I take the opportunity
+ to desire that in future, in all parts of my writings referring to
+ religion, you will be more careful, and not forget that it is
+ possible that in addressing the Deity a blunder may become a
+ blasphemy; and I do not choose to suffer such infamous perversions
+ of my words or of my intentions.
+
+ "I saw the Canto by accident."
+
+[Footnote 28: This correction, I observe, has never been made,--the
+passage still remaining, unmeaningly,
+
+ "_Lost_ the unbalanced scale."
+]
+
+[Footnote 29: This passage also remains uncorrected.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 324. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, January 20. 1819.
+
+ "The opinions which I have asked of Mr. H. and others were with
+ regard to the poetical merit, and not as to what they may think due
+ to the _cant_ of the day, which still reads the Bath Guide,
+ Little's Poems, Prior, and Chaucer, to say nothing of Fielding and
+ Smollet. If published, publish entire, with the above-mentioned
+ exceptions; or you may publish anonymously, or _not at all_. In the
+ latter event, print 50 on my account, for private distribution.
+
+ "Yours, &c.
+
+ "I have written to Messrs. K. and H. to desire that they will not
+ erase more than I have stated.
+
+ "The second Canto of Don Juan is finished in 206 stanzas."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 325. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, January 25. 1819.
+
+ "You will do me the favour to print privately (for private
+ distribution) fifty copies of 'Don Juan.' The list of the men to
+ whom I wish it to be presented, I will send hereafter. The other
+ two poems had best be added to the collective edition: I do not
+ approve of _their_ being published separately. Print Don Juan
+ _entire_, omitting, of course, the lines on Castlereagh, as I am
+ not on the spot to meet him. I have a second Canto ready, which
+ will be sent by and by. By this post, I have written to Mr.
+ Hobhouse, addressed to your care.
+
+ "Yours, &c.
+
+ "P.S. I have acquiesced in the request and representation; and
+ having done so, it is idle to detail my arguments in favour of my
+ own self-love and 'Poeshie;' but I _protest_. If the poem has
+ poetry, it would stand; if not, fall; the rest is 'leather and
+ prunello,' and has never yet affected any human production 'pro or
+ con.' Dulness is the only annihilator in such cases. As to the cant
+ of the day, I despise it, as I have ever done all its other finical
+ fashions, which become you as paint became the ancient Britons. If
+ you admit this prudery, you must omit half Ariosto, La Fontaine,
+ Shakspeare, Beaumont, Fletcher, Massinger, Ford, all the Charles
+ Second writers; in short, _something_ of most who have written
+ before Pope and are worth reading, and much of Pope himself. _Read
+ him_--most of you _don't_--but _do_--and I will forgive you; though
+ the inevitable consequence would be that you would burn all I have
+ ever written, and all your other wretched Claudians of the day
+ (except Scott and Crabbe) into the bargain. I wrong Claudian, who
+ _was_ a _poet_, by naming him with such fellows; but he was the
+ 'ultimus Romanorum,' the tail of the comet, and these persons are
+ the tail of an old gown cut into a waistcoat for Jackey; but being
+ both _tails_, I have compared the one with the other, though very
+ unlike, like all similes. I write in a passion and a sirocco, and I
+ was up till six this morning at the Carnival: but I _protest_, as I
+ did in my former letter."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 326. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, February 1. 1819.
+
+ "After one of the concluding stanzas of the first Canto of 'Don
+ Juan,' which ends with (I forget the number)--
+
+ "To have ...
+ ... when the original is dust,
+ A book, a d----d bad picture, and worse bust,
+
+ insert the following stanza:--
+
+ "What are the hopes of man, &c.
+
+ "I have written to you several letters, some with additions, and
+ some upon the subject of the poem itself, which my cursed
+ puritanical committee have protested against publishing. But we
+ will circumvent them on that point. I have not yet begun to copy
+ out the second Canto, which is finished, from natural laziness, and
+ the discouragement of the milk and water they have thrown upon the
+ first. I say all this to them as to you, that is, for _you_ to say
+ to _them_, for I will have nothing underhand. If they had told me
+ the poetry was bad, I would have acquiesced; but they say the
+ contrary, and then talk to me about morality--the first time I ever
+ heard the word from any body who was not a rascal that used it for
+ a purpose. I maintain that it is the most moral of poems; but if
+ people won't discover the moral, that is their fault, not mine. I
+ have already written to beg that in any case you will print _fifty_
+ for private distribution. I will send you the list of persons to
+ whom it is to be sent afterwards.
+
+ "Within this last fortnight I have been rather indisposed with a
+ rebellion of stomach, which would retain nothing, (liver, I
+ suppose,) and an inability, or fantasy, not to be able to eat of
+ any thing with relish but a kind of Adriatic fish called 'scampi,'
+ which happens to be the most indigestible of marine viands.
+ However, within these last two days, I am better, and very truly
+ yours."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 327. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, April 6. 1819.
+
+ "The second Canto of Don Juan was sent, on Saturday last, by post,
+ in four packets, two of four, and two of three sheets each,
+ containing in all two hundred and seventeen stanzas, octave
+ measure. But I will permit no curtailments, except those mentioned
+ about Castlereagh and * * * *. You sha'n't make _canticles_ of my
+ cantos. The poem will please, if it is lively; if it is stupid, it
+ will fail: but I will have none of your damned cutting and
+ slashing. If you please, you may publish _anonymously_; it will
+ perhaps be better; but I will battle my way against them all, like
+ a porcupine.
+
+ "So you and Mr. Foscolo, &c. want me to undertake what you call a
+ 'great work?' an Epic Poem, I suppose, or some such pyramid. I'll
+ try no such thing; I hate tasks. And then 'seven or eight years!'
+ God send us all well this day three months, let alone years. If
+ one's years can't be better employed than in sweating poesy, a man
+ had better be a ditcher. And works, too!--is Childe Harold
+ nothing? You have so many 'divine poems,' is it nothing to have
+ written a _human_ one? without any of your worn-out machinery. Why,
+ man, I could have spun the thoughts of the four Cantos of that poem
+ into twenty, had I wanted to book-make, and its passion into as
+ many modern tragedies. Since you want _length_, you shall have
+ enough of _Juan_, for I'll make fifty Cantos.
+
+ "And Foscolo, too! Why does _he_ not do something more than the
+ Letters of Ortis, and a tragedy, and pamphlets? He has good fifteen
+ years more at his command than I have: what has he done all that
+ time?--proved his genius, doubtless, but not fixed its fame, nor
+ done his utmost.
+
+ "Besides, I mean to write my best work in _Italian_, and it will
+ take me nine years more thoroughly to master the language; and then
+ if my fancy exist, and I exist too, I will try what I _can_ do
+ _really_. As to the estimation of the English which you talk of,
+ let them calculate what it is worth, before they insult me with
+ their insolent condescension.
+
+ "I have not written for their pleasure. If they are pleased, it is
+ that they chose to be so; I have never flattered their opinions,
+ nor their pride; nor will I. Neither will I make 'Ladies' books 'al
+ dilettar le femine e la plebe.' I have written from the fulness of
+ my mind, from passion, from impulse, from many motives, but not for
+ their 'sweet voices.'
+
+ "I know the precise worth of popular applause, for few scribblers
+ have had more of it; and if I chose to swerve into their paths, I
+ could retain it, or resume it. But I neither love ye, nor fear ye;
+ and though I buy with ye and sell with ye, I will neither eat with
+ ye, drink with ye, nor pray with ye. They made me, without any
+ search, a species of popular idol; they, without reason or
+ judgment, beyond the caprice of their good pleasure, threw down the
+ image from its pedestal; it was not broken with the fall, and they
+ would, it seems, again replace it,--but they shall not.
+
+ "You ask about my health: about the beginning of the year I was in
+ a state of great exhaustion, attended by such debility of stomach
+ that nothing remained upon it; and I was obliged to reform my 'way
+ of life,' which was conducting me from the 'yellow leaf' to the
+ ground, with all deliberate speed. I am better in health and
+ morals, and very much yours, &c.
+
+ "P.S. I have read Hodgson's 'Friends.' He is right in defending
+ Pope against the bastard pelicans of the poetical winter day, who
+ add insult to their parricide, by sucking the blood of the parent
+ of English _real_ poetry,--poetry without fault,--and then spurning
+ the bosom which fed them."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was about the time when the foregoing letter was written, and when,
+as we perceive, like the first return of reason after intoxication, a
+full consciousness of some of the evils of his late libertine course of
+life had broken upon him, that an attachment differing altogether, both
+in duration and devotion, from any of those that, since the dream of his
+boyhood, had inspired him, gained an influence over his mind which
+lasted through his few remaining years; and, undeniably wrong and
+immoral (even allowing for the Italian estimate of such frailties) as
+was the nature of the connection to which this attachment led, we can
+hardly perhaps,--taking into account the far worse wrong from which it
+rescued and preserved him,--consider it otherwise than as an event
+fortunate both for his reputation and happiness.
+
+The fair object of this last, and (with one signal exception) only
+_real_ love of his whole life, was a young Romagnese lady, the daughter
+of Count Gamba, of Ravenna, and married, but a short time before Lord
+Byron first met with her, to an old and wealthy widower, of the same
+city, Count Guiccioli. Her husband had in early life been the friend of
+Alfieri, and had distinguished himself by his zeal in promoting the
+establishment of a National Theatre, in which the talents of Alfieri and
+his own wealth were to be combined. Notwithstanding his age, and a
+character, as it appears, by no means reputable, his great opulence
+rendered him an object of ambition among the mothers of Ravenna, who,
+according to the too frequent maternal practice, were seen vying with
+each other in attracting so rich a purchaser for their daughters, and
+the young Teresa Gamba, not yet sixteen, and just emancipated from a
+convent, was the selected victim.
+
+The first time Lord Byron had ever seen this lady was in the autumn of
+1818, when she made her appearance, three days after her marriage, at
+the house of the Countess Albrizzi, in all the gaiety of bridal array,
+and the first delight of exchanging a convent for the world. At this
+time, however, no acquaintance ensued between them;--it was not till the
+spring of the present year that, at an evening party of Madame
+Benzoni's, they were introduced to each other. The love that sprung out
+of this meeting was instantaneous and mutual, though with the usual
+disproportion of sacrifice between the parties; such an event being, to
+the man, but one of the many scenes of life, while, with woman, it
+generally constitutes the whole drama. The young Italian found herself
+suddenly inspired with a passion of which, till that moment, her mind
+could not have formed the least idea;--she had thought of love but as an
+amusement, and now became its slave. If at the outset, too, less slow to
+be won than an Englishwoman, no sooner did she begin to understand the
+full despotism of the passion than her heart shrunk from it as something
+terrible, and she would have escaped, but that the chain was already
+around her.
+
+No words, however, can describe so simply and feelingly as her own, the
+strong impression which their first meeting left upon her mind:--
+
+"I became acquainted (says Madame Guiccioli) with Lord Byron in the
+April of 1819:--he was introduced to me at Venice, by the Countess
+Benzoni, at one of that lady's parties. This introduction, which had so
+much influence over the lives of us both, took place contrary to our
+wishes, and had been permitted by us only from courtesy. For myself,
+more fatigued than usual that evening on account of the late hours they
+keep at Venice, I went with great repugnance to this party, and purely
+in obedience to Count Guiccioli. Lord Byron, too, who was averse to
+forming new acquaintances,--alleging that he had entirely renounced all
+attachments, and was unwilling any more to expose himself to their
+consequences,--on being requested by the countess Benzoni to allow
+himself to be presented to me, refused, and, at last, only assented from
+a desire to oblige her.
+
+"His noble and exquisitely beautiful countenance, the tone of his voice,
+his manners, the thousand enchantments that surrounded him, rendered him
+so different and so superior a being to any whom I had hitherto seen,
+that it was impossible he should not have left the most profound
+impression upon me. From that evening, during the whole of my subsequent
+stay at Venice, we met every day."[30]
+
+[Footnote 30: "Nell' Aprile del 1819, io feci la conoscenza di Lord
+Byron; e mi fu presentato a Venezia dalla Contessa Benzoni nella di lei
+società. Questa presentazione che ebbe tante consequenze per tutti e due
+fu fatta contro la volontà d'entrambi, e solo per condiscendenza
+l'abbiamo permessa. Io stanca più che mai quella sera par le ore tarde
+che si costuma fare in Venezia andai con molta ripugnanza e solo per
+ubbidire al Conte Guiccioli in quella società. Lord Byron che scansava
+di fare nuove conoscenze, dicendo sempre che aveva interamente
+rinunciato alle passioni e che non voleva esporsi più alle loro
+consequenze, quando la Contessa Benzoni la pregò di volersi far
+presentare a me eglì recusò, e solo per la compiàcenza glielo permise.
+La nobile e bellissima sua fisonomia, il suono della sua voce, le sue
+maniere, i mille incanti che lo circondavano lo rendevano un essere così
+differente, così superiore a tutti quelli che io aveva sino allora
+veduti che non potei a meno di non provarne la più profonda impressione.
+Da quella sera in poi in tutti i giorni che mi fermai in Venezia ei
+siamo seinpre veduti."--MS.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 328. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, May 15. 1819.
+
+ "I have got your extract, and the 'Vampire.' I need not say it is
+ _not mine_. There is a rule to go by: you are my publisher (till we
+ quarrel), and what is not published by you is not written by me.
+
+ "Next week I set out for Romagna--at least, in all probability. You
+ had better go on with the publications, without waiting to hear
+ farther, for I have other things in my head. 'Mazeppa' and the
+ 'Ode' separate?--what think you? _Juan anonymous, without the
+ Dedication;_ for I won't be shabby, and attack Southey under cloud
+ of night.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In another letter on the subject of the Vampire, I find the following
+interesting particulars:--
+
+ "TO MR. ----.
+
+ "The story of Shelley's agitation is true.[31] I can't tell what
+ seized him, for he don't want courage. He was once with me in a
+ gale of wind, in a small boat, right under the rocks between
+ Meillerie and St. Gingo. We were five in the boat--a servant, two
+ boatmen, and ourselves. The sail was mismanaged, and the boat was
+ filling fast. He can't swim. I stripped off my coat, made him strip
+ off his, and take hold of an oar, telling him that I thought (being
+ myself an expert swimmer) I could save him, if he would not
+ struggle when I took hold of him--unless we got smashed against the
+ rocks, which were high and sharp, with an awkward surf on them at
+ that minute. We were then about a hundred yards from shore, and the
+ boat in peril. He answered me with the greatest coolness, 'that he
+ had no notion of being saved, and that I would have enough to do to
+ save myself, and begged not to trouble me.' Luckily, the boat
+ righted, and, bailing, we got round a point into St. Gingo, where
+ the inhabitants came down and embraced the boatmen on their escape,
+ the wind having been high enough to tear up some huge trees from
+ the Alps above us, as we saw next day.
+
+ "And yet the same Shelley, who was as cool as it was possible to be
+ in such circumstances, (of which I am no judge myself, as the
+ chance of swimming naturally gives self-possession when near
+ shore,) certainly had the fit of phantasy which Polidori describes,
+ though _not exactly_ as he describes it.
+
+ "The story of the agreement to write the ghost-books is true; but
+ the ladies are _not_ sisters. Mary Godwin (now Mrs. Shelley) wrote
+ Frankenstein, which you have reviewed, thinking it Shelley's.
+ Methinks it is a wonderful book for a girl of nineteen,--not
+ nineteen, indeed, at that time. I enclose you the beginning of
+ mine, by which you will see how far it resembles Mr. Colburn's
+ publication. If you choose to publish it, you may, _stating why_,
+ and with such explanatory proem as you please. I never went on with
+ it, as you will perceive by the date. I began it in an old
+ account-book of Miss Milbanke's, which I kept because it contains
+ the word 'Household,' written by her twice on the inside blank page
+ of the covers, being the only two scraps I have in the world in her
+ writing, except her name to the Deed of Separation. Her letters I
+ sent back except those of the quarrelling correspondence, and
+ those, being documents, are placed in the hands of a third person,
+ with copies of several of my own; so that I have no kind of
+ memorial whatever of her, but these two words,--and her actions. I
+ have torn the leaves containing the part of the Tale out of the
+ book, and enclose them with this sheet.
+
+ "What do you mean? First you seem hurt by my letter, and then, in
+ your next, you talk of its 'power,' and so forth. 'This is a
+ d----d blind story, Jack; but never mind, go on.' You may be sure I
+ said nothing _on purpose_ to plague you; but if you will put me 'in
+ a frenzy, I will never call you _Jack_ again.' I remember nothing
+ of the epistle at present.
+
+ "What do you mean by Polidori's _Diary_? Why, I defy him to say any
+ thing about me, but he is welcome. I have nothing to reproach me
+ with on his score, and I am much mistaken if that is not his _own_
+ opinion. But why publish the names of the two girls? and in such a
+ manner?--what a blundering piece of exculpation! _He_ asked Pictet,
+ &c. to dinner, and of course was left to entertain them. I went
+ into society _solely_ to present _him_ (as I told him), that he
+ might return into good company if he chose; it was the best thing
+ for his youth and circumstances: for myself, I had done with
+ society, and, having presented him, withdrew to my own 'way of
+ life.' It is true that I returned without entering Lady Dalrymple
+ Hamilton's, because I saw it full. It is true that Mrs. Hervey (she
+ writes novels) fainted at my entrance into Coppet, and then came
+ back again. On her fainting, the Duchess de Broglie exclaimed,
+ 'This is _too much_--at _sixty-five_ years of age!'--I never gave
+ 'the English' an opportunity of avoiding me; but I trust that, if
+ ever I do, they will seize it. With regard to Mazeppa and the Ode,
+ you may join or separate them, as you please, from the two Cantos.
+
+ "Don't suppose I want to put you out of humour. I have a great
+ respect for your good and gentlemanly qualities, and return your
+ personal friendship towards me; and although I think you a little
+ spoilt by 'villanous company,'--wits, persons of honour about town,
+ authors, and fashionables, together with your 'I am just going to
+ call at Carlton House, are you walking that way?'--I say,
+ notwithstanding 'pictures, taste, Shakspeare, and the musical
+ glasses,' you deserve and possess the esteem of those whose esteem
+ is worth having, and of none more (however useless it may be) than
+ yours very truly, &c.
+
+ "P.S. Make my respects to Mr. Gifford. I am perfectly aware that
+ 'Don Juan' must set us all by the ears, but that is my concern, and
+ my beginning. There will be the 'Edinburgh,' and all, too, against
+ it, so that, like 'Rob Roy,' I shall have my hands full."
+
+[Footnote 31: This story, as given in the Preface to the "Vampire," is
+as follows:--
+
+"It appears that one evening Lord B., Mr. P.B. Shelley, two ladies, and
+the gentleman before alluded to, after having perused a German work
+called Phantasmagoria, began relating ghost stories, when his Lordship
+having recited the beginning of Christabel, then unpublished, the whole
+took so strong a hold of Mr. Shelley's mind, that he suddenly started
+up, and ran out of the room. The physician and Lord Byron followed, and
+discovered him leaning against a mantel-piece, with cold drops of
+perspiration trickling down his face. After having given him something
+to refresh him, upon enquiring into the cause of his alarm, they found
+that his wild imagination having pictured to him the bosom of one of the
+ladies with eyes (which was reported of a lady in the neighbourhood
+where he lived), he was obliged to leave the room in order to destroy
+the impression."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 329. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, May 25. 1819.
+
+ "I have received no proofs by the last post, and shall probably
+ have quitted Venice before the arrival of the next. There wanted a
+ few stanzas to the termination of Canto first in the last proof;
+ the next will, I presume, contain them, and the whole or a portion
+ of Canto second; but it will be idle to wait for further answers
+ from me, as I have directed that my letters wait for my return
+ (perhaps in a month, and probably so); therefore do not wait for
+ further advice from me. You may as well talk to the wind, and
+ better--for _it_ will at least convey your accents a little further
+ than they would otherwise have gone; whereas _I_ shall neither
+ echo nor acquiesce in your 'exquisite reasons.' You may omit the
+ _note_ of reference to Hobhouse's travels, in Canto second, and you
+ will put as motto to the whole--
+
+ 'Difficile est proprie communia dicere.'--HORACE.
+
+ "A few days ago I sent you all I know of Polidori's Vampire. He may
+ do, say, or write, what he pleases, but I wish he would not
+ attribute to me his own compositions. If he has any thing of mine
+ in his possession, the MS. will put it beyond controversy; but I
+ scarcely think that any one who knows me would believe the thing in
+ the Magazine to be mine, even if they saw it in my own
+ hieroglyphics.
+
+ "I write to you in the agonies of a _sirocco_, which annihilates
+ me; and I have been fool enough to do four things since dinner,
+ which are as well omitted in very hot weather: 1stly, * * * *;
+ 2dly, to play at billiards from 10 to 12, under the influence of
+ lighted lamps, that doubled the heat; 3dly, to go afterwards into a
+ red-hot conversazione of the Countess Benzoni's; and, 4thly, to
+ begin this letter at three in the morning: but being begun, it must
+ be finished.
+
+ "Ever very truly and affectionately yours,
+
+ "B.
+
+ "P.S. I petition for tooth-brushes, powder, magnesia, Macassar oil
+ (or Russia), _the_ sashes, and Sir Nl. Wraxall's Memoirs of his own
+ Times. I want, besides, a bull-dog, a terrier, and two Newfoundland
+ dogs; and I want (is it Buck's?) a life of _Richard 3d_,
+ advertised by Longman _long, long, long_ ago; I asked for it at
+ least three years since. See Longman's advertisements."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+About the middle of April, Madame Guiccioli had been obliged to quit
+Venice with her husband. Having several houses on the road from Venice
+to Ravenna, it was his habit to stop at these mansions, one after the
+other, in his journeys between the two cities; and from all these places
+the enamoured young Countess now wrote to Lord Byron, expressing, in the
+most passionate and pathetic terms, her despair at leaving him. So
+utterly, indeed, did this feeling overpower her, that three times, in
+the course of her first day's journey, she was seized with fainting
+fits. In one of her letters, which I saw when at Venice, dated, if I
+recollect right, from "Cà Zen, Cavanelle di Po," she tells him that the
+solitude of this place, which she had before found irksome, was, now
+that one sole idea occupied her mind, become dear and welcome to her,
+and promises that, as soon as she arrives at Ravenna, "she will,
+according to his wish, avoid all general society, and devote herself to
+reading, music, domestic occupations, riding on horseback,--every thing,
+in short, that she knew he would most like." What a change for a young
+and simple girl, who, but a few weeks before, had thought only of
+society and the world, but who now saw no other happiness but in the
+hope of making herself worthy, by seclusion and self-instruction, of the
+illustrious object of her devotion!
+
+On leaving this place, she was attacked with a dangerous illness on the
+road, and arrived half dead at Ravenna; nor was it found possible to
+revive or comfort her till an assurance was received from Lord Byron,
+expressed with all the fervour of real passion, that, in the course of
+the ensuing month, he would pay her a visit. Symptoms of consumption,
+brought on by her state of mind, had already shown themselves; and, in
+addition to the pain which this separation had caused her, she was also
+suffering much grief from the loss of her mother, who, at this time,
+died in giving birth to her fourteenth child. Towards the latter end of
+May she wrote to acquaint Lord Byron that, having prepared all her
+relatives and friends to expect him, he might now, she thought, venture
+to make his appearance at Ravenna. Though, on the lady's account,
+hesitating as to the prudence of such a step, he, in obedience to her
+wishes, on the 2d of June, set out from La Mira (at which place he had
+again taken a villa for the summer), and proceeded towards Romagna.
+
+From Padua he addressed a letter to Mr. Hoppner, chiefly occupied with
+matters of household concern which that gentleman had undertaken to
+manage for him at Venice, but, on the immediate object of his journey,
+expressing himself in a tone so light and jesting, as it would be
+difficult for those not versed in his character to conceive that he
+could ever bring himself, while under the influence of a passion so
+sincere, to assume. But such is ever the wantonness of the mocking
+spirit, from which nothing,--not even love,--remains sacred; and which,
+at last, for want of other food, turns upon himself. The same horror,
+too, of hypocrisy that led Lord Byron to exaggerate his own errors, led
+him also to disguise, under a seemingly heartless ridicule, all those
+natural and kindly qualities by which they were redeemed.
+
+This letter from Padua concludes thus:--
+
+ "A journey in an Italian June is a conscription; and if I was not
+ the most constant of men, I should now be swimming from the Lido,
+ instead of smoking in the dust of Padua. Should there be letters
+ from England, let them wait my return. And do look at my house and
+ (not lands, but) waters, and scold;--and deal out the monies to
+ Edgecombe[32] with an air of reluctance and a shake of the
+ head--and put queer questions to him--and turn up your nose when he
+ answers.
+
+ "Make my respect to the Consules--and to the Chevalier--and to
+ Scotin--and to all the counts and countesses of our acquaintance.
+
+ "And believe me ever
+
+ "Your disconsolate and affectionate," &c.
+
+[Footnote 32: A clerk of the English Consulate, whom he at this time
+employed to control his accounts.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As a contrast to the strange levity of this letter, as well as in
+justice to the real earnestness of the passion, however censurable in
+all other respects, that now engrossed him, I shall here transcribe some
+stanzas which he wrote in the course of this journey to Romagna, and
+which, though already published, are not comprised in the regular
+collection of his works.
+
+ "River[33], that rollest by the ancient walls,
+ Where dwells the lady of my love, when she
+ Walks by thy brink, and there perchance recalls
+ A faint and fleeting memory of me;
+
+ "What if thy deep and ample stream should be
+ A mirror of my heart, where she may read
+ The thousand thoughts I now betray to thee,
+ Wild as thy wave, and headlong as thy speed!
+
+ "What do I say--a mirror of my heart?
+ Are not thy waters sweeping, dark, and strong?
+ Such as my feelings were and are, thou art;
+ And such as thou art were my passions long.
+
+ "Time may have somewhat tamed them,--not for ever;
+ Thou overflow'st thy banks, and not for aye
+ Thy bosom overboils, congenial river!
+ Thy floods subside, and mine have sunk away,
+
+ "But left long wrecks behind, and now again,
+ Borne in our old unchanged career, we move;
+ Thou tendest wildly onwards to the main,
+ And I--to loving _one_ I should not love.
+
+ "The current I behold will sweep beneath
+ Her native walls and murmur at her feet;
+ Her eyes will look on thee, when she shall breathe
+ The twilight air, unharm'd by summer's heat.
+
+ "She will look on thee,--I have look'd on thee,
+ Full of that thought; and, from that moment, ne'er
+ Thy waters could I dream of, name, or see,
+ Without the inseparable sigh for her!
+
+ "Her bright eyes will be imaged in thy stream,--
+ Yes! they will meet the wave I gaze on now:
+ Mine cannot witness, even in a dream,
+ That happy wave repass me in its flow!
+
+ "The wave that bears my tears returns no more:
+ Will she return by whom that wave shall sweep?--
+ Both tread thy banks, both wander on thy shore,
+ I by thy source, she by the dark-blue deep.
+
+ "But that which keepeth us apart is not
+ Distance, nor depth of wave, nor space of earth.
+ But the distraction of a various lot,
+ As various as the climates of our birth.
+
+ "A stranger loves the lady of the land,
+ Born far beyond the mountains, but his blood
+ Is all meridian, as if never fann'd
+ By the black wind that chills the polar flood.
+
+ "My blood is all meridian; were it not,
+ I had not left my clime, nor should I be,
+ In spite of tortures, ne'er to be forgot,
+ A slave again of love,--at least of thee.
+
+ "'Tis vain to struggle--let me perish young--
+ Live as I lived, and love as I have loved;
+ To dust if I return, from dust I sprung,
+ And then, at least, my heart can ne'er be moved."
+
+On arriving at Bologna and receiving no further intelligence from the
+Contessa, he began to be of opinion, as we shall perceive in the annexed
+interesting letters, that he should act most prudently, for all parties,
+by returning to Venice.
+
+[Footnote 33: The Po.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 330. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "Bologna, June 6. 1819.
+
+ "I am at length joined to Bologna, where I am settled like a
+ sausage, and shall be broiled like one, if this weather continues.
+ Will you thank Mengaldo on my part for the Ferrara acquaintance,
+ which was a very agreeable one. I stayed two days at Ferrara, and
+ was much pleased with the Count Mosti, and the little the shortness
+ of the time permitted me to see of his family. I went to his
+ conversazione, which is very far superior to any thing of the kind
+ at Venice--the women almost all young--several pretty--and the men
+ courteous and cleanly. The lady of the mansion, who is young,
+ lately married, and with child, appeared very pretty by candlelight
+ (I did not see her by day), pleasing in her manners, and very
+ lady-like, or thorough-bred, as we call it in England,--a kind of
+ thing which reminds one of a racer, an antelope, or an Italian
+ greyhound. She seems very fond of her husband, who is amiable and
+ accomplished; he has been in England two or three times, and is
+ young. The sister, a Countess somebody--I forget what--(they are
+ both Maffei by birth, and Veronese of course)--is a lady of more
+ display; she sings and plays divinely; but I thought she was a
+ d----d long time about it. Her likeness to Madame Flahaut (Miss
+ Mercer that was) is something quite extraordinary.
+
+ "I had but a bird's eye view of these people, and shall not
+ probably see them again; but I am very much obliged to Mengaldo for
+ letting me see them at all. Whenever I meet with any thing
+ agreeable in this world, it surprises me so much, and pleases me so
+ much (when my passions are not interested one way or the other),
+ that I go on wondering for a week to come. I feel, too, in great
+ admiration of the Cardinal Legate's red stockings.
+
+ "I found, too, such a pretty epitaph in the Certosa cemetery, or
+ rather two: one was
+
+ 'Martini Luigi
+ Implora pace;'
+
+ the other,
+
+ 'Lucrezia Picini
+ Implora eterna quiete.'
+
+ That was all; but it appears to me that these two and three words
+ comprise and compress all that can be said on the subject,--and
+ then, in Italian, they are absolute music. They contain doubt,
+ hope, and humility; nothing can be more pathetic than the 'implora'
+ and the modesty of the request;--they have had enough of life--they
+ want nothing but rest--they implore it, and 'eterna quiete.' It is
+ like a Greek inscription in some good old heathen 'City of the
+ Dead.' Pray, if I am shovelled into the Lido churchyard in your
+ time, let me have the 'implora pace,' and nothing else, for my
+ epitaph. I never met with any, ancient or modern, that pleased me a
+ tenth part so much.
+
+ "In about a day or two after you receive this letter, I will thank
+ you to desire Edgecombe to prepare for my return. I shall go back
+ to Venice before I village on the Brenta. I shall stay but a few
+ days in Bologna. I am just going out to see sights, but shall not
+ present my introductory letters for a day or two, till I have run
+ over again the place and pictures; nor perhaps at all, if I find
+ that I have books and sights enough to do without the inhabitants.
+ After that, I shall return to Venice, where you may expect me about
+ the eleventh, or perhaps sooner. Pray make my thanks acceptable to
+ Mengaldo: my respects to the Consuless, and to Mr. Scott. I hope my
+ daughter is well.
+
+ "Ever yours, and truly.
+
+ "P.S. I went over the Ariosto MS. &c. &c. again at Ferrara, with
+ the castle, and cell, and house, &c. &c.
+
+ "One of the Ferrarese asked me if I knew 'Lord Byron,' an
+ acquaintance of his, _now_ at Naples. I told him '_No!_' which was
+ true both ways; for I knew not the impostor, and in the other, no
+ one knows himself. He stared when told that I was 'the real Simon
+ Pure.' Another asked me if I had _not translated_ 'Tasso.' You see
+ what _fame_ is! how _accurate!_ how _boundless!_ I don't know how
+ others feel, but I am always the lighter and the better looked on
+ when I have got rid of mine; it sits on me like armour on the Lord
+ Mayor's champion; and I got rid of all the husk of literature, and
+ the attendant babble, by answering, that I had not translated
+ Tasso, but a namesake had; and by the blessing of Heaven, I looked
+ so little like a poet, that every body believed me."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 331. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Bologna, June 7. 1819.
+
+ "Tell Mr. Hobhouse that I wrote to him a few days ago from Ferrara.
+ It will therefore be idle in him or you to wait for any further
+ answers or returns of proofs from Venice, as I have directed that
+ no English letters be sent after me. The publication can be
+ proceeded in without, and I am already sick of your remarks, to
+ which I think not the least attention ought to be paid.
+
+ "Tell Mr. Hobhouse that, since I wrote to him, I had availed myself
+ of my Ferrara letters, and found the society much younger and
+ better there than at Venice. I am very much pleased with the little
+ the shortness of my stay permitted me to see of the Gonfaloniere
+ Count Mosti, and his family and friends in general.
+
+ "I have been picture-gazing this morning at the famous Domenichino
+ and Guido, both of which are superlative. I afterwards went to the
+ beautiful cemetery of Bologna, beyond the walls, and found, besides
+ the superb burial-ground, an original of a Custode, who reminded
+ one of the grave-digger in Hamlet. He has a collection of
+ capuchins' skulls, labelled on the forehead, and taking down one of
+ them, said, 'This was Brother Desiderio Berro, who died at
+ forty--one of my best friends. I begged his head of his brethren
+ after his decease, and they gave it me. I put it in lime, and then
+ boiled it. Here it is, teeth and all, in excellent preservation. He
+ was the merriest, cleverest fellow I ever knew. Wherever he went,
+ he brought joy; and whenever any one was melancholy, the sight of
+ him was enough to make him cheerful again. He walked so actively,
+ you might have taken him for a dancer--he joked--he laughed--oh! he
+ was such a Frate as I never saw before, nor ever shall again!'
+
+ "He told me that he had himself planted all the cypresses in the
+ cemetery; that he had the greatest attachment to them and to his
+ dead people; that since 1801 they had buried fifty-three thousand
+ persons. In showing some older monuments, there was that of a Roman
+ girl of twenty, with a bust by Bernini. She was a princess
+ Bartorini, dead two centuries ago: he said that, on opening her
+ grave, they had found her hair complete, and 'as yellow as gold.'
+ Some of the epitaphs at Ferrara pleased me more than the more
+ splendid monuments at Bologna; for instance:--
+
+ "Martini Luigi
+ Implora pace;
+
+ "Lucrezia Picini
+ Implora eterna quiete.
+
+ Can any thing be more full of pathos? Those few words say all that
+ can be said or sought: the dead had had enough of life; all they
+ wanted was rest, and this they _implore_! There is all the
+ helplessness, and humble hope, and deathlike prayer, that can arise
+ from the grave--'implora pace.'[34] I hope, whoever may survive
+ me, and shall see me put in the foreigners' burying-ground at the
+ Lido, within the fortress by the Adriatic, will see those two
+ words, and no more, put over me. I trust they won't think of
+ 'pickling, and bringing me home to Clod or Blunderbuss Hall.' I am
+ sure my bones would not rest in an English grave, or my clay mix
+ with the earth of that country. I believe the thought would drive
+ me mad on my deathbed, could I suppose that any of my friends would
+ be base enough to convey my carcass back to your soil. I would not
+ even feed your worms, if I could help it.
+
+ "So, as Shakspeare says of Mowbray, the banished Duke of Norfolk,
+ who died at Venice (see Richard II.) that he, after fighting
+
+ "'Against black Pagans, Turks, and Saracens,
+ And toiled with works of war, retired himself
+ To Italy, and there, at _Venice_, gave
+ His body to that _pleasant_ country's earth,
+ And his pure soul unto his captain, Christ,
+ Under whose colours he had fought so long.'
+
+ "Before I left Venice, I had returned to you your late, and Mr.
+ Hobhouse's sheets of Juan. Don't wait for further answers from me,
+ but address yours to Venice, as usual. I know nothing of my own
+ movements; I may return there in a few days, or not for some time.
+ All this depends on circumstances. I left Mr. Hoppner very well. My
+ daughter Allegra was well too, and is growing pretty; her hair is
+ growing darker, and her eyes are blue. Her temper and her ways, Mr.
+ Hoppner says, are like mine, as well as her features: she will
+ make, in that case, a manageable young lady.
+
+ "I have never heard any thing of Ada, the little Electra of
+ Mycenae. But there will come a day of reckoning, even if I should
+ not live to see it.[35] What a long letter I have scribbled! Yours,
+ &c.
+
+ "P.S. Here, as in Greece, they strew flowers on the tombs. I saw a
+ quantity of rose-leaves, and entire roses, scattered over the
+ graves at Ferrara. It has the most pleasing effect you can
+ imagine."
+
+[Footnote 34: Though Lord Byron, like most other persons, in writing to
+different friends, was sometimes led to repeat the same circumstances
+and thoughts, there is, from the ever ready fertility of his mind, much
+less of such repetition in his correspondence than in that, perhaps, of
+any other multifarious letter-writer; and, in the instance before us,
+where the same facts and reflections are, for the second time,
+introduced, it is with such new touches, both of thought and expression,
+as render them, even a second time, interesting;--what is wanting in the
+novelty of the matter being made up by the new aspect given to it.]
+
+[Footnote 35: There were, in the former edition, both here and in a
+subsequent letter, some passages reflecting upon the late Sir Samuel
+Romilly, which, in my anxiety to lay open the workings of Lord Byron's
+mind upon a subject in which so much of his happiness and character were
+involved, I had been induced to retain, though aware of the erroneous
+impression under which they were written;--the evident morbidness of the
+feeling that dictated the attack, and the high, stainless reputation of
+the person assailed, being sufficient, I thought, to neutralise any ill
+effects such reflections might otherwise have produced. As I find it,
+however, to be the opinion of all those whose opinions I most respect,
+that, even with these antidotes, such an attack upon such a man ought
+not to be left on record, I willingly expunge all trace of it from these
+pages.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+While he was thus lingering irresolute at Bologna, the Countess
+Guiccioli had been attacked with an intermittent fever, the violence of
+which, combining with the absence of a confidential person to whom she
+had been in the habit of intrusting her letters, prevented her from
+communicating with him. At length, anxious to spare him the
+disappointment of finding her so ill on his arrival, she had begun a
+letter, requesting that he would remain at Bologna till the visit to
+which she looked forward should bring her there also; and was in the act
+of writing, when a friend came in to announce the arrival of an English
+lord in Ravenna. She could not doubt for an instant that it was her
+noble friend; and he had, in fact, notwithstanding his declaration to
+Mr. Hoppner that it was his intention to return to Venice immediately,
+wholly altered this resolution before the letter announcing it was
+despatched,--the following words being written on the outside cover:--"I
+am just setting off for Ravenna, June 8. 1819.--I changed my mind this
+morning, and decided to go on."
+
+The reader, however, shall have Madame Guiccioli's own account of these
+events, which, fortunately for the interest of my narration, I am
+enabled to communicate.
+
+"On my departure from Venice, he had promised to come and see me at
+Ravenna. Dante's tomb, the classical pine wood[36], the relics of
+antiquity which are to be found in that place, afforded a sufficient
+pretext for me to invite him to come, and for him to accept my
+invitation. He came, in fact, in the month of June, arriving at Ravenna
+on the day of the festival of the Corpus Domini; while I, attacked by a
+consumptive complaint, which had its origin from the moment of my
+quitting Venice, appeared on the point of death. The arrival of a
+distinguished foreigner at Ravenna, a town so remote from the routes
+ordinarily followed by travellers, was an event which gave rise to a
+good deal of conversation. His motives for such a visit became the
+subject of discussion, and these he himself afterwards involuntarily
+divulged; for having made some enquiries with a view to paying me a
+visit, and being told that it was unlikely that he would ever see me
+again, as I was at the point of death, he replied, if such were the
+case, he hoped that he should die also; which circumstance, being
+repeated, revealed the object of his journey. Count Guiccioli, having
+been acquainted with Lord Byron at Venice, went to visit him now, and in
+the hope that his presence might amuse, and be of some use to me in the
+state in which I then found myself, invited him to call upon me. He came
+the day following. It is impossible to describe the anxiety he
+showed,--the delicate attentions that he paid me. For a long time he had
+perpetually medical books in his hands; and not trusting my physicians,
+he obtained permission from Count Guiccioli to send for a very clever
+physician, a friend of his, in whom he placed great confidence. The
+attentions of Professor Aglietti (for so this celebrated Italian was
+called), together with tranquillity, and the inexpressible happiness
+which I experienced in Lord Byron's society, had so good an effect on my
+health, that only two months afterwards I was able to accompany my
+husband in a tour he was obliged to make to visit his various
+estates."[37]
+
+[Footnote 36:
+
+ "Tal qual di ramo in ramo si raccoglie
+ Per la pineta in sul lito di Chiassi,
+ Quando Eolo Scirocco fuor discioglie."
+ DANTE, PURG. Canto xxviii.
+
+Dante himself (says Mr. Carey, in one of the notes on his admirable
+translation of this poet) "perhaps wandered in this wood during his
+abode with Guido Novello da Polenta."]
+
+[Footnote 37: "Partendo io da Venezia egli promise di venir a vedermi a
+Ravenna. La Tomba di Dante, il classico bosco di pini, gli avvanzi di
+antichità che a Ravenna si trovano davano a me ragioni plausibili per
+invitarlo a venire, ed a lui per accettare l'invito. Egli venne difatti
+nel mese Guigno, e giunse a Ravenna nel giorno della Solennità del
+Corpus Domini, mentre io attaccata da una malattia de consunzione ch'
+ebbe principio dalla mia partenza da Venezia ero vicina a morire.
+L'arrivo in Ravenna d'un forestiero distinto, in un paese così lontano
+dalle strade che ordinariamente tengono i viaggiatori era un avvenimento
+del quale molto si parlava, indagandosene i motivi, che
+involontariamente poi egli feci conoscere. Perchè avendo egli domandato
+di me per venire a vedermi ed essendogli risposto 'che non potrebbe
+vedermi più perchè ero vicina a morire'--egli rispose che in quel caso
+voleva morire egli pure; la qual cosa essendosi poi ripetata si conobbe
+cosi l'oggetto del suo viaggio.
+
+"Il Conte Guiccioli visitò Lord Byron, essendolo conosciuto in Venezia,
+e nella speranza che la di lui compagnia potesse distrarmi ed essermi di
+qualche giovamento nello stato in cui mi trovavo egli lo invitò di
+venire a visitarmi. Il giorno appresso egli venne. Non si potrebbero
+descrivere le cure, i pensieri delicati, quanto egli fece per me. Per
+molto tempo egli non ebbe per le mani che dei Libri di Medicina; e poco
+confidandosi nel miei medici ottenne dal Conte Guiccioli il permesso di
+far venire un valente medico di lui amico nel quale egli aveva molta
+confidenza. Le cure del Professore Aglietti (cosi si chiama questo
+distinto Italiano) la tranquillità, anzi la felicità inesprimibile che
+mi cagionava la presenza di Lord Byron migliorarono così rapidamente la
+mia salute che entro lo spazio di due mesi potei seguire mio marito in
+un giro che egli doveva fare per le sue terre."--MS.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 332. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "Ravenna, June 20. 1819.
+
+ "I wrote to you from Padua, and from Bologna, and since from
+ Ravenna. I find my situation very agreeable, but want my horses
+ very much, there being good riding in the environs. I can fix no
+ time for my return to Venice--it may be soon or late--or not at
+ all--it all depends on the Donna, whom I found very seriously in
+ _bed_ with a cough and spitting of blood, &c. all of which has
+ subsided. I found all the people here firmly persuaded that she
+ would never recover;--they were mistaken, however.
+
+ "My letters were useful as far as I employed them; and I like both
+ the place and people, though I don't trouble the latter more than I
+ can help _She_ manages very well--but if I come away with a
+ stiletto in my gizzard some fine afternoon, I shall not be
+ astonished. I can't make _him_ out at all--he visits me frequently,
+ and takes me out (like Whittington, the Lord Mayor) in a coach and
+ _six_ horses. The fact appears to be, that he is completely
+ _governed_ by her--for that matter, so am I.[38] The people here
+ don't know what to make of us, as he had the character of jealousy
+ with all his wives--this is the third. He is the richest of the
+ Ravennese, by their own account, but is not popular among them. Now
+ do, pray, send off Augustine, and carriage and cattle, to Bologna,
+ without fail or delay, or I shall lose my remaining shred of
+ senses. Don't forget this. My coming, going, and every thing,
+ depend upon HER entirely, just as Mrs. Hoppner (to whom I remit my
+ reverences) said in the true spirit of female prophecy.
+
+ "You are but a shabby fellow not to have written before. And I am
+ truly yours," &c.
+
+[Footnote 38: That this task of "governing" him was one of more ease
+than, from the ordinary view of his character, might be concluded, I
+have more than once, in these pages, expressed my opinion, and shall
+here quote, in corroboration of it, the remark of his own servant
+(founded on an observation of more than twenty years), in speaking of
+his master's matrimonial fate:--
+
+"It is very odd, but I never yet knew a lady that could not manage my
+Lord, _except_ my Lady."
+
+"More knowledge," says Johnson, "may be gained of a man's real character
+by a short conversation with one of his servants than from the most
+formal and studied narrative."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 333. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, June 29. 1819.
+
+ "The letters have been forwarded from Venice, but I trust that you
+ will not have waited for further alterations--I will make none.
+
+ "I have no time to return you the proofs--publish without them. I
+ am glad you think the poesy good; and as to 'thinking of the
+ effect,' think _you_ of the sale, and leave me to pluck the
+ porcupines who may point their quills at you.
+
+ "I have been here (at Ravenna) these four weeks, having left Venice
+ a month ago;--I came to see my 'Amica,' the Countess Guiccioli, who
+ has been, and still continues, very unwell. * * She is only in her
+ seventeenth, but not of a strong constitution. She has a perpetual
+ cough and an intermittent fever, but bears up most _gallantly_ in
+ every sense of the word. Her husband (this is his third wife) is
+ the richest noble of Ravenna, and almost of Romagna; he is also
+ _not_ the youngest, being upwards of three-score, but in good
+ preservation. All this will appear strange to you, who do not
+ understand the meridian morality, nor our way of life in such
+ respects, and I cannot at present expound the difference;--but you
+ would find it much the same in these parts. At Faenza there is Lord
+ * * * * with an opera girl; and at the inn in the same town is a
+ Neapolitan Prince, who serves the wife of the Gonfaloniere of that
+ city. I am on duty here--so you see 'Così fan tut_ti_ e tut_te_.'
+
+ "I have my horses here, _saddle_ as well as carriage, and ride or
+ drive every day in the forest, the _Pineta_, the scene of
+ Boccaccio's novel, and Dryden's fable of Honoria, &c. &c.; and I
+ see my Dama every day; but I feel seriously uneasy about her
+ health, which seems very precarious. In losing her, I should lose a
+ being who has run great risks on my account, and whom I have every
+ reason to love--but I must not think this possible. I do not know
+ what I _should_ do if she died, but I ought to blow my brains
+ out--and I hope that I should. Her husband is a very polite
+ personage, but I wish he would not carry me out in his coach and
+ six, like Whittington and his cat.
+
+ "You ask me if I mean to continue D.J. &c. How should I know? What
+ encouragement do you give me, all of you, with your nonsensical
+ prudery? publish the two Cantos, and then you will see. I desired
+ Mr. Kinnaird to speak to you on a little matter of business; either
+ he has not spoken, or you have not answered. You are a pretty pair,
+ but I will be even with you both. I perceive that Mr. Hobhouse has
+ been challenged by Major Cartwright--Is the Major 'so cunning of
+ fence?'--why did not they fight?--they ought.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 334. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "Ravenna, July 2. 1819.
+
+ "Thanks for your letter and for Madame's. I will answer it
+ directly. Will you recollect whether I did not consign to you one
+ or two receipts of Madame Mocenigo's for house-rent--(I am not sure
+ of this, but think I did--if not, they will be in my drawers)--and
+ will you desire Mr. Dorville[39] to have the goodness to see if
+ Edgecombe has _receipts_ to all payments _hitherto_ made by him on
+ my account, and that there are _no debts_ at Venice? On your
+ answer, I shall send order of further remittance to carry on my
+ household expenses, as my present return to Venice is very
+ problematical; and it may happen--but I can say nothing
+ positive--every thing with me being indecisive and undecided,
+ except the disgust which Venice excites when fairly compared with
+ any other city in this part of Italy. When I say _Venice_, I mean
+ the _Venetians_--the city itself is superb as its history--but the
+ people are what I never thought them till they taught me to think
+ so.
+
+ "The best way will be to leave Allegra with Antonio's spouse till I
+ can decide something about her and myself--but I thought that you
+ would have had an answer from Mrs. V----r.[40] You have had bore
+ enough with me and mine already.
+
+ "I greatly fear that the Guiccioli is going into a consumption, to
+ which her constitution tends. Thus it is with every thing and every
+ body for whom I feel any thing like a real attachment;--'War,
+ death, or discord, doth lay siege to them.' I never even could
+ keep alive a dog that I liked or that liked me. Her symptoms are
+ obstinate cough of the lungs, and occasional fever, &c. &c. and
+ there are latent causes of an eruption in the skin, which she
+ foolishly repelled into the system two years ago: but I have made
+ them send her case to Aglietti; and have begged him to come--if
+ only for a day or two--to consult upon her state.
+
+ "If it would not bore Mr. Dorville, I wish he would keep an eye on
+ E---- and on my other ragamuffins. I might have more to say, but I
+ am absorbed about La Gui. and her illness. I cannot tell you the
+ effect it has upon me.
+
+ "The horses came, &c. &c. and I have been galloping through the
+ pine forest daily.
+
+ "Believe me, &c.
+
+ "P.S. My benediction on Mrs. Hoppner, a pleasant journey among the
+ Bernese tyrants, and safe return. You ought to bring back a
+ Platonic Bernese for my reformation. If any thing happens to my
+ present Amica, I have done with the passion for ever--it is my
+ _last_ love. As to libertinism, I have sickened myself of that, as
+ was natural in the way I went on, and I have at least derived that
+ advantage from vice, to _love_ in the better sense of the word.
+ _This_ will be my last adventure--I can hope no more to inspire
+ attachment, and I trust never again to feel it."
+
+[Footnote 39: The Vice-Consul of Mr. Hoppner.]
+
+[Footnote 40: An English widow lady, of considerable property in the
+north of England, who, having seen the little Allegra at Mr. Hoppner's,
+took an interest in the poor child's fate, and having no family of her
+own, offered to adopt and provide for this little girl, if Lord Byron
+would consent to renounce all claim to her. At first he seemed not
+disinclined to enter into her views--so far, at least, as giving
+permission that she should take the child with her to England and
+educate it; but the entire surrender of his paternal authority he would
+by no means consent to. The proposed arrangement accordingly was never
+carried into effect.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The impression which, I think, cannot but be entertained, from some
+passages of these letters, of the real fervour and sincerity of his
+attachment to Madame Guiccioli[41], would be still further confirmed by
+the perusal of his letters to that lady herself, both from Venice and
+during his present stay at Ravenna--all bearing, throughout, the true
+marks both of affection and passion. Such effusions, however, are but
+little suited to the general eye. It is the tendency of all strong
+feeling, from dwelling constantly on the same idea, to be monotonous;
+and those often-repeated vows and verbal endearments, which make the
+charm of true love-letters to the parties concerned in them, must for
+ever render even the best of them cloying to others. Those of Lord Byron
+to Madame Guiccioli, which are for the most part in Italian, and written
+with a degree of ease and correctness attained rarely by foreigners,
+refer chiefly to the difficulties thrown in the way of their
+meetings,--not so much by the husband himself, who appears to have liked
+and courted Lord Byron's society, as by the watchfulness of other
+relatives, and the apprehension felt by themselves lest their intimacy
+should give uneasiness to the father of the lady, Count Gamba, a
+gentleman to whose good nature and amiableness of character all who know
+him bear testimony.
+
+In the near approaching departure of the young Countess for Bologna,
+Lord Byron foresaw a risk of their being again separated; and under the
+impatience of this prospect, though through the whole of his preceding
+letters the fear of committing her by any imprudence seems to have been
+his ruling thought, he now, with that wilfulness of the moment which has
+so often sealed the destiny of years, proposed that she should, at once,
+abandon her husband and fly with him:--"c'è uno solo rimedio efficace,"
+he says,--"cioè d' andar vià insieme." To an Italian wife, almost every
+thing but this is permissible. The same system which so indulgently
+allows her a friend, as one of the regular appendages of her matrimonial
+establishment, takes care also to guard against all unseemly
+consequences of this privilege; and in return for such convenient
+facilities of wrong exacts rigidly an observance of all the appearances
+of right. Accordingly, the open step of deserting the husband for the
+lover instead of being considered, as in England, but a sign and sequel
+of transgression, takes rank, in Italian morality, as the main
+transgression itself; and being an offence, too, rendered wholly
+unnecessary by the latitude otherwise enjoyed, becomes, from its rare
+occurrence, no less monstrous than odious.
+
+The proposition, therefore, of her noble friend seemed to the young
+Contessa little less than sacrilege, and the agitation of her mind,
+between the horrors of such a step, and her eager readiness to give up
+all and every thing for him she adored, was depicted most strongly in
+her answer to the proposal. In a subsequent letter, too, the romantic
+girl even proposed, as a means of escaping the ignominy of an elopement,
+that she should, like another Juliet, "pass for dead,"--assuring him
+that there were many easy ways of effecting such a deception.
+
+[Footnote 41: "During my illness," says Madame Guiccioli, in her
+recollections of this period, "he was for ever near me, paying me the
+most amiable attentions, and when I became convalescent he was
+constantly at my side. In society, at the theatre, riding, walking, he
+never was absent from me. Being deprived at that time of his books, his
+horses, and all that occupied him at Venice, I begged him to gratify me
+by writing something on the subject of Dante, and, with his usual
+facility and rapidity, he composed his 'Prophecy.'"--"Durante la mia
+malattia L.B. era sempre presso di me, prestandomi le più sensibili
+cure, e quando passai allo stato di convalescenza egli era sempre al mio
+fianco;--e in società, e al teatro, e cavalcando, e passeggiando egli
+non si allontanava mai da me. In quel' epoca essendo egli privo de' suoi
+libri, e de' suoi cavalli, e di tuttociò che lo occupava in Venezia io
+lo pregai di volersi occupare per me scrivendo qualche cosa sul Dante;
+ed egli colla usata sua facilita e rapidita scrisse la sua Profezia."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 335. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, August 1. 1819.
+
+ [Address your Answer to Venice, however.]
+
+ "Don't be alarmed. You will see me defend myself gaily--that is, if
+ I happen to be in spirits; and by spirits, I don't mean your
+ meaning of the word, but the spirit of a bull-dog when pinched, or
+ a bull when pinned; it is then that they make best sport; and as my
+ sensations under an attack are probably a happy compound of the
+ united energies of these amiable animals, you may perhaps see what
+ Marrall calls 'rare sport,' and some good tossing and goring, in
+ the course of the controversy. But I must be in the right cue
+ first, and I doubt I am almost too far off to be in a sufficient
+ fury for the purpose. And then I have effeminated and enervated
+ myself with love and the summer in these last two months.
+
+ "I wrote to Mr. Hobhouse, the other day, and foretold that Juan
+ would either fall entirely or succeed completely; there will be no
+ medium. Appearances are not favourable; but as you write the day
+ after publication, it can hardly be decided what opinion will
+ predominate. You seem in a fright, and doubtless with cause. Come
+ what may I never will flatter the million's canting in any shape.
+ Circumstances may or may not have placed me at times in a situation
+ to lead the public opinion, but the public opinion never led, nor
+ ever shall lead, me. I will not sit on a degraded throne; so pray
+ put Messrs. * * or * *, or Tom Moore, or * * * upon it; they will
+ all of them be transported with their coronation.
+
+ "P.S. The Countess Guiccioli is much better than she was. I sent
+ you, before leaving Venice, the real original sketch which gave
+ rise to the 'Vampire,' &c.--Did you get it?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+This letter was, of course (like most of those he addressed to England
+at this time), intended to be shown; and having been, among others,
+permitted to see it, I took occasion, in my very next communication to
+Lord Byron, to twit him a little with the passage in it relating to
+myself,--the only one, as far as I can learn, that ever fell from my
+noble friend's pen during our intimacy, in which he has spoken of me
+otherwise than in terms of kindness and the most undeserved praise.
+Transcribing his own words, as well as I could recollect them, at the
+top of my letter, I added, underneath, "Is _this_ the way you speak of
+your friends?" Not long after, too, when visiting him at Venice, I
+remember making the same harmless little sneer a subject of raillery
+with him; but he declared boldly that he had no recollection of having
+ever written such words, and that, if they existed, "he must have been
+half asleep when he wrote them."
+
+I have mentioned the circumstance merely for the purpose of remarking,
+that with a sensibility vulnerable at so many points as his was, and
+acted upon by an imagination so long practised in self-tormenting, it is
+only wonderful that, thinking constantly, as his letters prove him to
+have been, of distant friends, and receiving from few or none equal
+proofs of thoughtfulness in return, he should not more frequently have
+broken out into such sallies against the absent and "unreplying." For
+myself, I can only say that, from the moment I began to unravel his
+character, the most slighting and even acrimonious expressions that I
+could have heard he had, in a fit of spleen, uttered against me, would
+have no more altered my opinion of his disposition, nor disturbed my
+affection for him, than the momentary clouding over of a bright sky
+could leave an impression on the mind of gloom, after its shadow had
+passed away.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 336. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, August 9. 1819.
+
+ "Talking of blunders reminds me of Ireland--Ireland of Moore.
+ What is this I see in Galignani about
+ 'Bermuda--agent--deputy--appeal--attachment,' &c.? What is the
+ matter? Is it any thing in which his friends can be of use to him?
+ Pray inform me.
+
+ "Of Don Juan I hear nothing further from you; * * *, but the papers
+ don't seem so fierce as the letter you sent me seemed to
+ anticipate, by their extracts at least in Galignani's Messenger. I
+ never saw such a set of fellows as you are! And then the pains
+ taken to exculpate the modest publisher--he remonstrated, forsooth!
+ I will write a preface that _shall_ exculpate _you_ and * * *, &c.
+ completely, on that point; but, at the same time, I will cut you
+ up, like gourds. You have no more soul than the Count de Caylus,
+ (who assured his friends, on his death-bed, that he had none, and
+ that _he_ must know better than they whether he had one or no,) and
+ no more blood than a water-melon! And I see there hath been
+ asterisks, and what Perry used to called 'd_o_mned cutting and
+ slashing'--but, never mind.
+
+ "I write in haste. To-morrow I set off for Bologna. I write to you
+ with thunder, lightning, &c. and all the winds of heaven whistling
+ through my hair, and the racket of preparation to boot. 'My
+ mistress dear, who hath fed my heart upon smiles and wine' for the
+ last two months, set off with her husband for Bologna this morning,
+ and it seems that I follow him at three to-morrow morning. I
+ cannot tell how our romance will end, but it hath gone on hitherto
+ most erotically. Such perils and escapes! Juan's are as child's
+ play in comparison. The fools think that all my _poeshie_ is always
+ allusive to my _own_ adventures: I have had at one time or another
+ better and more extraordinary and perilous and pleasant than these,
+ every day of the week, if I might tell them; but that must never
+ be.
+
+ "I hope Mrs. M. has accouched.
+
+ "Yours ever."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 337. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Bologna, August 12. 1819.
+
+ "I do not know how far I may be able to reply to your letter, for I
+ am not very well to-day. Last night I went to the representation of
+ Alfieri's Mirra, the two last acts of which threw me into
+ convulsions. I do not mean by that word a lady's hysterics, but the
+ agony of reluctant tears, and the choking shudder, which I do not
+ often undergo for fiction. This is but the second time for any
+ thing under reality: the first was on seeing Kean's Sir Giles
+ Overreach. The worst was, that the 'Dama' in whose box I was, went
+ off in the same way, I really believe more from fright than any
+ other sympathy--at least with the players: but she has been ill,
+ and I have been ill, and we are all languid and pathetic this
+ morning, with great expenditure of sal volatile.[42] But, to return
+ to your letter of the 23d of July.
+
+ "You are right, Gifford is right, Crabbe is right, Hobhouse is
+ right--you are all right, and I am all wrong; but do, pray, let me
+ have that pleasure. Cut me up root and branch; quarter me in the
+ Quarterly; send round my 'disjecti membra poetæ,' like those of
+ the Levite's concubine; make me, if you will, a spectacle to men
+ and angels; but don't ask me to alter, for I won't:--I am obstinate
+ and lazy--and there's the truth.
+
+ "But, nevertheless, I will answer your friend P * *, who objects to
+ the quick succession of fun and gravity, as if in that case the
+ gravity did not (in intention, at least) heighten the fun. His
+ metaphor is, that 'we are never scorched and drenched at the same
+ time.' Blessings on his experience! Ask him these questions about
+ 'scorching and drenching.' Did he never play at cricket, or walk a
+ mile in hot weather? Did he never spill a dish of tea over himself
+ in handing the cup to his charmer, to the great shame of his
+ nankeen breeches? Did he never swim in the sea at noonday with the
+ sun in his eyes and on his head, which all the foam of ocean could
+ not cool? Did he never draw his foot out of too hot water,
+ d----ning his eyes and his valet's? Did he never tumble into a
+ river or lake, fishing, and sit in his wet clothes in the boat, or
+ on the bank, afterwards 'scorched and drenched,' like a true
+ sportsman? 'Oh for breath to utter!'--but make him my compliments;
+ he is a clever fellow for all that--a very clever fellow.
+
+ "You ask me for the plan of Donny Johnny: I _have_ no plan; I _had_
+ no plan; but I had or have materials; though if, like Tony Lumpkin,
+ 'I am to be snubbed so when I am in spirits,' the poem will be
+ naught, and the poet turn serious again. If it don't take, I will
+ leave it off where it is, with all due respect to the public; but
+ if continued, it must be in my own way. You might as well make
+ Hamlet (or Diggory) 'act mad' in a strait waistcoat as trammel my
+ buffoonery, if I am to be a buffoon; their gestures and my thoughts
+ would only be pitiably absurd and ludicrously constrained. Why,
+ man, the soul of such writing is its licence; at least the
+ _liberty_ of that _licence_, if one likes--_not_ that one should
+ abuse it. It is like Trial by Jury and Peerage and the Habeas
+ Corpus--a very fine thing, but chiefly in the _reversion;_ because
+ no one wishes to be tried for the mere pleasure of proving his
+ possession of the privilege.
+
+ "But a truce with these reflections. You are too earnest and eager
+ about a work never intended to be serious. Do you suppose that I
+ could have any intention but to giggle and make giggle?--a playful
+ satire, with as little poetry as could be helped, was what I meant.
+ And as to the indecency, do, pray, read in Boswell what _Johnson_,
+ the sullen moralist, says of _Prior_ and Paulo Purgante.
+
+ "Will you get a favour done for me? _You_ can, by your government
+ friends, Croker, Canning, or my old schoolfellow Peel, and I can't.
+ Here it is. Will you ask them to appoint (_without salary or
+ emolument_) a noble Italian (whom I will name afterwards) consul or
+ vice-consul for Ravenna? He is a man of very large
+ property,--noble, too; but he wishes to have a British protection,
+ in case of changes. Ravenna is near the sea. He wants no
+ _emolument_ whatever. That his office might be useful, I know; as I
+ lately sent off from Ravenna to Trieste a poor devil of an English
+ sailor, who had remained there sick, sorry, and pennyless (having
+ been set ashore in 1814), from the want of any accredited agent
+ able or willing to help him homewards. Will you get this done? If
+ you do, I will then send his name and condition, subject, of
+ course, to rejection, if _not_ approved when known.
+
+ "I know that in the Levant you make consuls and vice-consuls,
+ perpetually, of foreigners. This man is a patrician, and has twelve
+ thousand a year. His motive is a British protection in case of new
+ invasions. Don't you think Croker would do it for us? To be sure,
+ my _interest_ is rare!! but, perhaps, a brother wit in the Tory
+ line might do a good turn at the request of so harmless and long
+ absent a Whig, particularly as there is no _salary_ or _burden_ of
+ any sort to be annexed to the office.
+
+ "I can assure you, I should look upon it as a great obligation;
+ but, alas! that very circumstance may, very probably, operate to
+ the contrary--indeed, it ought; but I have, at least, been an
+ honest and an open enemy. Amongst your many splendid government
+ connections, could not you, think you, get our Bibulus made a
+ Consul? or make me one, that I may make him my Vice. You may be
+ assured that, in case of accidents in Italy, he would be no feeble
+ adjunct--as you would think, if you knew his patrimony.
+
+ "What is all this about Tom Moore? but why do I ask? since the
+ state of my own affairs would not permit me to be of use to him,
+ though they are greatly improved since 1816, and may, with some
+ more luck and a little prudence, become quite clear. It seems his
+ claimants are _American_ merchants? _There goes Nemesis!_ Moore
+ abused America. It is always thus in the long run:--Time, the
+ Avenger. You have seen every trampler down, in turn, from
+ Buonaparte to the simplest individuals. You saw how some were
+ avenged even upon my insignificance, and how in turn * * * paid for
+ his atrocity. It is an odd world; but the watch has its mainspring,
+ after all.
+
+ "So the Prince has been repealing Lord Edward Fitzgerald's
+ forfeiture? _Ecco un' sonetto!_
+
+ "To be the father of the fatherless,
+ To stretch the hand from the throne's height, and raise
+ _His_ offspring, who expired in other days
+ To make thy sire's sway by a kingdom less,--
+ _This_ is to be a monarch, and repress
+ Envy into unutterable praise.
+ Dismiss thy guard, and trust thee to such traits,
+ For who would lift a hand, except to bless?
+ Were it not easy, sir, and is't not sweet
+ To make thyself beloved? and to be
+ Omnipotent by Mercy's means? for thus
+ Thy sovereignty would grow but more complete,
+ A despot thou, and yet thy people free,
+ And by the heart, not hand, enslaving us.
+
+ "There, you dogs! there's a sonnet for you: you won't have such as
+ that in a hurry from Mr. Fitzgerald. You may publish it with my
+ name, an' ye wool. He deserves all praise, bad and good; it was a
+ very noble piece of principality. Would you like an epigram--a
+ translation?
+
+ "If for silver, or for gold,
+ You could melt ten thousand pimples
+ Into half a dozen dimples,
+ Then your face we might behold,
+ Looking, doubtless, much more snugly,
+ Yet ev'n _then_ 'twould be d----d _ugly_.
+
+ "This was written on some Frenchwoman, by Rulhieres, I believe.
+ Yours."
+
+[Footnote 42: The "Dama," in whose company he witnessed this
+representation, thus describes its effect upon him:--"The play was that
+of Mirra; the actors, and particularly the actress who performed the
+part of Mirra, seconded with much success the intentions of our great
+dramatist. Lord Byron took a strong interest in the representation, and
+it was evident that he was deeply affected. At length there came a point
+of the performance at which he could no longer restrain his
+emotions;--he burst into a flood of tears, and, his sobs preventing him
+from remaining any longer in the box, he rose and left the theatre.--I
+saw him similarly affected another time during a representation of
+Alfieri's 'Philip,' at Ravenna."--"Gli attori, e specialmente l' attrice
+che rappresentava Mirra secondava assai bene la mente del nostro grande
+tragico. L.B. prece molto interesse alla rappresentazione, e si
+conosceva che era molto commosso. Venne un punto poi della tragedia in
+cui non potè più frenare la sua emozione,--diede in un diretto pianto e
+i singhiozzi gl' impedirono di più restare nel palco; onde si levò, e
+parti dal teatro. In uno stato simile lo viddi un altra volta a Ravenna
+ad una rappresentazione del Filippo d'Alfieri."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 338. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Bologna, August 23. 1819.
+
+ "I send you a letter to R * *ts, signed Wortley Clutterbuck, which
+ you may publish in what form you please, in answer to his article.
+ I have had many proofs of men's absurdity, but he beats all in
+ folly. Why, the wolf in sheep's clothing has tumbled into the very
+ trap! We'll strip him. The letter is written in great haste, and
+ amidst a thousand vexations. Your letter only came yesterday, so
+ that there is no time to polish: the post goes out to-morrow. The
+ date is 'Little Piddlington.' Let * * * * correct the press: he
+ knows and can read the handwriting. Continue to keep the
+ _anonymous_ about 'Juan;' it helps us to fight against overwhelming
+ numbers. I have a thousand distractions at present; so excuse
+ haste, and wonder I can act or write at all. Answer by post, as
+ usual.
+
+ "Yours.
+
+ "P.S. If I had had time, and been quieter and nearer, I would have
+ cut him to hash; but as it is, you can judge for yourselves."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The letter to the Reviewer, here mentioned, had its origin in rather an
+amusing circumstance. In the first Canto of Don Juan appeared the
+following passage:--
+
+ "For fear some prudish readers should grow skittish,
+ I've bribed My Grandmother's Review,--the British!
+
+ "I sent it in a letter to the editor,
+ Who thank'd me duly by return of post--
+ I'm for a handsome article his creditor;
+ Yet if my gentle Muse he please to roast,
+ And break a promise after having made it her,
+ Denying the receipt of what it cost,
+ And smear his page with gall instead of honey,
+ All I can say is--that he had the money."
+
+On the appearance of the poem, the learned editor of the Review in
+question allowed himself to be decoyed into the ineffable absurdity of
+taking the charge as serious, and, in his succeeding number, came forth
+with an indignant contradiction of it. To this tempting subject the
+letter, written so hastily off at Bologna, related; but, though printed
+for Mr. Murray, in a pamphlet consisting of twenty-three pages, it was
+never published by him.[43] Being valuable, however, as one of the best
+specimens we have of Lord Byron's simple and thoroughly English prose, I
+shall here preserve some extracts from it.
+
+[Footnote 43: It appeared afterwards in the Liberal.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"TO THE EDITOR OF THE BRITISH REVIEW.
+
+ "My dear R----ts,
+
+ "As a believer in the Church of England--to say nothing of the
+ State--I have been an occasional reader, and great admirer, though
+ not a subscriber, to your Review. But I do not know that any
+ article of its contents ever gave me much surprise till the
+ eleventh of your late twenty-seventh number made its appearance.
+ You have there most manfully refuted a calumnious accusation of
+ bribery and corruption, the credence of which in the public mind
+ might not only have damaged your reputation as a clergyman and an
+ editor, but, what would have been still worse, have injured the
+ circulation of your journal; which, I regret to hear, is not so
+ extensive as the 'purity (as you well observe) of its, &c. &c.' and
+ the present taste for propriety, would induce us to expect. The
+ charge itself is of a solemn nature; and, although in verse, is
+ couched in terms of such circumstantial gravity as to induce a
+ belief little short of that generally accorded to the thirty-nine
+ articles, to which you so generously subscribed on taking your
+ degrees. It is a charge the most revolting to the heart of man from
+ its frequent occurrence; to the mind of a statesman from its
+ occasional truth; and to the soul of an editor from its moral
+ impossibility. You are charged then in the last line of one octave
+ stanza, and the whole eight lines of the next, viz. 209th and 210th
+ of the first Canto of that 'pestilent poem,' Don Juan, with
+ receiving, and still more foolishly acknowledging, the receipt of
+ certain moneys to eulogise the unknown author, who by this account
+ must be known to you, if to nobody else. An impeachment of this
+ nature, so seriously made, there is but one way of refuting; and it
+ is my firm persuasion, that whether you did or did not (and _I_
+ believe that you did not) receive the said moneys, of which I wish
+ that he had specified the sum, you are quite right in denying all
+ knowledge of the transaction. If charges of this nefarious
+ description are to go forth, sanctioned by all the solemnity of
+ circumstance, and guaranteed by the veracity of verse (as
+ Counsellor Phillips would say), what is to become of readers
+ hitherto implicitly confident in the not less veracious prose of
+ our critical journals? what is to become of the reviews; and, if
+ the reviews fail, what is to become of the editors? It is common
+ cause, and you have done well to sound the alarm. I myself, in my
+ humble sphere, will be one of your echoes. In the words of the
+ tragedian Liston, 'I love a row,' and you seem justly determined to
+ make one.
+
+ "It is barely possible, certainly improbable, that the writer might
+ have been in jest; but this only aggravates his crime. A joke, the
+ proverb says, 'breaks no bones;' but it may break a bookseller, or
+ it may be the cause of bones being broken. The jest is but a bad
+ one at the best for the author, and might have been a still worse
+ one for you, if your copious contradiction did not certify to all
+ whom it may concern your own indignant innocence, and the
+ immaculate purity of the British Review. I do not doubt your word,
+ my dear R----ts, yet I cannot help wishing that, in a case of such
+ vital importance, it had assumed the more substantial shape of an
+ affidavit sworn before the Lord Mayor Atkins, who readily receives
+ any deposition; and doubtless would have brought it in some way as
+ evidence of the designs of the Reformers to set fire to London, at
+ the same time that he himself meditates the same good office
+ towards the river Thames.
+
+ "I recollect hearing, soon after the publication, this subject
+ discussed at the tea-table of Mr. * * * the poet,--and Mrs. and the
+ Misses * * * * * being in a corner of the room perusing the proof
+ sheets of Mr. * * *'s poems, the male part of the _conversazione_
+ were at liberty to make some observations on the poem and passage
+ in question, and there was a difference of opinion. Some thought
+ the allusion was to the 'British Critic;' others, that by the
+ expression 'My Grandmother's Review,' it was intimated that 'my
+ grandmother' was not the reader of the review, but actually the
+ writer; thereby insinuating, my dear Mr. R----ts, that you were an
+ old woman; because, as people often say, 'Jeffrey's Review,"
+ 'Gifford's Review,' in lieu of Edinburgh and Quarterly, so 'My
+ Grandmother's Review' and R----ts's might be also synonymous. Now,
+ whatever colour this insinuation might derive from the circumstance
+ of your wearing a gown, as well as from your time of life, your
+ general style, and various passages of your writings,--I will take
+ upon myself to exculpate you from all suspicion of the kind, and
+ assert, without calling Mrs. R----ts in testimony, that if ever you
+ should be chosen Pope, you will pass through all the previous
+ ceremonies with as much credit as any pontiff since the parturition
+ of Joan. It is very unfair to judge of sex from writings,
+ particularly from those of the British Review. We are all liable to
+ be deceived, and it is an indisputable fact that many of the best
+ articles in your journal, which were attributed to a veteran
+ female, were actually written by you yourself, and yet to this day
+ there are people who could never find out the difference. But let
+ us return to the more immediate question.
+
+ "I agree with you that it is impossible Lord B. should be the
+ author, not only because, as a British peer and a British poet, it
+ would be impracticable for him to have recourse to such facetious
+ fiction, but for some other reasons which you have omitted to
+ state. In the first place, his Lordship has no grandmother. Now the
+ author--and we may believe him in this--doth expressly state that
+ the 'British' is his 'Grandmother's Review;' and if, as I think I
+ have distinctly proved, this was not a mere figurative allusion to
+ your supposed intellectual age and sex, my dear friend, it follows,
+ whether you be she or no, that there is such an elderly lady still
+ extant.
+
+ "Shall I give you what I think a prudent opinion? I don't mean to
+ insinuate, God forbid! but if, by any accident, there should have
+ been such a correspondence between you and the unknown author,
+ whoever he may be, send him back his money; I dare say he will be
+ very glad to have it again; it can't be much, considering the value
+ of the article and the circulation of the journal; and you are too
+ modest to rate your praise beyond its real worth:--don't be angry,
+ I know you won't, at this appraisement of your powers of eulogy:
+ for on the other hand, my dear fellow, depend upon it your abuse is
+ worth, not its own weight, that's a feather, but _your_ weight in
+ gold. So don't spare it; if he has bargained for _that_, give it
+ handsomely, and depend upon your doing him a friendly office.
+
+ "What the motives of this writer may have been for (as you
+ magnificently translate his quizzing you) 'stating, with the
+ particularity which belongs to fact, the forgery of a groundless
+ fiction,' (do, pray, my dear R., talk a little less 'in King
+ Cambyses' vein,') I cannot pretend to say; perhaps to laugh at you,
+ but that is no reason for your benevolently making all the world
+ laugh also. I approve of your being angry, I tell you I am angry
+ too, but you should not have shown it so outrageously. Your solemn
+ '_if_ somebody personating the Editor of the, &c. &c. has received
+ from Lord B. or from any other person,' reminds me of Charley
+ Incledon's usual exordium when people came into the tavern to hear
+ him sing without paying their share of the reckoning--'if a maun,
+ or _ony_ maun, or _ony other_ maun,' &c. &c.; you have both the
+ same redundant eloquence. But why should you think any body would
+ personate you? Nobody would dream of such a prank who ever read
+ your compositions, and perhaps not many who have heard your
+ conversation. But I have been inoculated with a little of your
+ prolixity. The fact is, my dear R----ts, that somebody has tried to
+ make a fool of you, and what he did not succeed in doing, you have
+ done for him and for yourself."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Towards the latter end of August, Count Guiccioli, accompanied by his
+lady, went for a short time to visit some of his Romagnese estates,
+while Lord Byron remained at Bologna alone. And here, with a heart
+softened and excited by the new feeling that had taken possession of
+him, he appears to have given himself up, during this interval of
+solitude, to a train of melancholy and impassioned thought, such as, for
+a time, brought back all the romance of his youthful days. That spring
+of natural tenderness within his soul, which neither the world's efforts
+nor his own had been able to chill or choke up, was now, with something
+of its first freshness, set flowing once more. He again knew what it was
+to love and be loved,--too late, it is true, for happiness, and too
+wrongly for peace, but with devotion enough, on the part of the woman,
+to satisfy even his thirst for affection, and with a sad earnestness, on
+his own, a foreboding fidelity, which made him cling but the more
+passionately to this attachment from feeling that it would be his last.
+
+A circumstance which he himself used to mention as having occurred at
+this period will show how over-powering, at times, was the rush of
+melancholy over his heart. It was his fancy, during Madame Guiccioli's
+absence from Bologna, to go daily to her house at his usual hour of
+visiting her, and there, causing her apartments to be opened, to sit
+turning over her books, and writing in them.[44] He would then descend
+into her garden, where he passed hours in musing; and it was on an
+occasion of this kind, as he stood looking, in a state of unconscious
+reverie, into one of those fountains so common in the gardens of Italy,
+that there came suddenly into his mind such desolate fancies, such
+bodings of the misery he might bring on her he loved, by that doom which
+(as he has himself written) "makes it fatal to be loved[45]," that,
+overwhelmed with his own thoughts, he burst into an agony of tears.
+
+During the same few days it was that he wrote in the last page of Madame
+Guiccioli's copy of "Corinne" the following remarkable note:--
+
+ "My dearest Teresa,--I have read this book in your garden;--my
+ love, you were absent, or else I could not have read it. It is a
+ favourite book of yours, and the writer was a friend of mine. You
+ will not understand these English words, and _others_ will not
+ understand them--which is the reason I have not scrawled them in
+ Italian. But you will recognise the hand-writing of him who
+ passionately loved you, and you will divine that, over a book which
+ was yours, he could only think of love. In that word, beautiful in
+ all languages, but most so in yours--_Amor mio_--is comprised my
+ existence here and hereafter. I feel I exist here, and I fear that
+ I shall exist hereafter,--to _what_ purpose you will decide; my
+ destiny rests with you, and you are a woman, seventeen years of
+ age, and two out of a convent. I wish that you had stayed there,
+ with all my heart,--or, at least, that I had never met you in your
+ married state.
+
+ "But all this is too late. I love you, and you love me,--at least,
+ you _say so_, and _act_ as if you _did_ so, which last is a great
+ consolation in all events. But _I_ more than love you, and cannot
+ cease to love you.
+
+ "Think of me, sometimes, when the Alps and the ocean divide
+ us,--but they never will, unless you _wish_ it. BYRON.
+
+ "Bologna, August 25. 1819."
+
+[Footnote 44: One of these notes, written at the end of the 5th chapter,
+18th book of Corinne ("Fragmens des Pensées de Corinne") is as
+follows:--
+
+ "I knew Madame de Staël well,--better than she knew Italy,--but I
+ little thought that, one day, I should _think with her thoughts_,
+ in the country where she has laid the scene of her most attractive
+ productions. She is sometimes right, and often wrong, about Italy
+ and England; but almost always true in delineating the heart, which
+ is of but one nation, and of no country,--or, rather, of all.
+
+ "BYRON.
+
+ "Bologna, August 23. 1819."
+]
+
+[Footnote 45:
+
+ "Oh Love! what is it, in this world of ours,
+ Which makes it fatal to be loved? ah! why
+ With cypress branches hast thou wreath'd thy bowers,
+ And made thy best interpreter a sigh?
+ As those who dote on odours pluck the flowers,
+ And place them on their breasts--but place to die.--
+ Thus the frail beings we would fondly cherish
+ Are laid within our bosoms but to perish."
+]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 339. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Bologna, August 24. 1819.
+
+ "I wrote to you by last post, enclosing a buffooning letter for
+ publication, addressed to the buffoon R----ts, who has thought
+ proper to tie a canister to his own tail. It was written off-hand,
+ and in the midst of circumstances not very favourable to
+ facetiousness, so that there may, perhaps, be more bitterness than
+ enough for that sort of small acid punch:--you will tell me.
+
+ "Keep the anonymous, in any case: it helps what fun there may be.
+ But if the matter grow serious about _Don Juan_, and you feel
+ _yourself_ in a scrape, or _me_ either, _own that I am the author._
+ _I_ will never _shrink_; and if _you_ do, I can always answer you
+ in the question of Guatimozin to his minister--each being on his
+ own coals.[46]
+
+ "I wish that I had been in better spirits; but I am out of sorts,
+ out of nerves, and now and then (I begin to fear) out of my senses.
+ All this Italy has done for me, and not England: I defy all you,
+ and your climate to boot, to make me mad. But if ever I do really
+ become a bedlamite, and wear a strait waistcoat, let me be brought
+ back among you; your people will then be proper company.
+
+ "I assure you what I here say and feel has nothing to do with
+ England, either in a literary or personal point of view. All my
+ present pleasures or plagues are as Italian as the opera. And after
+ all, they are but trifles; for all this arises from my 'Dama's'
+ being in the country for three days (at Capo-fiume). But as I could
+ never live but for one human being at a time, (and, I assure you,
+ _that one_ has never been _myself_, as you may know by the
+ consequences, for the _selfish_ are _successful_ in life,) I feel
+ alone and unhappy.
+
+ "I have sent for my daughter from Venice, and I ride daily, and
+ walk in a garden, under a purple canopy of grapes, and sit by a
+ fountain, and talk with the gardener of his tools, which seem
+ greater than Adam's, and with his wife, and with his son's wife,
+ who is the youngest of the party, and, I think, talks best of the
+ three. Then I revisit the Campo Santo, and my old friend, the
+ sexton, has two--but _one_ the prettiest daughter imaginable; and I
+ amuse myself with contrasting her beautiful and innocent face of
+ fifteen with the skulls with which he has peopled several cells,
+ and particularly with that of one skull dated 1766, which was once
+ covered (the tradition goes) by the most lovely features of
+ Bologna--noble and rich. When I look at these, and at this
+ girl--when I think of what _they were_, and what she must be--why,
+ then, my dear Murray, I won't shock you by saying what I think. It
+ is little matter what becomes of us 'bearded men,' but I don't like
+ the notion of a beautiful woman's lasting less than a beautiful
+ tree--than her own picture--her own shadow, which won't change so
+ to the sun as her face to the mirror. I must leave off, for my head
+ aches consumedly. I have never been quite well since the night of
+ the representation of Alfieri's Mirra, a fortnight ago. Yours
+ ever."
+
+[Footnote 46:
+
+ "Am I now reposing on a bed of flowers?"
+
+See ROBERTSON.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 340. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Bologna, August 29. 1819.
+
+ "I have been in a rage these two days, and am still bilious
+ therefrom. You shall hear. A captain of dragoons, * *, Hanoverian
+ by birth, in the Papal troops at present, whom I had obliged by a
+ loan when nobody would lend him a paul, recommended a horse to me,
+ on sale by a Lieutenant * *, an officer who unites the sale of
+ cattle to the purchase of men. I bought it. The next day, on
+ shoeing the horse, we discovered the _thrush_,--the animal being
+ warranted sound. I sent to reclaim the contract and the money. The
+ lieutenant desired to speak with me in person. I consented. He
+ came. It was his own particular request. He began a story. I asked
+ him if he would return the money. He said no--but he would
+ exchange. He asked an exorbitant price for his other horses. I told
+ him that he was a thief. He said he was an _officer_ and a man of
+ honour, and pulled out a Parmesan passport signed by General Count
+ Neifperg. I answered, that as he was an officer, I would treat him
+ as such; and that as to his being a gentleman, he might prove it by
+ returning the money: as for his Parmesan passport, I should have
+ valued it more if it had been a Parmesan cheese. He answered in
+ high terms, and said that if it were the _morning_ (it was about
+ eight o'clock in the evening) he would have _satisfaction_. I then
+ lost my temper: 'As for THAT,' I replied, 'you shall have it
+ directly,--it will be _mutual_ satisfaction, I can assure you. You
+ are a thief, and, as you say, an officer; my pistols are in the
+ next room loaded; take one of the candles, examine, and make your
+ choice of weapons.' He replied, that _pistols_ were _English
+ weapons_; _he_ always fought with the _sword_. I told him that I
+ was able to accommodate him, having three regimental swords in a
+ drawer near us: and he might take the longest and put himself on
+ guard.
+
+ "All this passed in presence of a third person. He then said _No_;
+ but to-morrow morning he would give me the meeting at any time or
+ place. I answered that it was not usual to appoint meetings in the
+ presence of witnesses, and that we had best speak man to man, and
+ appoint time and instruments. But as the man present was leaving
+ the room, the Lieutenant * *, before he could shut the door after
+ him, ran out roaring 'Help and murder' most lustily, and fell into
+ a sort of hysteric in the arms of about fifty people, who all saw
+ that I had no weapon of any sort or kind about me, and followed
+ him, asking him what the devil was the matter with him. Nothing
+ would do: he ran away without his hat, and went to bed, ill of the
+ fright. He then tried his complaint at the police, which dismissed
+ it as frivolous. He is, I believe, gone away, or going.
+
+ "The horse was warranted, but, I believe, so worded that the
+ villain will not be obliged to refund, according to law. He
+ endeavoured to raise up an indictment of assault and battery, but
+ as it was in a public inn, in a frequented street, there were too
+ many witnesses to the contrary; and, as a military man, he has not
+ cut a martial figure, even in the opinion of the priests. He ran
+ off in such a hurry that he left his hat, and never missed it till
+ he got to his hostel or inn. The facts are as I tell you, I can
+ assure you. He began by 'coming Captain Grand over me,' or I should
+ never have thought of trying his 'cunning in fence.' But what could
+ I do? He talked of 'honour, and satisfaction, and his commission;'
+ he produced a military passport; there are severe punishments for
+ _regular duels_ on the Continent, and trifling ones for
+ _rencontres_, so that it is best to fight it out directly; he had
+ robbed, and then wanted to insult me;--what could I do? My
+ patience was gone, and the weapons at hand, fair and equal.
+ Besides, it was just after dinner, when my digestion was bad, and I
+ don't like to be disturbed. His friend * * is at Forli; we shall
+ meet on my way back to Ravenna. The Hanoverian seems the greater
+ rogue of the two; and if my valour does not ooze away like
+ Acres's--'Odds flints and triggers!' if it should be a rainy
+ morning, and my stomach in disorder, there may be something for the
+ obituary.
+
+ "Now pray, 'Sir Lucius, do not you look upon me as a very ill-used
+ gentleman?' I send my Lieutenant to match Mr. Hobhouse's Major
+ Cartwright: and so 'good morrow to you, good master Lieutenant.'
+ With regard to other things I will write soon, but I have been
+ quarrelling and fooling till I can scribble no more."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the month of September, Count Guiccioli, being called away by
+business to Ravenna, left his young Countess and her lover to the free
+enjoyment of each other's society at Bologna. The lady's ill health,
+which had been the cause of her thus remaining behind, was thought, soon
+after, to require the still further advantage of a removal to Venice;
+and the Count her husband, being written to on the subject, consented,
+with the most complaisant readiness, that she should proceed thither in
+company with Lord Byron. "Some business" (says the lady's own Memoir)
+"having called Count Guiccioli to Ravenna, I was obliged, by the state
+of my health, instead of accompanying him, to return to Venice, and he
+consented that Lord Byron should be the companion of my journey. We left
+Bologna on the fifteenth of September: we visited the Euganean Hills
+and Arquà, and wrote our names in the book which is presented to those
+who make this pilgrimage. But I cannot linger over these recollections
+of happiness;--the contrast with the present is too dreadful. If a
+blessed spirit, while in the full enjoyment of heavenly happiness, were
+sent down to this earth to suffer all its miseries, the contrast could
+not be more dreadful between the past and the present, than what I have
+endured from the moment when that terrible word reached my ears, and I
+for ever lost the hope of again beholding him, one look from whom I
+valued beyond earth's all happiness. When I arrived at Venice, the
+physicians ordered that I should try the country air, and Lord Byron,
+having a villa at La Mira, gave it up to me, and came to reside there
+with me. At this place we passed the autumn, and there I had the
+pleasure of forming your acquaintance."[47]
+
+It was my good fortune, at this period, in the course of a short and
+hasty tour through the north of Italy, to pass five or six days with
+Lord Byron at Venice. I had written to him on my way thither to announce
+my coming, and to say how happy it would make me could I tempt him to
+accompany me as far as Rome.
+
+During my stay at Geneva, an opportunity had been afforded me of
+observing the exceeding readiness with which even persons the least
+disposed to be prejudiced gave an ear to any story relating to Lord
+Byron, in which the proper portions of odium and romance were but
+plausibly mingled. In the course of conversation, one day, with the late
+amiable and enlightened Monsieur D * *, that gentleman related, with
+much feeling, to my fellow-traveller and myself, the details of a late
+act of seduction of which Lord Byron had, he said, been guilty, and
+which was made to comprise within itself all the worst features of such
+unmanly frauds upon innocence;--the victim, a young unmarried lady, of
+one of the first families of Venice, whom the noble seducer had lured
+from her father's house to his own, and, after a few weeks, most
+inhumanly turned her out of doors. In vain, said the relator, did she
+entreat to become his servant, his slave;--in vain did she ask to
+remain in some dark corner of his mansion, from which she might be able
+to catch a glimpse of his form as he passed. Her betrayer was obdurate,
+and the unfortunate young lady, in despair at being thus abandoned by
+him, threw herself into the canal, from which she was taken out but to
+be consigned to a mad-house. Though convinced that there must be
+considerable exaggeration in this story, it was only on my arrival at
+Venice I ascertained that the whole was a romance; and that out of the
+circumstances (already laid before the reader) connected with Lord
+Byron's fantastic and, it must be owned, discreditable fancy for the
+Fornarina, this pathetic tale, so implicitly believed at Geneva, was
+fabricated.
+
+Having parted at Milan, with Lord John Russell, whom I had accompanied
+from England, and whom I was to rejoin, after a short visit to Rome, at
+Genoa, I made purchase of a small and (as it soon proved) crazy
+travelling carriage, and proceeded alone on my way to Venice. My time
+being limited, I stopped no longer at the intervening places than was
+sufficient to hurry over their respective wonders, and, leaving Padua at
+noon on the 8th of October, I found myself, about two o'clock, at the
+door of my friend's villa, at La Mira. He was but just up, and in his
+bath; but the servant having announced my arrival, he returned a message
+that, if I would wait till he was dressed, he would accompany me to
+Venice. The interval I employed in conversing with my old acquaintance,
+Fletcher, and in viewing, under his guidance, some of the apartments of
+the villa.
+
+It was not long before Lord Byron himself made his appearance; and the
+delight I felt in meeting him once more, after a separation of so many
+years, was not a little heightened by observing that his pleasure was,
+to the full, as great, while it was rendered doubly touching by the
+evident rarity of such meetings to him of late, and the frank outbreak
+of cordiality and gaiety with which he gave way to his feelings. It
+would be impossible, indeed, to convey to those who have not, at some
+time or other, felt the charm of his manner, any idea of what it could
+be when under the influence of such pleasurable excitement as it was
+most flatteringly evident he experienced at this moment.
+
+I was a good deal struck, however, by the alteration that had taken
+place in his personal appearance. He had grown fatter both in person and
+face, and the latter had most suffered by the change,--having lost, by
+the enlargement of the features, some of that refined and spiritualised
+look that had, in other times, distinguished it. The addition of
+whiskers, too, which he had not long before been induced to adopt, from
+hearing that some one had said he had a "faccia di musico," as well as
+the length to which his hair grew down on his neck, and the rather
+foreign air of his coat and cap,--all combined to produce that
+dissimilarity to his former self I had observed in him. He was still,
+however, eminently handsome: and, in exchange for whatever his features
+might have lost of their high, romantic character, they had become more
+fitted for the expression of that arch, waggish wisdom, that Epicurean
+play of humour, which he had shown to be equally inherent in his
+various and prodigally gifted nature; while, by the somewhat increased
+roundness of the contours, the resemblance of his finely formed mouth
+and chin to those of the Belvedere Apollo had become still more
+striking.
+
+His breakfast, which I found he rarely took before three or four o'clock
+in the afternoon, was speedily despatched,--his habit being to eat it
+standing, and the meal in general consisting of one or two raw eggs, a
+cup of tea without either milk or sugar, and a bit of dry biscuit.
+Before we took our departure, he presented me to the Countess Guiccioli,
+who was at this time, as my readers already know, living under the same
+roof with him at La Mira; and who, with a style of beauty singular in an
+Italian, as being fair-complexioned and delicate, left an impression
+upon my mind, during this our first short interview, of intelligence and
+amiableness such as all that I have since known or heard of her has but
+served to confirm.
+
+We now started together, Lord Byron and myself, in my little Milanese
+vehicle, for Fusina,--his portly gondolier Tita, in a rich livery and
+most redundant mustachios, having seated himself on the front of the
+carriage, to the no small trial of its strength, which had already once
+given way, even under my own weight, between Verona and Vicenza. On our
+arrival at Fusina, my noble friend, from his familiarity with all the
+details of the place, had it in his power to save me both trouble and
+expense in the different arrangements relative to the custom-house,
+remise, &c.; and the good-natured assiduity with which he bustled about
+in despatching these matters, gave me an opportunity of observing, in
+his use of the infirm limb, a much greater degree of activity than I had
+ever before, except in sparring, witnessed.
+
+As we proceeded across the Lagoon in his gondola, the sun was just
+setting, and it was an evening such as Romance would have chosen for a
+first sight of Venice, rising "with her tiara of bright towers" above
+the wave; while, to complete, as might be imagined, the solemn interest
+of the scene, I beheld it in company with him who had lately given a new
+life to its glories, and sung of that fair City of the Sea thus
+grandly:--
+
+ "I stood in Venice on the Bridge of Sighs;
+ A palace and a prison on each hand:
+ I saw from out the wave her structures rise
+ As from the stroke of the enchanter's wand:
+ A thousand years their cloudy wings expand
+ Around me, and a dying glory smiles
+ O'er the far times, when many a subject land
+ Look'd to the winged lion's marble piles,
+ Where Venice sat in state, throned in her hundred isles."
+
+But, whatever emotions the first sight of such a scene might, under
+other circumstances, have inspired me with, the mood of mind in which I
+now viewed it was altogether the very reverse of what might have been
+expected. The exuberant gaiety of my companion, and the
+recollections,--any thing but romantic,--into which our conversation
+wandered, put at once completely to flight all poetical and historical
+associations; and our course was, I am almost ashamed to say, one of
+uninterrupted merriment and laughter till we found ourselves at the
+steps of my friend's palazzo on the Grand Canal. All that had ever
+happened, of gay or ridiculous, during our London life together,--his
+scrapes and my lecturings,--our joint adventures with the Bores and
+Blues, the two great enemies, as he always called them, of London
+happiness,--our joyous nights together at Watier's, Kinnaird's, &c. and
+"that d----d supper of Rancliffe's which _ought_ to have been a
+dinner,"--all was passed rapidly in review between us, and with a flow
+of humour and hilarity, on his side, of which it would have been
+difficult, even for persons far graver than I can pretend to be, not to
+have caught the contagion.
+
+He had all along expressed his determination that I should not go to any
+hotel, but fix my quarters at his house during the period of my stay;
+and, had he been residing there himself, such an arrangement would have
+been all that I most desired. But, this not being the case, a common
+hotel was, I thought, a far readier resource; and I therefore entreated
+that he would allow me to order an apartment at the Gran Bretagna, which
+had the reputation, I understood, of being a comfortable hotel. This,
+however, he would not hear of; and, as an inducement for me to agree to
+his plan, said that, as long as I chose to stay, though he should be
+obliged to return to La Mira in the evenings, he would make it a point
+to come to Venice every day and dine with me. As we now turned into the
+dismal canal, and stopped before his damp-looking mansion, my
+predilection for the Gran Bretagna returned in full force; and I again
+ventured to hint that it would save an abundance of trouble to let me
+proceed thither. But "No--no," he answered,--"I see you think you'll be
+very uncomfortable here; but you'll find that it is not quite so bad as
+you expect."
+
+As I groped my way after him through the dark hall, he cried out, "Keep
+clear of the dog;" and before we had proceeded many paces farther, "Take
+care, or that monkey will fly at you;"--a curious proof, among many
+others, of his fidelity to all the tastes of his youth, as it agrees
+perfectly with the description of his life at Newstead, in 1809, and of
+the sort of menagerie which his visiters had then to encounter in their
+progress through his hall. Having escaped these dangers, I followed him
+up the staircase to the apartment destined for me. All this time he had
+been despatching servants in various directions,--one, to procure me a
+_laquais de place_; another to go in quest of Mr. Alexander Scott, to
+whom he wished to give me in charge; while a third was sent to order his
+Segretario to come to him. "So, then, you keep a Secretary?" I said.
+"Yes," he answered, "a fellow who _can't write_[48]--but such are the
+names these pompous people give to things."
+
+When we had reached the door of the apartment it was discovered to be
+locked, and, to all appearance, had been so for some time, as the key
+could not be found;--a circumstance which, to my English apprehension,
+naturally connected itself with notions of damp and desolation, and I
+again sighed inwardly for the Gran Bretagna. Impatient at the delay of
+the key, my noble host, with one of his humorous maledictions, gave a
+vigorous kick to the door and burst it open; on which we at once entered
+into an apartment not only spacious and elegant, but wearing an aspect
+of comfort and habitableness which to a traveller's eye is as welcome as
+it is rare. "Here," he said, in a voice whose every tone spoke kindness
+and hospitality,--"these are the rooms I use myself, and here I mean to
+establish you."
+
+He had ordered dinner from some Tratteria, and while waiting its
+arrival--as well as that of Mr. Alexander Scott, whom he had invited to
+join us--we stood out on the balcony, in order that, before the daylight
+was quite gone, I might have some glimpses of the scene which the Canal
+presented. Happening to remark, in looking up at the clouds, which were
+still bright in the west, that "what had struck me in Italian sunsets
+was that peculiar rosy hue--" I had hardly pronounced the word "rosy,"
+when Lord Byron, clapping his hand on my mouth, said, with a laugh,
+"Come, d----n it, Tom, don't be poetical." Among the few gondolas
+passing at the time, there was one at some distance, in which sat two
+gentlemen, who had the appearance of being English; and, observing them
+to look our way, Lord Byron putting his arms a-kimbo, said with a sort
+of comic swagger, "Ah! if you, John Bulls, knew who the two fellows
+are, now standing up here, I think you _would_ stare!"--I risk
+mentioning these things, though aware how they may be turned against
+myself, for the sake of the otherwise indescribable traits of manner and
+character which they convey. After a very agreeable dinner, through
+which the jest, the story, and the laugh were almost uninterruptedly
+carried on, our noble host took leave of us to return to La Mira, while
+Mr. Scott and I went to one of the theatres, to see the Ottavia of
+Alfieri.
+
+The ensuing evenings, during my stay, were passed much in the same
+manner,--my mornings being devoted, under the kind superintendence of
+Mr. Scott, to a hasty, and, I fear, unprofitable view of the treasures
+of art with which Venice abounds. On the subjects of painting and
+sculpture Lord Byron has, in several of his letters, expressed strongly
+and, as to most persons will appear, heretically his opinions. In his
+want, however, of a due appreciation of these arts, he but resembled
+some of his great precursors in the field of poetry;--both Tasso and
+Milton, for example, having evinced so little tendency to such
+tastes[49], that, throughout the whole of their pages, there is not, I
+fear, one single allusion to any of those great masters of the pencil
+and chisel, whose works, nevertheless, both had seen. That Lord Byron,
+though despising the imposture and jargon with which the worship of the
+Arts is, like other worships, clogged and mystified, felt deeply, more
+especially in sculpture, whatever imaged forth true grace and energy,
+appears from passages of his poetry, which are in every body's memory,
+and not a line of which but thrills alive with a sense of grandeur and
+beauty such as it never entered into the capacity of a mere connoisseur
+even to conceive.
+
+In reference to this subject, as we were conversing one day after dinner
+about the various collections I had visited that morning, on my saying
+that fearful as I was, at all times, of praising any picture, lest I
+should draw upon myself the connoisseur's sneer for my pains, I would
+yet, to _him_, venture to own that I had seen a picture at Milan
+which--"The Hagar!" he exclaimed, eagerly interrupting me; and it was in
+fact this very picture I was about to mention as having wakened in me,
+by the truth of its expression, more real emotion than any I had yet
+seen among the chefs-d'oeuvre of Venice. It was with no small degree of
+pride and pleasure I now discovered that my noble friend had felt
+equally with myself the affecting mixture of sorrow and reproach with
+which the woman's eyes tell the whole story in that picture.
+
+On the second evening of my stay, Lord Byron having, as before, left us
+for La Mira, I most willingly accepted the offer of Mr. Scott to
+introduce me to the conversazioni of the two celebrated ladies, with
+whose names, as leaders of Venetian fashion, the tourists to Italy have
+made every body acquainted. To the Countess A * *'s parties Lord Byron
+had chiefly confined himself during the first winter he passed at
+Venice; but the tone of conversation at these small meetings being much
+too learned for his tastes, he was induced, the following year, to
+discontinue his attendance at them, and chose, in preference, the less
+erudite, but more easy, society of the Countess B * *. Of the sort of
+learning sometimes displayed by the "blue" visitants at Madame A * *'s,
+a circumstance mentioned by the noble poet himself may afford some idea.
+The conversation happening to turn, one evening, upon the statue of
+Washington, by Canova, which had been just shipped off for the United
+States, Madame A * *, who was then engaged in compiling a Description
+Raisonnée of Canova's works, and was anxious for information respecting
+the subject of this statue, requested that some of her learned guests
+would detail to her all they knew of him. This task a Signor * * (author
+of a book on Geography and Statistics) undertook to perform, and, after
+some other equally sage and authentic details, concluded by informing
+her that "Washington was killed in a duel by Burke."--"What," exclaimed
+Lord Byron, as he stood biting his lips with impatience during this
+conversation, "what, in the name of folly, are you all thinking
+of?"--for he now recollected the famous duel between Hamilton and
+Colonel Burr, whom, it was evident, this learned worthy had confounded
+with Washington and Burke!
+
+In addition to the motives easily conceivable for exchanging such a
+society for one that offered, at least, repose from such erudite
+efforts, there was also another cause more immediately leading to the
+discontinuance of his visits to Madame A * *. This lady, who has been
+sometimes honoured with the title of "The De Staël of Italy," had
+written a book called "Portraits," containing sketches of the characters
+of various persons of note; and it being her intention to introduce Lord
+Byron into this assemblage, she had it intimated to his Lordship that an
+article in which his portraiture had been attempted was to appear in a
+new edition she was about to publish of her work. It was expected, of
+course, that this intimation would awaken in him some desire to see the
+sketch; but, on the contrary, he was provoking enough not to manifest
+the least symptoms of curiosity. Again and again was the same hint, with
+as little success, conveyed; till, at length, on finding that no
+impression could be produced in this manner, a direct offer was made, in
+Madame A * *'s own name, to submit the article to his perusal. He could
+now contain himself no longer. With more sincerity than politeness, he
+returned for answer to the lady, that he was by no means ambitious of
+appearing in her work; that, from the shortness, as well as the distant
+nature of their acquaintance, it was impossible she could have qualified
+herself to be his portrait-painter, and that, in short, she could not
+oblige him more than by committing the article to the flames.
+
+Whether the tribute thus unceremoniously treated ever met the eyes of
+Lord Byron, I know not; but he could hardly, I think, had he seen it,
+have escaped a slight touch of remorse at having thus spurned from him a
+portrait drawn in no unfriendly spirit, and, though affectedly
+expressed, seizing some of the less obvious features of his
+character,--as, for instance, that diffidence so little to be expected
+from a career like his, with the discriminating niceness of a female
+hand. The following are extracts from this Portrait:--
+
+
+ "'Toi, dont le monde encore ignore le vrai nom,
+ Esprit mystérieux, Mortel, Ange, ou Démon,
+ Qui que tu sois, Byron, bon ou fatal génie,
+ J'aime de tes conceits la sauvage harmonie.'
+ LAMARTINE.
+
+"It would be to little purpose to dwell upon the mere beauty of a
+countenance in which the expression of an extraordinary mind was so
+conspicuous. What serenity was seated on the forehead, adorned with the
+finest chestnut hair, light, curling, and disposed with such art, that
+the art was hidden in the imitation of most pleasing nature! What
+varied expression in his eyes! They were of the azure colour of the
+heavens, from which they seemed to derive their origin. His teeth, in
+form, in colour, in transparency, resembled pearls; but his cheeks were
+too delicately tinged with the hue of the pale rose. His neck, which he
+was in the habit of keeping uncovered as much as the usages of society
+permitted, seemed to have been formed in a mould, and was very white.
+His hands were as beautiful as if they had been the works of art. His
+figure left nothing to be desired, particularly by those who found
+rather a grace than a defect in a certain light and gentle undulation of
+the person when he entered a room, and of which you hardly felt tempted
+to enquire the cause. Indeed it was scarcely perceptible,--the clothes
+he wore were so long.
+
+"He was never seen to walk through the streets of Venice, nor along the
+pleasant banks of the Brenta, where he spent some weeks of the summer;
+and there are some who assert that he has never seen, excepting from a
+window, the wonders of the 'Piazza di San Marco;'--so powerful in him
+was the desire of not showing himself to be deformed in any part of his
+person. I, however, believe that he has often gazed on those wonders,
+but in the late and solitary hour, when the stupendous edifices which
+surrounded him, illuminated by the soft and placid light of the moon,
+appeared a thousand times more lovely.
+
+"His face appeared tranquil like the ocean on a fine spring morning;
+but, like it, in an instant became changed into the tempestuous and
+terrible, if a passion, (a passion did I say?) a thought, a word,
+occurred to disturb his mind. His eyes then lost all their sweetness,
+and sparkled so that it became difficult to look on them. So rapid a
+change would not have been thought possible; but it was impossible to
+avoid acknowledging that the natural state of his mind was the
+tempestuous.
+
+"What delighted him greatly one day annoyed him the next; and whenever
+he appeared constant in the practice of any habits, it arose merely from
+the indifference, not to say contempt, in which he held them all:
+whatever they might be, they were not worthy that he should occupy his
+thoughts with them. His heart was highly sensitive, and suffered itself
+to be governed in an extraordinary degree by sympathy; but his
+imagination carried him away, and spoiled every thing. He believed in
+presages, and delighted in the recollection that he held this belief in
+common with Napoleon. It appeared that, in proportion as his
+intellectual education was cultivated, his moral education was
+neglected, and that he never suffered himself to know or observe other
+restraints than those imposed by his inclinations. Nevertheless, who
+could believe that he had a constant, and almost infantine timidity, of
+which the evidences were so apparent as to render its existence
+indisputable, notwithstanding the difficulty experienced in associating
+with Lord Byron a sentiment which had the appearance of modesty?
+Conscious as he was that, wherever he presented himself, all eyes were
+fixed on him, and all lips, particularly those of the women, were opened
+to say, 'There he is, that is Lord Byron,'--he necessarily found
+himself in the situation of an actor obliged to sustain a character, and
+to render an account, not to others (for about them he gave himself no
+concern), but to himself, of his every action and word. This occasioned
+him a feeling of uneasiness which was obvious to every one.
+
+"He remarked on a certain subject (which in 1814 was the topic of
+universal discourse) that 'the world was worth neither the trouble taken
+in its conquest, nor the regret felt at its loss,' which saying (if the
+worth of an expression could ever equal that of many and great actions)
+would almost show the thoughts and feelings of Lord Byron to be more
+stupendous and unmeasured than those of him respecting whom he spoke.
+
+"His gymnastic exercises were sometimes violent, and at others almost
+nothing. His body, like his spirit, readily accommodated itself to all
+his inclinations. During an entire winter, he went out every morning
+alone to row himself to the island of Armenians, (a small island
+situated in the midst of a tranquil lake, and distant from Venice about
+half a league,) to enjoy the society of those learned and hospitable
+monks, and to learn their difficult language; and, in the evening,
+entering again into his gondola, he went, but only for a couple of
+hours, into company. A second winter, whenever the water of the lake was
+violently agitated, he was observed to cross it, and landing on the
+nearest _terra firma_, to fatigue at least two horses with riding.
+
+"No one ever heard him utter a word of French, although he was
+perfectly conversant with that language. He hated the nation and its
+modern literature; in like manner, he held the modern Italian literature
+in contempt, and said it possessed but one living author,--a restriction
+which I know not whether to term ridiculous, or false and injurious. His
+voice was sufficiently sweet and flexible. He spoke with much suavity,
+if not contradicted, but rather addressed himself to his neighbour than
+to the entire company.
+
+"Very little food sufficed him; and he preferred fish to flesh for this
+extraordinary reason, that the latter, he said, rendered him ferocious.
+He disliked seeing women eat; and the cause of this extraordinary
+antipathy must be sought in the dread he always had, that the notion he
+loved to cherish of their perfection and almost divine nature might be
+disturbed. Having always been governed by them, it would seem that his
+very self-love was pleased to take refuge in the idea of their
+excellence,--a sentiment which he knew how (God knows how) to reconcile
+with the contempt in which, shortly afterwards, almost with the
+appearance of satisfaction, he seemed to hold them. But contradictions
+ought not to surprise us in characters like Lord Byron's; and then, who
+does not know that the slave holds in detestation his ruler?
+
+"Lord Byron disliked his countrymen, but only because he knew that his
+morals were held in contempt by them. The English, themselves rigid
+observers of family duties, could not pardon him the neglect of his, nor
+his trampling on principles; therefore neither did he like being
+presented to them, nor did they, especially when they had their wives
+with them, like to cultivate his acquaintance. Still there was a strong
+desire in all of them to see him, and the women in particular, who did
+not dare to look at him but by stealth, said in an under voice, 'What a
+pity it is!' If, however, any of his compatriots of exalted rank and of
+high reputation came forward to treat him with courtesy, he showed
+himself obviously flattered by it, and was greatly pleased with such
+association. It seemed that to the wound which remained always open in
+his ulcerated heart such soothing attentions were as drops of healing
+balm, which comforted him.
+
+"Speaking of his marriage,--a delicate subject, but one still agreeable
+to him, if it was treated in a friendly voice,--he was greatly moved,
+and said it had been the innocent cause of all his errors and all his
+griefs. Of his wife he spoke with much respect and affection. He said
+she was an illustrious lady, distinguished for the qualities of her
+heart and understanding, and that all the fault of their cruel
+separation lay with himself. Now, was such language dictated by justice
+or by vanity? Does it not bring to mind the saying of Julius, that the
+wife of Caesar must not even be suspected? What vanity in that saying of
+Caesar! In fact, if it had not been from vanity, Lord Byron would have
+admitted this to no one. Of his young daughter, his dear Ada, he spoke
+with great tenderness, and seemed to be pleased at the great sacrifice
+he had made in leaving her to comfort her mother. The intense hatred he
+bore his mother-in-law, and a sort of Euryclea of Lady Byron, two women
+to whose influence he, in a great measure, attributed her estrangement
+from him,--demonstrated clearly how painful the separation was to him,
+notwithstanding some bitter pleasantries which occasionally occur in his
+writings against her also, dictated rather by rancour than by
+indifference."
+
+[Footnote 47: "Il Conte Guiccioli doveva per affari ritornare a Ravenna;
+lo stato della mia salute esiggeva che io ritornassi in vece a Venezia.
+Egli acconsenti dunque che Lord Byron, mi fosse compagno di viaggio.
+Partimmo da Bologna alli 15 di Sre.--visitammo insieme i Colli Euganei
+ed Arquà; scrivemmo i nostri nomi nel libro che si presenta a quelli che
+fanno quel pellegrinaggio. Ma sopra tali rimembranze di felicità non
+posso fermarmi, caro Signr. Moore; l'opposizione col presente é troppo
+forte, e se un anima benedetta nel pieno godimento di tutte le felicità
+celesti fosse mandata quaggiù e condannata a sopportare tutte le miserie
+della nostra terra non potrebbe sentire più terribile contrasto frà il
+passato ed il presente di quello che io sento dacchè quella terribile
+parola è giunta alle mie orecchie, dacchè ho perduto la speranza di più
+vedere quello di cui uno sguardo valeva per me più di tutte le felicità
+della terra. Giunti a Venezia i medici mi ordinarono di respirare l'aria
+della campagna. Egli aveva una villa alla Mira,--la cedesse a me, e
+venne meco. Là passammo l'autunno, e là ebbi il bene di fare la vostra
+conoscenza."--MS.]
+
+[Footnote 48: The title of Segretario is sometimes given, as in this
+case, to a head-servant or house-steward.]
+
+[Footnote 49: That this was the case with Milton is acknowledged by
+Richardson, who admired both Milton and the Arts too warmly to make such
+an admission upon any but valid grounds. "He does not appear," says this
+writer, "to have much regarded what was done with the pencil; no, not
+even when in Italy, in Rome, in the Vatican. Neither does it seem
+Sculpture was much esteemed by him." After an authority like this, the
+theories of Hayley and others, with respect to the impressions left upon
+Milton's mind by the works of art he had seen in Italy, are hardly worth
+a thought. Though it may be conceded that Dante was an admirer of the
+Arts, his recommendation of the Apocalypse to Giotto, as a source of
+subjects for the pencil, shows, at least, what indifferent judges poets
+are, in general, of the sort of fancies fittest to be embodied by the
+painter.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From the time of his misunderstanding with Madame A * * *, the visits of
+the noble poet were transferred to the house of the other great rallying
+point of Venetian society, Madame B * * *,--a lady in whose manners,
+though she had long ceased to be young, there still lingered much of
+that attaching charm, which a youth passed in successful efforts to
+please seldom fails to leave behind. That those powers of pleasing, too,
+were not yet gone, the fidelity of, at least, one devoted admirer
+testified; nor is she supposed to have thought it impossible that Lord
+Byron himself might yet be linked on at the end of that long chain of
+lovers, which had, through so many years, graced the triumphs of her
+beauty. If, however, there could have been, in any case, the slightest
+chance of such a conquest, she had herself completely frustrated it by
+introducing her distinguished visitor to Madame Guiccioli,--a step by
+which she at last lost, too, even the ornament of his presence at her
+parties, as in consequence of some slighting conduct, on her part,
+towards his "Dama," he discontinued his attendance at her evening
+assemblies, and at the time of my visit to Venice had given up society
+altogether.
+
+I could soon collect, from the tone held respecting his conduct at
+Madame B * * *'s, how subversive of all the morality of intrigue they
+considered the late step of which he had been guilty in withdrawing his
+acknowledged "Amica" from the protection of her husband, and placing
+her, at once, under the same roof with himself. "You must really (said
+the hostess herself to me) scold your friend;--till this unfortunate
+affair, he conducted himself _so_ well!"--a eulogy on his previous moral
+conduct which, when I reported it the following day to my noble host,
+provoked at once a smile and sigh from his lips.
+
+The chief subject of our conversation, when alone, was his marriage, and
+the load of obloquy which it had brought upon him. He was most anxious
+to know the worst that had been alleged of his conduct; and as this was
+our first opportunity of speaking together on the subject, I did not
+hesitate to put his candour most searchingly to the proof, not only by
+enumerating the various charges I had heard brought against him by
+others, but by specifying such portions of these charges as I had been
+inclined to think not incredible myself. To all this he listened with
+patience, and answered with the most unhesitating frankness, laughing to
+scorn the tales of unmanly outrage related of him, but, at the same
+time, acknowledging that there had been in his conduct but too much to
+blame and regret, and stating one or two occasions, during his domestic
+life, when he had been irritated into letting "the breath of bitter
+words" escape him,--words, rather those of the unquiet spirit that
+possessed him than his own, and which he now evidently remembered with
+a degree of remorse and pain which might well have entitled them to be
+forgotten by others.
+
+It was, at the same time, manifest, that, whatever admissions he might
+be inclined to make respecting his own delinquencies, the inordinate
+measure of the punishment dealt out to him had sunk deeply into his
+mind, and, with the usual effect of such injustice, drove him also to be
+unjust himself;--so much so, indeed, as to impute to the quarter, to
+which he now traced all his ill fate, a feeling of fixed hostility to
+himself, which would not rest, he thought, even at his grave, but
+continue to persecute his memory as it was now embittering his life. So
+strong was this impression upon him, that during one of our few
+intervals of seriousness, he conjured me, by our friendship, if, as he
+both felt and hoped, I should survive him, not to let unmerited censure
+settle upon his name, but, while I surrendered him up to condemnation,
+where he deserved it, to vindicate him where aspersed.
+
+How groundless and wrongful were these apprehensions, the early death
+which he so often predicted and sighed for has enabled us, unfortunately
+but too soon, to testify. So far from having to defend him against any
+such assailants, an unworthy voice or two, from persons more injurious
+as friends than as enemies, is all that I find raised in hostility to
+his name; while by none, I am inclined to think, would a generous
+amnesty over his grave be more readily and cordially concurred in than
+by her, among whose numerous virtues a forgiving charity towards
+himself was the only one to which she had not yet taught him to render
+justice.
+
+I have already had occasion to remark, in another part of this work,
+that with persons who, like Lord Byron, live centred in their own
+tremulous web of sensitiveness, those friends of whom they see least,
+and who, therefore, least frequently come in collision with them in
+those every-day realities from which such natures shrink so morbidly,
+have proportionately a greater chance of retaining a hold on their
+affections. There is, however, in long absence from persons of this
+temperament, another description of risk hardly less, perhaps, to be
+dreaded. If the station a friend holds in their hearts is, in near
+intercourse with them, in danger from their sensitiveness, it is almost
+equally, perhaps, at the mercy of their too active imaginations during
+absence. On this very point, I recollect once expressing my
+apprehensions to Lord Byron, in a passage of a letter addressed to him
+but a short time before his death, of which the following is, as nearly
+as I can recall it, the substance:--"When _with_ you, I feel _sure_ of
+you; but, at a distance, one is often a little afraid of being made the
+victim, all of a sudden, of some of those fanciful suspicions, which,
+like meteoric stones, generate themselves (God knows how) in the upper
+regions of your imagination, and come clattering down upon our heads,
+some fine sunny day, when we are least expecting such an invasion."
+
+In writing thus to him, I had more particularly in recollection a fancy
+of this kind respecting myself, which he had, not long before my present
+visit to him at Venice, taken into his head. In a ludicrous, and now,
+perhaps, forgotten publication of mine, giving an account of the
+adventures of an English family in Paris, there had occurred the
+following description of the chief hero of the tale:--
+
+ "A fine, sallow, sublime sort of Werter-faced man,
+ With mustachios which gave (what we read of so oft)
+ The dear Corsair expression, half savage, half soft,--
+ As hyænas in love may be fancied to look, or
+ A something between Abelard and old Blucher."
+
+On seeing this doggrel, my noble friend,--as I might, indeed, with a
+little more thought, have anticipated,--conceived the notion that I
+meant to throw ridicule on his whole race of poetic heroes, and
+accordingly, as I learned from persons then in frequent intercourse with
+him, flew out into one of his fits of half humorous rage against me.
+This he now confessed himself, and, in laughing over the circumstance
+with me, owned that he had even gone so far as, in his first moments of
+wrath, to contemplate some little retaliation for this perfidious hit at
+his heroes. "But when I recollected," said he, "what pleasure it would
+give the whole tribe of blockheads and blues to see you and me turning
+out against each other, I gave up the idea." He was, indeed, a striking
+instance of what may be almost invariably observed, that they who best
+know how to wield the weapon of ridicule themselves, are the most alive
+to its power in the hands of others. I remember, one day,--in the year
+1813, I think,--as we were conversing together about critics and their
+influence on the public. "For my part," he exclaimed, "I don't care what
+they say of me, so they don't quiz me."--"Oh, you need not fear
+that,"--I answered, with something, perhaps, of a half suppressed smile
+on my features,--"nobody could quiz _you_"--"_You could_, you villain!"
+he replied, clenching his hand at me, and looking, at the same time,
+with comic earnestness into my face.
+
+Before I proceed any farther with my own recollections, I shall here
+take the opportunity of extracting some curious particulars respecting
+the habits and mode of life of my friend while at Venice, from an
+account obligingly furnished me by a gentleman who long resided in that
+city, and who, during the greater part of Lord Byron's stay, lived on
+terms of the most friendly intimacy with him.
+
+"I have often lamented that I kept no notes of his observations during
+our rides and aquatic excursions. Nothing could exceed the vivacity and
+variety of his conversation, or the cheerfulness of his manner. His
+remarks on the surrounding objects were always original: and most
+particularly striking was the quickness with which he availed himself of
+every circumstance, however trifling in itself, and such as would have
+escaped the notice of almost any other person, to carry his point in
+such arguments as we might chance to be engaged in. He was feelingly
+alive to the beauties of nature, and took great interest in any
+observations, which, as a dabbler in the arts, I ventured to make upon
+the effects of light and shadow, or the changes produced in the colour
+of objects by every variation in the atmosphere.
+
+"The spot where we usually mounted our horses had been a Jewish
+cemetery; but the French, during their occupation of Venice, had thrown
+down the enclosures, and levelled all the tombstones with the ground, in
+order that they might not interfere with the fortifications upon the
+Lido, under the guns of which it was situated. To this place, as it was
+known to be that where he alighted from his gondola and met his horses,
+the curious amongst our country people, who were anxious to obtain a
+glimpse of him, used to resort; and it was amusing in the extreme to
+witness the excessive coolness with which ladies, as well as gentlemen,
+would advance within a very few paces of him, eyeing him, some with
+their glasses, as they would have done a statue in a museum, or the wild
+beasts at Exeter 'Change. However flattering this might be to a man's
+vanity, Lord Byron, though he bore it very patiently, expressed himself,
+as I believe he really was, excessively annoyed at it.
+
+"I have said that our usual ride was along the sea-shore, and that the
+spot where we took horse, and of course dismounted, had been a cemetery.
+It will readily be believed, that some caution was necessary in riding
+over the broken tombstones, and that it was altogether an awkward place
+for horses to pass. As the length of our ride was not very great,
+scarcely more than six miles in all, we seldom rode fast, that we might
+at least prolong its duration; and enjoy as much as possible the
+refreshing air of the Adriatic. One day, as we were leisurely returning
+homewards, Lord Byron, all at once, and without saying any thing to me,
+set spurs to his horse and started off at full gallop, making the
+greatest haste he could to get to his gondola. I could not conceive what
+fit had seized him, and had some difficulty in keeping even within a
+reasonable distance of him, while I looked around me to discover, if I
+were able, what could be the cause of his unusual precipitation. At
+length I perceived at some distance two or three gentlemen, who were
+running along the opposite side of the island nearest the Lagoon,
+parallel with him, towards his gondola, hoping to get there in time to
+see him alight; and a race actually took place between them, he
+endeavouring to outstrip them. In this he, in fact, succeeded, and,
+throwing himself quickly from his horse, leapt into his gondola, of
+which he hastily closed the blinds, ensconcing himself in a corner so as
+not to be seen. For my own part, not choosing to risk my neck over the
+ground I have spoken of, I followed more leisurely as soon as I came
+amongst the gravestones, but got to the place of embarkation just at the
+same moment with my curious countrymen, and in time to witness their
+disappointment at having had their run for nothing. I found him exulting
+in his success in outstripping them. He expressed in strong terms his
+annoyance at what he called their impertinence, whilst I could not but
+laugh at his impatience, as well as at the mortification of the
+unfortunate pedestrians, whose eagerness to see him, I said, was, in my
+opinion, highly flattering to him. That, he replied, depended on the
+feeling with which they came; and he had not the vanity to believe that
+they were influenced by any admiration of his character or of his
+abilities, but that they were impelled merely by idle curiosity. Whether
+it was so or not, I cannot help thinking that if they had been of the
+other sex, he would not have been so eager to escape from their
+observation, as in that case he would have repaid them glance for
+glance.
+
+"The curiosity that was expressed by all classes of travellers to see
+him, and the eagerness with which they endeavoured to pick up any
+anecdotes of his mode of life, were carried to a length which will
+hardly be credited. It formed the chief subject of their enquiries of
+the gondoliers who conveyed them from terra firma to the floating city;
+and these people, who are generally loquacious, were not at all backward
+in administering to the taste and humours of their passengers, relating
+to them the most extravagant and often unfounded stories. They took care
+to point out the house where he lived, and to give such hints of his
+movements as might afford them an opportunity of seeing him. Many of the
+English visiters, under pretext of seeing his house, in which there were
+no paintings of any consequence, nor, besides himself, any thing worthy
+of notice, contrived to obtain admittance through the cupidity of his
+servants, and with the most barefaced impudence forced their way even
+into his bedroom, in the hopes of seeing him. Hence arose, in a great
+measure, his bitterness towards them, which he has expressed in a note
+to one of his poems, on the occasion of some unfounded remark made upon
+him by an anonymous traveller in Italy; and it certainly appears well
+calculated to foster that cynicism which prevails in his latter works
+more particularly, and which, as well as the misanthropical expressions
+that occur in those which first raised his reputation, I do not believe
+to have been his natural feeling. Of this I am certain, that I never
+witnessed greater kindness than in Lord Byron.
+
+"The inmates of his family were all extremely attached to him, and would
+have endured any thing on his account. He was indeed culpably lenient to
+them; for even when instances occurred of their neglecting their duty,
+or taking an undue advantage of his good-nature, he rather bantered than
+spoke seriously to them upon it, and could not bring himself to
+discharge them, even when he had threatened to do so. An instance
+occurred within my knowledge of his unwillingness to act harshly towards
+a tradesman whom he had materially assisted, not only by lending him
+money, but by forwarding his interest in every way that he could.
+Notwithstanding repeated acts of kindness on Lord Byron's part, this man
+robbed and cheated him in the most barefaced manner; and when at length
+Lord Byron was induced to sue him at law for the recovery of his money,
+the only punishment he inflicted upon him, when sentence against him was
+passed, was to put him in prison for one week, and then to let him out
+again, although his debtor had subjected him to a considerable
+additional expense, by dragging him into all the different courts of
+appeal, and that he never at last recovered one halfpenny of the money
+owed to him. Upon this subject he writes to me from Ravenna, 'If * * is
+in (prison), let him out; if out, put him in for a week, merely for a
+lesson, and give him a good lecture.'
+
+"He was also ever ready to assist the distressed, and he was most
+unostentatious in his charities: for besides considerable sums which he
+gave away to applicants at his own house, he contributed largely by
+weekly and monthly allowances to persons whom he had never seen, and
+who, as the money reached them by other hands, did not even know who was
+their benefactor. One or two instances might be adduced where his
+charity certainly bore an appearance of ostentation; one particularly,
+when he sent fifty louis d'or to a poor printer whose house had been
+burnt to the ground, and all his property destroyed; but even this was
+not unattended with advantage; for it in a manner compelled the Austrian
+authorities to do something for the poor sufferer, which I have no
+hesitation in saying they would not have done otherwise; and I attribute
+it entirely to the publicity of his donation, that they allowed the man
+the use of an unoccupied house belonging to the government until he
+could rebuild his own, or re-establish his business elsewhere. Other
+instances might be perhaps discovered where his liberalities proceeded
+from selfish, and not very worthy motives[50]; but these are rare, and
+it would be unjust in the extreme to assume them as proofs of his
+character."
+
+It has been already mentioned that, in writing to my noble friend to
+announce my coming, I had expressed a hope that he would be able to go
+on with me to Rome; and I had the gratification of finding, on my
+arrival, that he was fully prepared to enter into this plan. On becoming
+acquainted, however, with all the details of his present situation, I so
+far sacrificed my own wishes and pleasure as to advise strongly that he
+should remain at La Mira. In the first place, I saw reason to apprehend
+that his leaving Madame Guiccioli at this crisis might be the means of
+drawing upon him the suspicion of neglecting, if not actually deserting,
+a young person who had just sacrificed so much to her devotion for him,
+and whose position, at this moment, between the Count and Lord Byron, it
+required all the generous prudence of the latter to shield from shame or
+fall. There had just occurred too, as it appeared to me, a most
+favourable opening for the retrieval of, at least, the imprudent part of
+the transaction, by replacing the lady instantly under her husband's
+protection, and thus enabling her still to retain that station in
+society which, in such society, nothing but such imprudence could have
+endangered.
+
+This latter hope had been suggested by a letter he one day showed me,
+(as we were dining together alone, at the well-known Pellegrino,) which
+had that morning been received by the Contessa from her husband, and the
+chief object of which was--_not_ to express any censure of her conduct,
+but to suggest that she should prevail upon her noble admirer to
+transfer into his keeping a sum of 1000_l._, which was then lying, if I
+remember right, in the hands of Lord Byron's banker at Ravenna, but
+which the worthy Count professed to think would be more advantageously
+placed in his own. Security, the writer added, would be given, and five
+per cent. interest allowed; as to accept of the sum on any other terms
+he should hold to be an "avvilimento" to him. Though, as regarded the
+lady herself, who has since proved, by a most noble sacrifice, how
+perfectly disinterested were her feelings throughout[51], this trait of
+so wholly opposite a character in her lord must have still further
+increased her disgust at returning to him, yet so important did it seem,
+as well for her friend's sake as her own, to retrace, while there was
+yet time, their last imprudent step, that even the sacrifice of this
+sum, which I saw would materially facilitate such an arrangement, did
+not appear to me by any means too high a price to pay for it. On this
+point, however, my noble friend entirely differed with me; and nothing
+could be more humorous and amusing than the manner in which, in his
+newly assumed character of a lover of money, he dilated on the many
+virtues of a thousand pounds, and his determination not to part with a
+single one of them to Count Guiccioli. Of his confidence, too, in his
+own power of extricating himself from this difficulty he spoke with
+equal gaiety and humour; and Mr. Scott, who joined our party after
+dinner, having taken the same view of the subject as I did, he laid a
+wager of two sequins with that gentleman, that, without any such
+disbursement, he would yet bring all right again, and "save the lady and
+the money too."
+
+It is indeed, certain, that he had at this time taken up the whim (for
+it hardly deserves a more serious name) of minute and constant
+watchfulness over his expenditure; and, as most usually happens, it was
+with the increase of his means that this increased sense of the value of
+money came. The first symptom I saw of this new fancy of his was the
+exceeding joy which he manifested on my presenting to him a rouleau of
+twenty Napoleons, which Lord K * *d, to whom he had, on some occasion,
+lent that sum, had intrusted me with, at Milan, to deliver into his
+hands. With the most joyous and diverting eagerness, he tore open the
+paper, and, in counting over the sum, stopped frequently to congratulate
+himself on the recovery of it.
+
+Of his household frugalities I speak but on the authority of others; but
+it is not difficult to conceive that, with a restless spirit like his,
+which delighted always in having something to contend with, and which,
+but a short time before, "for want," as he said, "of something craggy to
+break upon," had tortured itself with the study of the Armenian
+language, he should, in default of all better excitement, find a sort of
+stir and amusement in the task of contesting, inch by inch, every
+encroachment of expense, and endeavouring to suppress what he himself
+calls
+
+ "That climax of all earthly ills,
+ The inflammation of our weekly bills."
+
+In truth, his constant recurrence to the praise of avarice in Don Juan,
+and the humorous zest with which he delights to dwell on it, shows how
+new-fangled, as well as how far from serious, was his adoption of this
+"good old-gentlemanly vice." In the same spirit he had, a short time
+before my arrival at Venice, established a hoarding-box, with a slit in
+the lid, into which he occasionally put sequins, and, at stated periods,
+opened it to contemplate his treasures. His own ascetic style of living
+enabled him, as far as himself was concerned, to gratify this taste for
+economy in no ordinary degree,--his daily bill of fare, when the
+Margarita was his companion, consisting, I have been assured, of but
+four beccafichi, of which the Fornarina eat three, leaving even him
+hungry.
+
+That his parsimony, however (if this new phasis of his ever-shifting
+character is to be called by such a name), was very far from being of
+that kind which Bacon condemns, as "withholding men from works of
+liberality," is apparent from all that is known of his munificence, at
+this very period,--some particulars of which, from a most authentic
+source, have just been cited, proving amply that while, for the
+indulgence of a whim, he kept one hand closed, he gave free course to
+his generous nature by dispensing lavishly from the other. It should be
+remembered, too, that as long as money shall continue to be one of the
+great sources of power, so long will they who seek influence over their
+fellow-men attach value to it as an instrument; and the more lowly they
+are inclined to estimate the disinterestedness of the human heart, the
+more available and precious will they consider the talisman that gives
+such power over it. Hence, certainly, it is not among those who have
+thought highest of mankind that the disposition to avarice has most
+generally displayed itself. In Swift the love of money was strong and
+avowed; and to Voltaire the same propensity was also frequently
+imputed,--on about as sufficient grounds, perhaps, as to Lord Byron.
+
+On the day preceding that of my departure from Venice, my noble host, on
+arriving from La Mira to dinner, told me, with all the glee of a
+schoolboy who had been just granted a holiday, that, as this was my last
+evening, the Contessa had given him leave to "make a night of it," and
+that accordingly he would not only accompany me to the opera, but we
+should sup together at some cafe (as in the old times) afterwards.
+Observing a volume in his gondola, with a number of paper marks between
+the leaves, I enquired of him what it was?--"Only a book," he answered,
+"from which I am trying to _crib_, as I do wherever I can[52];--and
+that's the way I get the character of an original poet." On taking it up
+and looking into it, I exclaimed, "Ah, my old friend,
+Agathon!"[53]--"What!" he cried, archly, "you have been beforehand with
+me there, have you?"
+
+Though in imputing to himself premeditated plagiarism, he was, of
+course, but jesting, it was, I am inclined to think, his practice, when
+engaged in the composition of any work, to excite thus his vein by the
+perusal of others, on the same subject or plan, from which the slightest
+hint caught by his imagination, as he read, was sufficient to kindle
+there such a train of thought as, but for that spark, had never been
+awakened, and of which he himself soon forgot the source. In the present
+instance, the inspiration he sought was of no very elevating
+nature,--the anti-spiritual doctrines of the Sophist in this Romance[54]
+being what chiefly, I suspect, attracted his attention to its pages, as
+not unlikely to supply him with fresh argument and sarcasm for those
+depreciating views of human nature and its destiny, which he was now,
+with all the wantonness of unbounded genius, enforcing in Don Juan.
+
+Of this work he was, at the time of my visit to him, writing the third
+Canto, and before dinner, one day, read me two or three hundred lines of
+it;--beginning with the stanzas "Oh Wellington," &c. which at that time
+formed the opening of this third Canto, but were afterwards reserved for
+the commencement of the ninth. My opinion of the poem, both as regarded
+its talent and its mischief, he had already been made acquainted with,
+from my having been one of those,--his Committee, as he called us,--to
+whom, at his own desire, the manuscript of the two first Cantos had been
+submitted, and who, as the reader has seen, angered him not a little by
+deprecating the publication of it. In a letter which I, at that time,
+wrote to him on the subject, after praising the exquisite beauty of the
+scenes between Juan and Haidée, I ventured to say, "Is it not odd that
+the same licence which, in your early Satire, you blamed _me_ for being
+guilty of on the borders of my twentieth year, you are now yourself
+(with infinitely greater power, and therefore infinitely greater
+mischief) indulging in _after_ thirty!"
+
+Though I now found him, in full defiance of such remonstrances,
+proceeding with this work, he had yet, as his own letters prove, been so
+far influenced by the general outcry against his poem, as to feel the
+zeal and zest with which he had commenced it considerably abated,--so
+much so, as to render, ultimately, in his own opinion, the third and
+fourth Cantos much inferior in spirit to the two first. So sensitive,
+indeed,--in addition to his usual abundance of this quality,--did he, at
+length, grow on the subject, that when Mr. W. Bankes, who succeeded me,
+as his visiter, happened to tell him, one day, that he had heard a Mr.
+Saunders (or some such name), then resident at Venice, declare that, in
+his opinion, "Don Juan was all Grub Street," such an effect had this
+disparaging speech upon his mind, (though coming from a person who, as
+he himself would have it, was "nothing but a d----d salt-fish seller,")
+that, for some time after, by his own confession to Mr. Bankes, he could
+not bring himself to write another line of the poem; and, one morning,
+opening a drawer where the neglected manuscript lay, he said to his
+friend, "Look here--this is all Mr. Saunders's 'Grub Street.'"
+
+To return, however, to the details of our last evening together at
+Venice. After a dinner with Mr. Scott at the Pellegrino, we all went,
+rather late, to the opera, where the principal part in the Baccanali di
+Roma was represented by a female singer, whose chief claim to
+reputation, according to Lord Byron, lay in her having _stilettoed_ one
+of her favourite lovers. In the intervals between the singing he pointed
+out to me different persons among the audience, to whom celebrity of
+various sorts, but, for the most part, disreputable, attached; and of
+one lady who sat near us, he related an anecdote, which, whether new or
+old, may, as creditable to Venetian facetiousness, be worth, perhaps,
+repeating. This lady had, it seems, been pronounced by Napoleon the
+finest woman in Venice; but the Venetians, not quite agreeing with this
+opinion of the great man, contented themselves with calling her "La
+Bella _per Decréto_,"--adding (as the Decrees always begin with the word
+"Considerando"), "Ma _senza_ il Considerando."
+
+From the opera, in pursuance of our agreement to "make a night of it,"
+we betook ourselves to a sort of _cabaret_ in the Place of St. Mark, and
+there, within a few yards of the Palace of the Doges, sat drinking hot
+brandy punch, and laughing over old times, till the clock of St. Mark
+struck the second hour of the morning. Lord Byron then took me in his
+gondola, and, the moon being in its fullest splendour, he made the
+gondoliers row us to such points of view as might enable me to see
+Venice, at that hour, to advantage. Nothing could be more solemnly
+beautiful than the whole scene around, and I had, for the first time,
+the Venice of my dreams before me. All those meaner details which so
+offend the eye by day were now softened down by the moonlight into a
+sort of visionary indistinctness; and the effect of that silent city of
+palaces, sleeping, as it were, upon the waters, in the bright stillness
+of the night, was such as could not but affect deeply even the least
+susceptible imagination. My companion saw that I was moved by it, and
+though familiar with the scene himself, seemed to give way, for the
+moment, to the same strain of feeling; and, as we exchanged a few
+remarks suggested by that wreck of human glory before us, his voice,
+habitually so cheerful, sunk into a tone of mournful sweetness, such as
+I had rarely before heard from him, and shall not easily forget. This
+mood, however, was but of the moment; some quick turn of ridicule soon
+carried him off into a totally different vein, and at about three
+o'clock in the morning, at the door of his own palazzo, we parted,
+laughing, as we had met;--an agreement having been first made that I
+should take an early dinner with him next day at his villa, on my road
+to Ferrara.
+
+Having employed the morning of the following day in completing my round
+of sights at Venice,--taking care to visit specially "that picture by
+Giorgione," to which the poet's exclamation, "_such_ a woman!"[55] will
+long continue to attract all votaries of beauty,--I took my departure
+from Venice, and, at about three o'clock, arrived at La Mira. I found my
+noble host waiting to receive me, and, in passing with him through the
+hall, saw his little Allegra, who, with her nursery maid, was standing
+there as if just returned from a walk. To the perverse fancy he had for
+falsifying his own character, and even imputing to himself faults the
+most alien to his nature, I have already frequently adverted, and had,
+on this occasion, a striking instance of it. After I had spoken a
+little, in passing, to the child, and made some remark on its beauty, he
+said to me,--"Have you any notion--but I suppose _you_ have--of what
+they call the parental feeling? For myself, I have not the least." And
+yet, when that child died, in a year or two afterwards, he who now
+uttered this artificial speech was so overwhelmed by the event, that
+those who were about him at the time actually trembled for his reason!
+
+A short time before dinner he left the room, and in a minute or two
+returned, carrying in his hand a white leather bag. "Look here," he
+said, holding it up--"this would be worth something to Murray, though
+_you_, I dare say, would not give sixpence for it."--"What is it?" I
+asked.--"My Life and Adventures," he answered. On hearing this, I raised
+my hands in a gesture of wonder. "It is not a thing," he continued,
+"that can be published during my lifetime, but you may have it--if you
+like--there, do whatever you please with it." In taking the bag, and
+thanking him most warmly, I added, "This will make a nice legacy for my
+little Tom, who shall astonish the latter days of the nineteenth century
+with it." He then added, "You may show it to any of our friends you
+think worthy of it:"--and this is, nearly word for word, the whole of
+what passed between us on the subject.
+
+At dinner we were favoured with the presence of Madame Guiccioli, who
+was so obliging as to furnish me, at Lord Byron's suggestion, with a
+letter of introduction to her brother, Count Gamba, whom it was
+probable, they both thought, I should meet at Rome. This letter I never
+had an opportunity of presenting; and as it was left open for me to
+read, and was, the greater part of it, I have little doubt, dictated by
+my noble friend, I may venture, without impropriety, to give an extract
+from it here;--premising that the allusion to the "Castle," &c. refers
+to some tales respecting the cruelty of Lord Byron to his wife, which
+the young Count had heard, and, at this time, implicitly believed. After
+a few sentences of compliment to the bearer, the letter proceeds:--"He
+is on his way to see the wonders of Rome, and there is no one, I am
+sure, more qualified to enjoy them. I shall be gratified and obliged by
+your acting, as far as you can, as his guide. He is a friend of Lord
+Byron's, and much more accurately acquainted with his history than those
+who have related it to you. He will accordingly describe to you, if you
+ask him, _the shape, the dimensions_, and whatever else you may please
+to require, of _that Castle in which he keeps imprisoned a young and
+innocent wife_, &c. &c. My dear Pietro, whenever you feel inclined to
+laugh, do send two lines of answer to your sister, who loves and ever
+will love you with the greatest tenderness.--Teresa Guiccioli."[56]
+
+After expressing his regret that I had not been able to prolong my stay
+at Venice, my noble friend said, "At least, I think, you might spare a
+day or two to go with me to Arquà. I should like," he continued,
+thoughtfully, "to visit that tomb with you:"--then, breaking off into
+his usual gay tone; "a pair of poetical pilgrims--eh, Tom, what say
+you?"--That I should have declined this offer, and thus lost the
+opportunity of an excursion which would have been remembered, as a
+bright dream, through all my after-life, is a circumstance I never can
+think of without wonder and self-reproach. But the main design on which
+I had then set my mind of reaching Rome, and, if possible, Naples,
+within the limited period which circumstances allowed, rendered me far
+less alive than I ought to have been to the preciousness of the episode
+thus offered to me.
+
+When it was time for me to depart, he expressed his intention to
+accompany me a few miles; and, ordering his horses to follow, proceeded
+with me in the carriage as far as Strà, where for the last time--how
+little thinking it was to be the last!--I bade my kind and admirable
+friend farewell.
+
+[Footnote 50: The writer here, no doubt, alludes to such questionable
+liberalities as those exercised towards the husbands of his two
+favourites, Madame S * * and the Fornarina.]
+
+[Footnote 51: The circumstance here alluded to may be most clearly,
+perhaps, communicated to my readers through the medium of the following
+extract from a letter which Mr. Barry (the friend and banker of Lord
+Byron) did me the favour of addressing to me, soon after his Lordship's
+death:--"When Lord Byron went to Greece, he gave me orders to advance
+money to Madame G * *; but that lady would never consent to receive any.
+His Lordship had also told me that he meant to leave his will in my
+hands, and that there would be a bequest in it of 10,000_l._ to Madame G
+* *. He mentioned this circumstance also to Lord Blessington. When the
+melancholy news of his death reached me, I took for granted that this
+will would be found among the sealed papers he had left with me; but
+there was no such instrument. I immediately then wrote to Madame G * *,
+enquiring if she knew any thing concerning it, and mentioning, at the
+same time, what his Lordship had said is to the legacy. To this the lady
+replied, that he had frequently spoken to her on the same subject, but
+that she had always cut the conversation short, as it was a topic she by
+no means liked to hear him speak upon. In addition, she expressed a wish
+that no such will as I had mentioned would be found; as her
+circumstances were already sufficiently independent, and the world might
+put a wrong construction on her attachment, should it appear that her
+fortunes were, in any degree, bettered by it."]
+
+[Footnote 52: This will remind the reader of Molière's avowal in
+speaking of wit:--"C'est mon bien, et je le prends partout où je le
+trouve."]
+
+[Footnote 53: The History of Agathon, by Wieland.]
+
+[Footnote 54: Between Wieland, the author of this Romance, and Lord
+Byron, may be observed some of those generic points of resemblance which
+it is so interesting to trace in the characters of men of genius. The
+German poet, it is said, never perused any work that made a strong
+impression upon him, without being stimulated to commence one, himself,
+on the same topic and plan; and in Lord Byron the imitative principle
+was almost equally active,--there being few of his poems that might not,
+in the same manner, be traced to the strong impulse given to his
+imagination by the perusal of some work that had just before interested
+him. In the history, too, of their lives and feelings, there was a
+strange and painful coincidence,--the revolution that took place in all
+Wieland's opinions, from the Platonism and romance of his youthful days,
+to the material and Epicurean doctrines that pervaded all his maturer
+works, being chiefly, it is supposed, brought about by the shock his
+heart had received from a disappointment of its affections in early
+life. Speaking of the illusion of this first passion, in one of his
+letters, he says,--"It is one for which no joys, no honours, no gifts of
+fortune, not even wisdom itself can afford an equivalent, and which,
+when it has once vanished, returns no more."]
+
+[Footnote 55:
+
+ "'Tis but a portrait of his son and wife,
+ And self; but such a woman! love in life!"
+ BEPPO, Stanza xii.
+
+This seems, by the way, to be an incorrect description of the picture,
+as, according to Vasari and others, Giorgione never was married, and
+died young.]
+
+[Footnote 56: "Egli viene per vedere le meraviglie di questa Città, e
+sono certa che nessuno meglio di lui saprebbe gustarle. Mi sarà grato
+che vi facciate sua guida come potrete, e voi poi me ne avrete obbligo.
+Egli è amico de Lord Byron--sà la sua storia assai più precisamente di
+quelli che a voi la raccontarono. Egli dunque vi racconterà se lo
+interrogherete _la forma, le dimensioni_, e tuttociò che vi piacerà del
+_Castello ove tiene imprigionata una giovane innocente sposa_, &c. &c.
+Mio caro Pietro, quando ti sei bene sfogato a ridere, allora rispondi
+due righe alla tua sorella, che t' ama e t' amerà sempre colla maggiore
+tenerezza."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 341. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "October 22. 1819.
+
+ "I am glad to hear of your return, but I do not know how to
+ congratulate you--unless you think differently of Venice from what
+ I think now, and you thought always. I am, besides, about to renew
+ your troubles by requesting you to be judge between Mr. E * * * and
+ myself in a small matter of imputed peculation and irregular
+ accounts on the part of that phoenix of secretaries. As I knew that
+ you had not parted friends, at the same time that _I_ refused for
+ my own part any judgment but _yours_, I offered him his choice of
+ any person, the _least_ scoundrel native to be found in Venice, as
+ his own umpire; but he expressed himself so convinced of your
+ impartiality, that he declined any but _you_. This is in his
+ favour.--The paper within will explain to you the default in his
+ accounts. You will hear his explanation, and decide if it so please
+ you. I shall not appeal from the decision.
+
+ "As he complained that his salary was insufficient, I determined to
+ have his accounts examined, and the enclosed was the result.--It is
+ all in black and white with documents, and I have despatched
+ Fletcher to explain (or rather to perplex) the matter.
+
+ "I have had much civility and kindness from Mr. Dorville during
+ your journey, and I thank him accordingly.
+
+ "Your letter reached me at your departure[57], and displeased me
+ very much:--not that it might not be true in its statement and kind
+ in its intention, but you have lived long enough to know how
+ useless all such representations ever are and must be in cases
+ where the passions are concerned. To reason with men in such a
+ situation is like reasoning with a drunkard in his cups--the only
+ answer you will get from him is, that he is sober, and you are
+ drunk.
+
+ "Upon that subject we will (if you like) be silent. You might only
+ say what would distress me without answering any purpose whatever;
+ and I have too many obligations to you to answer you in the same
+ style. So that you should recollect that you have also that
+ advantage over me. I hope to see you soon.
+
+ "I suppose you know that they said at Venice, that I was arrested
+ at Bologna as a _Carbonaro_--story about as true as their usual
+ conversation. Moore has been here--I lodged him in my house at
+ Venice, and went to see him daily; but I could not at that time
+ quit La Mira entirely. You and I were not very far from meeting in
+ Switzerland. With my best respects to Mrs. Hoppner, believe me ever
+ and truly, &c.
+
+ "P.S. Allegra is here in good health and spirits--I shall keep her
+ with me till I go to England, which will perhaps be in the spring.
+ It has just occurred to me that you may not perhaps like to
+ undertake the office of judge between Mr. E. and your humble
+ servant.--Of course, as Mr. Liston (the comedian, not the
+ ambassador) says, '_it is all hoptional_;' but I have no other
+ resource. I do not wish to find him a rascal, if it can be avoided,
+ and would rather think him guilty of carelessness than cheating.
+ The case is this--can I, or not, give him a character for
+ _honesty_?--It is not my intention to continue him in my service."
+
+[Footnote 57: Mr. Hoppner, before his departure from Venice for
+Switzerland, had, with all the zeal of a true friend, written a letter
+to Lord Byron, entreating him "to leave Ravenna while yet he had a whole
+skin, and urging him not to risk the safety of a person he appeared so
+sincerely attached to--as well as his own--for the gratification of a
+momentary passion, which could only be a source of regret to both
+parties." In the same letter Mr. Hoppner informed him of some reports he
+had heard lately at Venice, which, though possibly, he said, unfounded,
+had much increased his anxiety respecting the consequences of the
+connection formed by him.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 342. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "October 25. 1819.
+
+ "You need not have made any excuses about the letter: I never said
+ but that you might, could, should, or would have reason. I merely
+ described my own state of inaptitude to listen to it at that time,
+ and in those circumstances. Besides, you did not speak from your
+ _own_ authority--but from what you said you had heard. Now my blood
+ boils to hear an Italian speaking ill of another Italian, because,
+ though they lie in particular, they speak truth in general by
+ speaking ill at all;--and although they know that they are trying
+ and wishing to lie, they do not succeed, merely because they can
+ say nothing so bad of each other, that it _may_ not, and must not
+ be true, from the atrocity of their long debased national
+ character.[58]
+
+ "With regard to E., you will perceive a most irregular, extravagant
+ account, without proper documents to support it. He demanded an
+ increase of salary, which made me suspect him; he supported an
+ outrageous extravagance of expenditure, and did not like the
+ dismission of the cook; he never complained of him--as in duty
+ bound--at the time of his robberies. I can only say, that the house
+ expense is now under _one half_ of what it then was, as he himself
+ admits. He charged for a comb _eighteen_ francs,--the real price
+ was _eight_. He charged a passage from Fusina for a person named
+ Iambelli, who paid it _herself_, as she will prove if necessary. He
+ fancies, or asserts himself, the victim of a domestic complot
+ against him;--accounts are accounts--prices are prices;--let him
+ make out a fair detail. _I_ am not prejudiced against him--on the
+ contrary, I supported him against the complaints of his wife, and
+ of his former master, at a time when I could have crushed him like
+ an earwig; and if he is a scoundrel, he is the greatest of
+ scoundrels, an ungrateful one. The truth is, probably, that he
+ thought I was leaving Venice, and determined to make the most of
+ it. At present he keeps bringing in _account after account_, though
+ he had always money in hand--as I believe you know my system was
+ never to allow longer than a week's bills to run. Pray read him
+ this letter--I desire nothing to be concealed against which he may
+ defend himself.
+
+ "Pray how is your little boy? and how are you?--I shall be up in
+ Venice very soon, and we will be bilious together. I hate the place
+ and all that it inherits.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+[Footnote 58: "This language" (says Mr. Hoppner, in some remarks upon
+the above letter) "is strong, but it was the language of prejudice; and
+he was rather apt thus to express the feelings of the moment, without
+troubling himself to consider how soon he might be induced to change
+them. He was at this time so sensitive on the subject of Madame * *,
+that, merely because some persons had disapproved of her conduct, he
+declaimed in the above manner against the whole nation. I never"
+(continues Mr. Hoppner) "was partial to Venice; but disliked it almost
+from the first month of my residence there. Yet I experienced more
+kindness in that place than I ever met with in any country, and
+witnessed acts of generosity and disinterestedness such as rarely are
+met with elsewhere."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 343. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "October 28. 1819.
+
+ "I have to thank you for your letter, and your compliment to Don
+ Juan. I said nothing to you about it, understanding that it is a
+ sore subject with the moral reader, and has been the cause of a
+ great row; but I am glad you like it. I will say nothing about the
+ shipwreck, except that I hope you think it is as nautical and
+ technical as verse could admit in the octave measure.
+
+ "The poem has _not sold well_, so Murray says--'but the best
+ judges, &c. say, &c.' so says that worthy man. I have never seen it
+ in print. The third Canto is in advance about one hundred stanzas;
+ but the failure of the two first has weakened my _estro_, and it
+ will neither be so good as the two former, nor completed, unless I
+ get a little more _riscaldato_ in its behalf. I understand the
+ outcry was beyond every thing.--Pretty cant for people who read Tom
+ Jones, and Roderick Random, and the Bath Guide, and Ariosto, and
+ Dryden, and Pope--to say nothing of Little's Poems! Of course I
+ refer to the _morality_ of these works, and not to any pretension
+ of mine to compete with them in any thing but decency. I hope yours
+ is the Paris edition, and that you did not pay the London price. I
+ have seen neither except in the newspapers.
+
+ "Pray make my respects to Mrs. H., and take care of your little
+ boy. All my household have the fever and ague, except Fletcher,
+ Allegra, and my_sen_ (as we used to say in Nottinghamshire), and
+ the horses, and Mutz, and Moretto. In the beginning of November,
+ perhaps sooner, I expect to have the pleasure of seeing you. To-day
+ I got drenched by a thunder-storm, and my horse and groom too, and
+ his horse all bemired up to the middle in a cross-road. It was
+ summer at noon, and at five we were bewintered; but the lightning
+ was sent perhaps to let us know that the summer was not yet over.
+ It is queer weather for the 27th October.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 344. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, October 29. 1819.
+
+ "Yours of the 15th came yesterday. I am sorry that you do not
+ mention a large letter addressed to _your care_ for Lady Byron,
+ from me, at Bologna, two months ago. Pray tell me, was this letter
+ received and forwarded?
+
+ "You say nothing of the vice-consulate for the Ravenna patrician,
+ from which it is to be inferred that the thing will not be done.
+
+ "I had written about a hundred stanzas of a _third_ Canto to Don
+ Juan, but the reception of the two first is no encouragement to you
+ nor me to proceed.
+
+ "I had also written about 600 lines of a poem, the Vision (or
+ Prophecy) of Dante, the subject a view of Italy in the ages down to
+ the present--supposing Dante to speak in his own person, previous
+ to his death, and embracing all topics in the way of prophecy, like
+ Lycophron's Cassandra; but this and the other are both at a
+ stand-still for the present.
+
+ "I gave Moore, who is gone to Rome, my Life in MS., in
+ seventy-eight folio sheets, brought down to 1816. But this I put
+ into his hands for _his_ care, as he has some other MSS. of mine--a
+ Journal kept in 1814, &c. Neither are for publication during my
+ life; but when I am cold you may do what you please. In the mean
+ time, if you like to read them you may, and show them to anybody
+ you like--I care not.
+
+ "The Life is _Memoranda_, and not _Confessions_ I have left out all
+ my _loves_ (except in a general way), and many other of the most
+ important things (because I must not compromise other people), so
+ that it is like the play of Hamlet--'the part of Hamlet omitted by
+ particular desire.' But you will find many opinions, and some fun,
+ with a detailed account of my marriage, and its consequences, as
+ true as a party concerned can make such account, for I suppose we
+ are all prejudiced.
+
+ "I have never read over this Life since it was written, so that I
+ know not exactly what it may repeat or contain. Moore and I passed
+ some merry days together.
+
+ "I probably must return for business, or in my way to America.
+ Pray, did you get a letter for Hobhouse, who will have told you the
+ contents? I understand that the Venezuelan commissioners had orders
+ to treat with emigrants; now I want to go there. I should not make
+ a bad South-American planter, and I should take my natural
+ daughter, Allegra, with me, and settle. I wrote, at length, to
+ Hobhouse, to get information from Perry, who, I suppose, is the
+ best topographer and trumpeter of the new republicans. Pray write.
+
+ "Yours ever.
+
+ "P.S. Moore and I did nothing but laugh. He will tell you of 'my
+ whereabouts,' and all my proceedings at this present; they are as
+ usual. You should not let those fellows publish false 'Don Juans;'
+ but do not put _my name_, because I mean to cut R----ts up like a
+ gourd, in the preface, if I continue the poem."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 345. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "October 29. 1819.
+
+ "The Ferrara story is of a piece with all the rest of the Venetian
+ manufacture,--you may judge. I only changed horses there since I
+ wrote to you, after my visit in June last. '_Convent_' and '_carry
+ off_', quotha! and '_girl_.' I should like to know _who_ has been
+ carried off, except poor dear _me_. I have been more ravished
+ myself than anybody since the Trojan war; but as to the arrest and
+ its causes, one is as true as the other, and I can account for the
+ invention of neither. I suppose it is some confusion of the tale of
+ the F * * and of Me. Guiccioli, and half a dozen more; but it is
+ useless to unravel the web, when one has only to brush it away. I
+ shall settle with Master E. who looks very blue at your
+ _in-decision_, and swears that he is the best arithmetician in
+ Europe; and so I think also, for he makes out two and two to be
+ five.
+
+ "You may see me next week. I have a horse or two more (five in
+ all), and I shall repossess myself of Lido, and I will rise
+ earlier, and we will go and shake our livers over the beach, as
+ heretofore, if you like--and we will make the Adriatic roar again
+ with our hatred of that now empty oyster-shell, without its pearl,
+ the city of Venice.
+
+ "Murray sent me a letter yesterday: the impostors have published
+ _two_ new _third_ Cantos of _Don Juan_;--the devil take the
+ impudence of some blackguard bookseller or other _therefor_!
+ Perhaps I did not make myself understood; he told me the sale had
+ been great, 1200 out of 1500 quarto, I believe (which is nothing
+ after selling 13,000 of the Corsair in one day); but that the 'best
+ judges,' &c. had said it was very fine, and clever, and
+ particularly good English, and poetry, and all those consolatory
+ things, which are not, however, worth a single copy to a
+ bookseller: and as to the author, of course I am in a d----ned
+ passion at the bad taste of the times, and swear there is nothing
+ like posterity, who, of course, must know more of the matter than
+ their grandfathers. There has been an eleventh commandment to the
+ women not to read it, and, what is still more extraordinary, they
+ seem not to have broken it. But that can be of little import to
+ them, poor things, for the reading or non-reading a book will never
+ * * * *.
+
+ "Count G. comes to Venice next week, and I am requested to consign
+ his wife to him, which shall be done. What you say of the long
+ evenings at the Mira, or Venice, reminds me of what Curran said to
+ Moore:--'So I hear you have married a pretty woman, and a very good
+ creature, too--an excellent creature. Pray--um! _how do you pass
+ your evenings?_' It is a devil of a question that, and perhaps as
+ easy to answer with a wife as with a mistress.
+
+ "If you go to Milan, pray leave at least a _Vice-Consul_--the only
+ vice that will ever be wanting in Venice. D'Orville is a good
+ fellow. But you shall go to England in the spring with me, and
+ plant Mrs. Hoppner at Berne with her relations for a few months. I
+ wish you had been here (at Venice, I mean, not the Mira) when Moore
+ was here--we were very merry and tipsy. He _hated_ Venice, by the
+ way, and swore it was a sad place.[59]
+
+ "So Madame Albrizzi's death is in danger--poor woman! Moore told me
+ that at Geneva they had made a devil of a story of the
+ Fornaretta:--'Young lady seduced!--subsequent abandonment!--leap
+ into the Grand Canal!'--and her being in the 'hospital of _fous_ in
+ consequence!' I should like to know who was nearest being made
+ '_fou_,' and be d----d to them I Don't you think me in the
+ interesting character of a very ill used gentleman? I hope your
+ little boy is well. Allegrina is flourishing like a pomegranate
+ blossom. Yours," &c.
+
+[Footnote 59: I beg to say that this report of my opinion of Venice is
+coloured somewhat too deeply by the feelings of the reporter.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 346. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, November 8. 1819.
+
+ "Mr. Hoppner has lent me a copy of 'Don Juan,' Paris edition, which
+ he tells me is read in Switzerland by clergymen and ladies with
+ considerable approbation. In the second Canto, you must alter the
+ 49th stanza to
+
+ "'Twas twilight, and the sunless day went down
+ Over the waste of waters, like a veil
+ Which if withdrawn would but disclose the frown
+ Of one whose hate is mask'd but to assail;
+ Thus to their hopeless eyes the night was shown,
+ And grimly darkled o'er their faces pale
+ And the dim desolate deep; twelve days had Fear
+ Been their familiar, and now Death was here.
+
+ "I have been ill these eight days with a tertian fever, caught in
+ the country on horseback in a thunderstorm. Yesterday I had the
+ fourth attack: the two last were very smart, the first day as well
+ as the last being preceded by vomiting. It is the fever of the
+ place and the season. I feel weakened, but not unwell, in the
+ intervals, except headach and lassitude.
+
+ "Count Guiccioli has arrived in Venice, and has presented his
+ spouse (who had preceded him two months for her health and the
+ prescriptions of Dr. Aglietti) with a paper of conditions,
+ regulations of hours and conduct, and morals, &c. &c. &c. which he
+ insists on her accepting, and she persists in refusing. I am
+ expressly, it should seem, excluded by this treaty, as an
+ indispensable preliminary; so that they are in high dissension, and
+ what the result may be I know not, particularly as they are
+ consulting friends.
+
+ "To-night, as Countess Guiccioli observed me poring over 'Don
+ Juan,' she stumbled by mere chance on the 137th stanza of the first
+ Canto, and asked me what it meant. I told her, 'Nothing--but "your
+ husband is coming."' As I said this in Italian, with some emphasis,
+ she started up in a fright, and said, '_Oh, my God, is_ he
+ _coming_?' thinking it was _her own_, who either was or ought to
+ have been at the theatre. You may suppose we laughed when she found
+ out the mistake. You will be amused, as I was;--it happened not
+ three hours ago.
+
+ "I wrote to you last week, but have added nothing to the third
+ Canto since my fever, nor to 'The Prophecy of Dante.' Of the former
+ there are about 100 octaves done; of the latter about 500
+ lines--perhaps more. Moore saw the third Juan, as far as it then
+ went. I do not know if my fever will let me go on with either, and
+ the tertian lasts, they say, a good while. I had it in Malta on my
+ way home, and the malaria fever in Greece the year before that. The
+ Venetian is not very fierce, but I was delirious one of the nights
+ with it, for an hour or two, and, on my senses coming back, found
+ Fletcher sobbing on one side of the bed, and La Contessa
+ Guiccioli[60] weeping on the other; so that I had no want of
+ attendance. I have not yet taken any physician, because, though I
+ think they may relieve in chronic disorders, such as gout and the
+ like, &c. &c. &c. (though they can't cure them)--just as surgeons
+ are necessary to set bones and tend wounds--yet I think fevers
+ quite out of their reach, and remediable only by diet and nature.
+
+ "I don't like the taste of bark, but I suppose that I must take it
+ soon.
+
+ "Tell Rose that somebody at Milan (an Austrian, Mr. Hoppner says)
+ is answering his book. William Bankes is in quarantine at Trieste.
+ I have not lately heard from you. Excuse this paper: it is long
+ paper shortened for the occasion. What folly is this of Carlile's
+ trial? why let him have the honours of a martyr? it will only
+ advertise the books in question. Yours, &c.
+
+ "P.S. As I tell you that the Guiccioli business is on the eve of
+ exploding in one way or the other, I will just add that, without
+ attempting to influence the decision of the Contessa, a good deal
+ depends upon it. If she and her husband make it up, you will,
+ perhaps, see me in England sooner than you expect. If not, I shall
+ retire with her to France or America, change my name, and lead a
+ quiet provincial life. All this may seem odd, but I have got the
+ poor girl into a scrape; and as neither her birth, nor her rank,
+ nor her connections by birth or marriage are inferior to my own, I
+ am in honour bound to support her through. Besides, she is a very
+ pretty woman--ask Moore--and not yet one and twenty.
+
+ "If she gets over this and I get over my tertian, I will, perhaps,
+ look in at Albemarle Street, some of these days, _en passant_ to
+ Bolivar."
+
+[Footnote 60: The following curious particulars of his delirium are
+given by Madame Guiccioli:--"At the beginning of winter Count Guiccioli
+came from Ravenna to fetch me. When he arrived, Lord Byron was ill of a
+fever, occasioned by his having got wet through;--a violent storm having
+surprised him while taking his usual exercise on horseback. He had been
+delirious the whole night, and I had watched continually by his bedside.
+During his delirium he composed a good many verses, and ordered his
+servant to write them down from his dictation. The rhythm of these
+verses was quite correct, and the poetry itself had no appearance of
+being the work of a delirious mind. He preserved them for some time
+after he got well, and then burned them."--"Sul cominciare dell' inverno
+il Conte Guiccioli venne a prendermi per ricondurmi a Ravenna. Quando
+egli giunse Ld. Byron era ammalato di febbri prese per essersi bagnato
+avendolo sorpreso un forte temporale mentre faceva l' usato suo
+esercizio a cavallo. Egli aveva delirato tutta la notte, ed io aveva
+sempre vegliato presso al suo letto. Nel suo delirio egli compose molti
+versi che ordinò al suo domestico di scrivere sotto la sua dittatura. La
+misura dei versi era esatissima, e la poesia pure non pareva opera di
+una mente in delirio. Egli la conservò lungo tempo dopo restabilito--poi
+l' abbrucciò."
+
+I have been informed, too, that, during his ravings at this time, he was
+constantly haunted by the idea of his mother-in-law,--taking every one
+that came near him for her, and reproaching those about him for letting
+her enter his room.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 347. TO MR. BANKES.
+
+ "Venice, November 20. 1819.
+
+ "A tertian ague which has troubled me for some time, and the
+ indisposition of my daughter, have prevented me from replying
+ before to your welcome letter. I have not been ignorant of your
+ progress nor of your discoveries, and I trust that you are no worse
+ in health from your labours. You may rely upon finding every body
+ in England eager to reap the fruits of them; and as you have done
+ more than other men, I hope you will not limit yourself to saying
+ less than may do justice to the talents and time you have bestowed
+ on your perilous researches. The first sentence of my letter will
+ have explained to you why I cannot join you at Trieste. I was on
+ the point of setting out for England (before I knew of your
+ arrival) when my child's illness has made her and me dependent on a
+ Venetian Proto-Medico.
+
+ "It is now seven years since you and I met;--which time you have
+ employed better for others and more honourably for yourself than I
+ have done.
+
+ "In England you will find considerable changes, public and
+ private,--you will see some of our old college contemporaries
+ turned into lords of the Treasury, Admiralty, and the like,--others
+ become reformers and orators,--many settled in life, as it is
+ called,--and others settled in death; among the latter, (by the
+ way, not our fellow collegians,) Sheridan, Curran, Lady Melbourne,
+ Monk Lewis, Frederick Douglas, &c. &c. &c.; but you will still find
+ Mr. * * living and all his family, as also * * * * *.
+
+ "Should you come up this way, and I am still here, you need not be
+ assured how glad I shall be to see you; I long to hear some part
+ from you, of that which I expect in no long time to see. At length
+ you have had better fortune than any traveller of equal enterprise
+ (except Humboldt), in returning safe; and after the fate of the
+ Brownes, and the Parkes, and the Burckhardts, it is hardly less
+ surprise than satisfaction to get you back again.
+
+ "Believe me ever
+
+ "And very affectionately yours,
+
+ "BYRON."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 348. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, December 4. 1819.
+
+ "You may do as you please, but you are about a hopeless experiment.
+ Eldon will decide against you, were it only that my name is in the
+ record. You will also recollect that if the publication is
+ pronounced against, on the grounds you mention, as _indecent and
+ blasphemous_, that _I_ lose all right in my daughter's
+ _guardianship_ and _education_, in short, all paternal authority,
+ and every thing concerning her, except * * * * * * * * It was so
+ decided in Shelley's case, because he had written Queen Mab, &c.
+ &c. However, you can ask the lawyers, and do as you like: I do not
+ inhibit you trying the question; I merely state one of the
+ consequences to me. With regard to the copyright, it is hard that
+ you should pay for a nonentity: I will therefore refund it, which I
+ can very well do, not having spent it, nor begun upon it; and so we
+ will be quits on that score. It lies at my banker's.
+
+ "Of the Chancellor's law I am no judge; but take up Tom Jones, and
+ read his Mrs. Waters and Molly Seagrim; or Prior's Hans Carvel and
+ Paulo Purganti: Smollett's Roderick Random, the chapter of Lord
+ Strutwell, and many others; Peregrine Pickle, the scene of the
+ Beggar Girl; Johnson's _London_, for coarse expressions; for
+ instance, the words '* *,' and '* *;' Anstey's Bath Guide, the
+ 'Hearken, Lady Betty, hearken;'--take up, in short, Pope, Prior,
+ Congreve, Dryden, Fielding, Smollett, and let the counsel select
+ passages, and what becomes of _their_ copyright, if his Wat Tyler
+ decision is to pass into a precedent? I have nothing more to say:
+ you must judge for yourselves.
+
+ "I wrote to you some time ago. I have had a tertian ague; my
+ daughter Allegra has been ill also, and I have been almost obliged
+ to run away with a married woman; but with some difficulty, and
+ many internal struggles, I reconciled the lady with her lord, and
+ cured the fever of the child with bark, and my own with cold water.
+ I think of setting out for England by the Tyrol in a few days, so
+ that I could wish you to direct your next letter to Calais. Excuse
+ my writing in great haste and late in the morning, or night,
+ whichever you please to call it. The third Canto of 'Don Juan' is
+ completed, in about two hundred stanzas; very decent, I believe,
+ but do not know, and it is useless to discuss until it be
+ ascertained if it may or may not be a property.
+
+ "My present determination to quit Italy was unlooked for; but I
+ have explained the reasons in letters to my sister and Douglas
+ Kinnaird, a week or two ago. My progress will depend upon the snows
+ of the Tyrol, and the health of my child, who is at present quite
+ recovered; but I hope to get on well, and am
+
+ "Yours ever and truly.
+
+ "P.S. Many thanks for your letters, to which you are not to
+ consider this as an answer, but as an acknowledgment."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The struggle which, at the time of my visit to him, I had found Lord
+Byron so well disposed to make towards averting, as far as now lay in
+his power, some of the mischievous consequences which, both to the
+object of his attachment and himself, were likely to result from their
+connection, had been brought, as the foregoing letters show, to a crisis
+soon after I left him. The Count Guiccioli, on his arrival at Venice,
+insisted, as we have seen, that his lady should return with him; and,
+after some conjugal negotiations, in which Lord Byron does not appear to
+have interfered, the young Contessa consented reluctantly to accompany
+her lord to Ravenna, it being first covenanted that, in future, all
+communication between her and her lover should cease.
+
+"In a few days after this," says Mr. Hoppner, in some notices of his
+noble friend with which he has favoured me, "he returned to Venice, very
+much out of spirits, owing to Madame Guiccioli's departure, and out of
+humour with every body and every thing around him. We resumed our rides
+at the Lido; and I did my best not only to raise his spirits, but to
+make him forget his absent mistress, and to keep him to his purpose of
+returning to England. He went into no society; and having no longer any
+relish for his former occupation, his time, when he was not writing,
+hung heavy enough on hand."
+
+The promise given by the lovers not to correspond was, as all parties
+must have foreseen, soon violated; and the letters Lord Byron addressed
+to the lady, at this time, though written in a language not his own, are
+rendered frequently even eloquent by the mere force of the feeling that
+governed him--a feeling which could not have owed its fuel to fancy
+alone, since now that reality had been so long substituted, it still
+burned on. From one of these letters, dated November 25th, I shall so
+far presume upon the discretionary power vested in me, as to lay a short
+extract or two before the reader--not merely as matters of curiosity,
+but on account of the strong evidence they afford of the struggle
+between passion and a sense of right that now agitated him.
+
+"You are," he says, "and ever will be, my first thought. But, at this
+moment, I am in a state most dreadful, not knowing which way to
+decide;--on the one hand, fearing that I should compromise you for ever,
+by my return to Ravenna and the consequences of such a step, and, on the
+other, dreading that I shall lose both you and myself, and all that I
+have ever known or tasted of happiness, by never seeing you more. I pray
+of you, I implore you to be comforted, and to believe that I cannot
+cease to love you but with my life." [61] In another part he says, "I go
+to save you, and leave a country insupportable to me without you. Your
+letters to F * * and myself do wrong to my motives--but you will yet see
+your injustice. It is not enough that I must leave you--from motives of
+which ere long you will be convinced--it is not enough that I must fly
+from Italy, with a heart deeply wounded, after having passed all my days
+in solitude since your departure, sick both in body and mind--but I must
+also have to endure your reproaches without answering and without
+deserving them. Farewell! in that one word is comprised the death of my
+happiness." [62]
+
+He had now arranged every thing for his departure for England, and had
+even fixed the day, when accounts reached him from Ravenna that the
+Contessa was alarmingly ill;--her sorrow at their separation having so
+much preyed upon her mind, that even her own family, fearful of the
+consequences, had withdrawn all opposition to her wishes, and now, with
+the sanction of Count Guiccioli himself, entreated her lover to hasten
+to Ravenna. What was he, in this dilemma, to do? Already had he
+announced his coming to different friends in England, and every dictate,
+he felt, of prudence and manly fortitude urged his departure. While thus
+balancing between duty and inclination, the day appointed for his
+setting out arrived; and the following picture, from the life, of his
+irresolution on the occasion, is from a letter written by a female
+friend of Madame Guiccioli, who was present at the scene:--"He was ready
+dressed for the journey, his gloves and cap on, and even his little cane
+in his hand. Nothing was now waited for but his coming down
+stairs,--his boxes being already all on board the gondola. At this
+moment, my Lord, by way of pretext, declares, that if it should strike
+one o'clock before every thing was in order (his arms being the only
+thing not yet quite ready), he would not go that day. The hour strikes,
+and he remains!"[63]
+
+The writer adds, "it is evident he has not the heart to go;" and the
+result proved that she had not judged him wrongly. The very next day's
+tidings from Ravenna decided his fate, and he himself, in a letter to
+the Contessa, thus announces the triumph which she had achieved. "F * *
+* will already have told you, _with her accustomed sublimity_, that Love
+has gained the victory. I could not summon up resolution enough to leave
+the country where you are, without, at least, once more seeing you. On
+_yourself_, perhaps, it will depend, whether I ever again shall leave
+you. Of the rest we shall speak when we meet. You ought, by this time,
+to know which is most conducive to your welfare, my presence or my
+absence. For myself, I am a citizen of the world--all countries are
+alike to me. You have ever been, since our first acquaintance, _the sole
+object of my thoughts_. My opinion was, that the best course I could
+adopt, both for your peace and that of all your family, would have been
+to depart and go far, _far_ away from you;--since to have been near and
+not approach you would have been, for me, impossible. You have however
+decided that I am to return to Ravenna. I shall accordingly return--and
+shall _do_--and _be_ all that you wish. I cannot say more.[64]
+
+On quitting Venice he took leave of Mr. Hoppner in a short but cordial
+letter, which I cannot better introduce than by prefixing to it the few
+words of comment with which this excellent friend of the noble poet has
+himself accompanied it:--"I need not say with what painful feeling I
+witnessed the departure of a person who, from the first day of our
+acquaintance, had treated me with unvaried kindness, reposing a
+confidence in me which it was beyond the power of my utmost efforts to
+deserve; admitting me to an intimacy which I had no right to claim, and
+listening with patience, and the greatest good temper, to the
+remonstrances I ventured to make upon his conduct."
+
+[Footnote 61: "Tu sei, e sarai sempre mio primo pensier. Ma in questo
+momento sono in un' stato orribile non sapendo cosa decidere;--temendo,
+da una parte, comprometterti in eterno col mio ritorno a Ravenna, e
+colle sue consequenze; e, dal' altra perderti, e me stesso, e tutto quel
+che ho conosciuto o gustato di felicità, nel non vederti più. Ti prego,
+ti supplico calmarti, e credere che non posso cessare ad amarti che
+colla vita."]
+
+[Footnote 62: "Io parto, per _salvarti_, e lascio un paese divenuto
+insopportabile senza di te. Le tue lettere alla F * *, ed anche a me
+stesso fanno torto ai miei motivi; ma col tempo vedrai la tua
+ingiustizia. Tu parli del dolor--io lo sento, ma mi mancano le parole.
+Non basta lasciarti per dei motivi dei quali tu eri persuasa (non molto
+tempo fa)--non basta partire dall' Italia col cuore lacerato, dopo aver
+passato tutti i giorni dopo la tua partenza nella solitudine, ammalato
+di corpo e di anima--ma ho anche a sopportare i tuoi rimproveri, senza
+replicarti, e senza meritarli. Addio--in quella parola è compresa la
+morte _di_ mia felicità."
+
+The close of this last sentence exhibits one of the very few instances
+of incorrectness that Lord Byron falls into in these letters;--the
+proper construction being "_della_ mia felicità."]
+
+[Footnote 63: "Egli era tutto vestito di viaggio coi guanti fra le mani,
+col suo bonnet, e persino colla piccola sua canna; non altro aspettavasi
+che egli scendesse le scale, tutti i bauli erano in barca. Milord fa la
+pretesta che se suona un ora dopo il mezzodi e che non sia ogni cosa
+all' ordine (poichè le armi sole non erano in pronto) egli non
+partirebbe più per quel giorno. L'ora suona ed egli resta."]
+
+[Footnote 64: "La F * * ti avra detta, _colla sua solita sublimità_, che
+l'Amor ha vinto. Io non ho potuto trovare forza di anima per lasciare il
+paese dove tu sei, senza vederti almeno un' altra volta:--forse
+dipenderà da _te_ se mai ti lascio più. Per il resto parleremo. Tu
+dovresti adesso sapere cosa sarà più convenevole al tuo ben essere la
+mia presenza o la mia lontananza. Io sono cittadino del mondo--tutti i
+paesi sono eguali per me. Tu sei stata sempre (dopo che ci siamo
+conosciuti) _l'unico oggetto di miei_ pensieri. Credeva che il miglior
+partito per la pace tua e la pace di tua famiglia fosse il mio partire,
+e andare ben _lontano_; poichè stare vicino e non avvicinarti sarebbe
+per me impossible. Ma tu hai deciso che io debbo ritornare a
+Ravenna--tornaro--e farò--e sarò ciò die tu vuoi. Non posso dirti di
+più."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 349. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "My dear Hoppner,
+
+ "Partings are but bitter work at best, so that I shall not venture
+ on a second with you. Pray make my respects to Mrs. Hoppner, and
+ assure her of my unalterable reverence for the singular goodness of
+ her disposition, which is not without its reward even in this
+ world--for those who are no great believers in human virtues would
+ discover enough in her to give them a better opinion of their
+ fellow-creatures and--what is still more difficult--of themselves,
+ as being of the same species, however inferior in approaching its
+ nobler models. Make, too, what excuses you can for my omission of
+ the ceremony of leave-taking. If we all meet again, I will make my
+ humblest apology; if not, recollect that I wished you all well;
+ and, if you can, forget that I have given you a great deal of
+ trouble.
+
+ "Yours," &c. &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 350. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, December 10. 1819.
+
+ "Since I last wrote, I have changed my mind, and shall not come to
+ England. The more I contemplate, the more I dislike the place and
+ the prospect. You may, therefore, address to me as usual _here_,
+ though I mean to go to another city. I have finished the third
+ Canto of Don Juan, but the things I have read and heard discourage
+ all further publication--at least for the present. You may try the
+ copy question, but you'll lose it: the cry is up, and cant is up. I
+ should have no objection to return the price of the copyright, and
+ have written to Mr. Kinnaird by this post on the subject. Talk with
+ him.
+
+ "I have not the patience, nor do I feel interest enough in the
+ question, to contend with the fellows in their own slang; but I
+ perceive Mr. Blackwood's Magazine and one or two others of your
+ missives have been hyperbolical in their praise, and diabolical in
+ their abuse. I like and admire W * *n, and _he_ should not have
+ indulged himself in such outrageous licence.[65] It is overdone and
+ defeats itself. What would he say to the grossness without passion
+ and the misanthropy without feeling of Gulliver's Travels?--When he
+ talks of Lady's Byron's business, he talks of what he knows nothing
+ about; and you may tell him that no one can more desire a public
+ investigation of that affair than I do.
+
+ "I sent home by Moore (_for_ Moore only, who has my Journal also)
+ my Memoir written up to 1816, and I gave him leave to show it to
+ whom he pleased, but _not to publish_, on any account. You may
+ read it, and you may let W * *n read it, if he likes--not for his
+ _public_ opinion, but his private; for I like the man, and care
+ very little about his Magazine. And I could wish Lady B. herself to
+ read it, that she may have it in her power to mark any thing
+ mistaken or mis-stated; as it may probably appear after my
+ extinction, and it would be but fair she should see it,--that is to
+ say, herself willing.
+
+ "Perhaps I may take a journey to you in the spring; but I _have_
+ been ill and _am_ indolent and indecisive, because few things
+ interest me. These fellows first abused me for being gloomy, and
+ now they are wroth that I am, or attempted to be, facetious. I have
+ got such a cold and headach that I can hardly see what I
+ scrawl:--the winters here are as sharp as needles. Some time ago, I
+ wrote to you rather fully about my Italian affairs; at present I
+ can say no more except that you shall hear further by and by.
+
+ "Your Blackwood accuses me of treating women harshly: it may be so,
+ but I have been their martyr; my whole life has been sacrificed
+ _to_ them and _by_ them. I mean to leave Venice in a few days, but
+ you will address your letters _here_ as usual. When I fix
+ elsewhere, you shall know."
+
+[Footnote 65: This is one of the many mistakes into which his distance
+from the scene of literary operations led him. The gentleman, to whom
+the hostile article in the Magazine is here attributed, has never,
+either then or since, written upon the subject of the noble poet's
+character or genius, without giving vent to a feeling of admiration as
+enthusiastic as it is always eloquently and powerfully expressed.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Soon after this letter to Mr. Murray he set out for Ravenna, from which
+place we shall find his correspondence for the next year and a half
+dated. For a short time after his arrival, he took up his residence at
+an inn; but the Count Guiccioli having allowed him to hire a suite of
+apartments in the Palazzo Guiccioli itself, he was once more lodged
+under the same roof with the Countess Guiccioli.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 351. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "Ravenna, Dec. 31. 1819.
+
+ "I have been here this week, and was obliged to put on my armour
+ and go the night after my arrival to the Marquis Cavalli's, where
+ there were between two and three hundred of the best company I have
+ seen in Italy,--more beauty, more youth, and more diamonds among
+ the women than have been seen these fifty years in the
+ Sea-Sodom.[66] I never saw such a difference between two places of
+ the same latitude, (or platitude, it is all one,)--music, dancing,
+ and play, all in the same _salle_. The G.'s object appeared to be
+ to parade her foreign friend as much as possible, and, faith, if
+ she seemed to glory in so doing, it was not for me to be ashamed of
+ it. Nobody seemed surprised;--all the women, on the contrary, were,
+ as it were, delighted with the excellent example. The vice-legate,
+ and all the other vices, were as polite as could be;--and I, who
+ had acted on the reserve, was fairly obliged to take the lady under
+ my arm, and look as much like a cicisbeo as I could on so short a
+ notice,--to say nothing of the embarrassment of a cocked hat and
+ sword, much more formidable to me than ever it will be to the
+ enemy.
+
+ "I write in great haste--do you answer as hastily. I can understand
+ nothing of all this; but it seems as if the G. had been presumed to
+ be _planted_, and was determined to show that she was
+ not,--_plantation_, in this hemisphere, being the greatest moral
+ misfortune. But this is mere conjecture, for I know nothing about
+ it--except that every body are very kind to her, and not
+ discourteous to me. Fathers, and all relations, quite agreeable.
+
+ "Yours ever,
+
+ "B.
+
+ "P.S. Best respects to Mrs. H.
+
+ "I would send the _compliments_ of the season; but the season
+ itself is so complimentary with snow and rain that I wait for
+ sunshine."
+
+[Footnote 66:
+
+ "Gehenna of the waters! thou Sea-Sodom!"
+ MARINO FALIERO.
+]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 352. TO MR. MOORE.
+
+ "January 2. 1320.
+
+ "My dear Moore,
+
+ "'To-day it is my wedding day;
+ And all the folks would stare,
+ If wife should dine at Edmonton,
+ And I should dine at Ware.'
+
+ Or _thus_:
+
+ "Here's a happy new year! but with reason,
+ I beg you'll permit me to say--
+ Wish me many returns of the _season_,
+ But as _few_ as you please of the _day_.
+
+ "My this present writing is to direct you that, if _she chooses_,
+ she may see the MS. Memoir in your possession. I wish her to have
+ fair play, in all cases, even though it will not be published till
+ after my decease. For this purpose, it were but just that Lady B.
+ should know what is there said of her and hers, that she may have
+ full power to remark on or respond to any part or parts, as may
+ seem fitting to herself. This is fair dealing, I presume, in all
+ events.
+
+ "To change the subject, are you in England? I send you an epitaph
+ for Castlereagh. * * * * * Another for Pitt:--
+
+ "With death doom'd to grapple
+ Beneath this cold slab, he
+ Who lied in the Chapel
+ Now lies in the Abbey.
+
+ "The gods seem to have made me poetical this day:--
+
+ "In digging up your bones, Tom Paine,
+ Will. Cobbett has done well:
+ You visit him on earth again,
+ He'll visit you in hell.
+
+ Or,
+
+ "You come to him on earth again,
+ He'll go with you to hell.
+
+ "Pray let not these versiculi go forth with my name, except among
+ the initiated, because my friend H. has foamed into a reformer,
+ and, I greatly fear, will subside into Newgate; since the
+ Honourable House, according to Galignani's Reports of Parliamentary
+ Debates, are menacing a prosecution to a pamphlet of his. I shall
+ be very sorry to hear of any thing but good for him, particularly
+ in these miserable squabbles; but these are the natural effects of
+ taking a part in them.
+
+ "For my own part I had a sad scene since you went. Count Gu. came
+ for his wife, and _none_ of those consequences which Scott
+ prophesied ensued. There was no damages, as in England, and so
+ Scott lost his wager. But there was a great scene, for she would
+ not, at first, go back with him--at least, she _did_ go back with
+ him; but he insisted, reasonably enough, that all communication
+ should be broken off between her and me. So, finding Italy very
+ dull, and having a fever tertian, I packed up my valise, and
+ prepared to cross the Alps; but my daughter fell ill, and detained
+ me.
+
+ "After her arrival at Ravenna, the Guiccioli fell ill again too;
+ and at last, her father (who had, all along, opposed the liaison
+ most violently till now) wrote to me to say that she was in such a
+ state that _he_ begged me to come and see her,--and that her
+ husband had acquiesced, in consequence of her relapse, and that
+ _he_ (her father) would guarantee all this, and that there would be
+ no farther scenes in consequence between them, and that I should
+ not be compromised in any way. I set out soon after, and have been
+ here ever since. I found her a good deal altered, but getting
+ better:--_all_ this comes of reading Corinna.
+
+ "The Carnival is about to begin, and I saw about two or three
+ hundred people at the Marquis Cavalli's the other evening, with as
+ much youth, beauty, and diamonds among the women, as ever averaged
+ in the like number. My appearance in waiting on the Guiccioli was
+ considered as a thing of course. The Marquis is her uncle, and
+ naturally considered me as her relation.
+
+ "The paper is out, and so is the letter. Pray write. Address to
+ Venice, whence the letters will be forwarded. Yours, &c. B."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 353. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "Ravenna, January 20. 1820.
+
+ "I have not decided any thing about remaining at Ravenna. I may
+ stay a day, a week, a year, all my life; but all this depends upon
+ what I can neither see nor foresee. I came because I was called,
+ and will go the moment that I perceive what may render my departure
+ proper. My attachment has neither the blindness of the beginning,
+ nor the microscopic accuracy of the close to such liaisons; but
+ 'time and the hour' must decide upon what I do. I can as yet say
+ nothing, because I hardly know any thing beyond what I have told
+ you.
+
+ "I wrote to you last post for my movables, as there is no getting a
+ lodging with a chair or table here ready; and as I have already
+ some things of the sort at Bologna which I had last summer there
+ for my daughter, I have directed them to be moved; and wish the
+ like to be done with those of Venice, that I may at least get out
+ of the 'Albergo Imperiale,' which _is imperial_ in all true sense
+ of the epithet. Buffini may be paid for his poison. I forgot to
+ thank you and Mrs. Hoppner for a whole treasure of toys for Allegra
+ before our departure; it was very kind, and we are very grateful.
+
+ "Your account of the weeding of the Governor's party is very
+ entertaining. If you do not understand the consular exceptions, I
+ do; and it is right that a man of honour, and a woman of probity,
+ should find it so, particularly in a place where there are not 'ten
+ righteous.' As to nobility--in England none are strictly noble but
+ peers, not even peers' sons, though titled by courtesy; nor knights
+ of the garter, unless of the peerage, so that Castlereagh himself
+ would hardly pass through a foreign herald's ordeal till the death
+ of his father.
+
+ "The snow is a foot deep here. There is a theatre, and opera,--the
+ Barber of Seville. Balls begin on Monday next. Pay the porter for
+ never looking after the gate, and ship my chattels, and let me
+ know, or let Castelli let me know, how my law-suits go on--but fee
+ him only in proportion to his success. Perhaps we may meet in the
+ spring yet, if you are for England. I see H * * has got into a
+ scrape, which does not please me; he should not have gone so deep
+ among those men without calculating the consequences. I used to
+ think myself the most imprudent of all among my friends and
+ acquaintances, but almost begin to doubt it.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 354. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "Ravenna, January 31. 1820.
+
+ "You would hardly have been troubled with the removal of my
+ furniture, but there is none to be had nearer than Bologna, and I
+ have been fain to have that of the rooms which I fitted up for my
+ daughter there in the summer removed here. The expense will be at
+ least as great of the land carriage, so that you see it was
+ necessity, and not choice. Here they get every thing from Bologna,
+ except some lighter articles from Forli or Faenza.
+
+ "If Scott is returned, pray remember me to him, and plead laziness
+ the whole and sole cause of my not replying:--dreadful is the
+ exertion of letter-writing. The Carnival here is less boisterous,
+ but we have balls and a theatre. I carried Bankes to both, and he
+ carried away, I believe, a much more favourable impression of the
+ society here than of that of Venice,--recollect that I speak of the
+ _native_ society only.
+
+ "I am drilling very hard to learn how to double a shawl, and should
+ succeed to admiration if I did not always double it the wrong side
+ out; and then I sometimes confuse and bring away two, so as to put
+ all the Servanti out, besides keeping their _Servite_ in the cold
+ till every body can get back their property. But it is a dreadfully
+ moral place, for you must not look at anybody's wife except your
+ neighbour's,--if you go to the next door but one, you are scolded,
+ and presumed to be perfidious. And then a relazione or an amicizia
+ seems to be a regular affair of from five to fifteen years, at
+ which period, if there occur a widowhood, it finishes by a
+ sposalizio; and in the mean time it has so many rules of its own
+ that it is not much better. A man actually becomes a piece of
+ female property,--they won't let their Serventi marry until there
+ is a vacancy for themselves. I know two instances of this in one
+ family here.
+
+ "To-night there was a ----[67] Lottery after the opera; it is an
+ odd ceremony. Bankes and I took tickets of it, and buffooned
+ together very merrily. He is gone to Firenze. Mrs. J * * should
+ have sent you my postscript; there was no occasion to have bored
+ you in person. I never interfere in anybody's squabbles,--she may
+ scratch your face herself.
+
+ "The weather here has been dreadful--snow several feet--a _fiume_,
+ broke down a bridge, and flooded heaven knows how many _campi_;
+ then rain came--and it is still thawing--so that my saddle-horses
+ have a sinecure till the roads become more practicable. Why did
+ Lega give away the goat? a blockhead--I must have him again.
+
+ "Will you pay Missiaglia and the Buffo Buffini of the Gran
+ Bretagna? I heard from Moore, who is at Paris; I had previously
+ written to him in London, but he has not yet got my letter,
+ apparently.
+
+ "Believe me," &c.
+
+[Footnote 67: The word here, being under the seal, is illegible.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 355. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, February 7. 1820.
+
+ "I have had no letter from you these two months; but since I came
+ here in December, 1819, I sent you a letter for Moore, who is God
+ knows _where_--in Paris or London, I presume. I have copied and
+ cut the third Canto of Don Juan _into two_, because it was too
+ long; and I tell you this beforehand, because in case of any
+ reckoning between you and me, these two are only to go for one, as
+ this was the original form, and, in fact, the two together are not
+ longer than one of the first: so remember that I have not made this
+ division to _double_ upon _you_; but merely to suppress some
+ tediousness in the aspect of the thing. I should have served you a
+ pretty trick if I had sent you, for example, cantos of 50 stanzas
+ each.
+
+ "I am translating the first Canto of Pulci's Morgante Maggiore, and
+ have half done it; but these last days of the Carnival confuse and
+ interrupt every thing.
+
+ "I have not yet sent off the Cantos, and have some doubt whether
+ they ought to be published, for they have not the spirit of the
+ first. The outcry has not frightened but it has _hurt_ me, and I
+ have not written _con amore_ this time. It is very decent, however,
+ and as dull as 'the last new comedy.'
+
+ "I think my translations of Pulci will make you stare. It must be
+ put by the original, stanza for stanza, and verse for verse; and
+ you will see what was permitted in a Catholic country and a bigoted
+ age to a churchman, on the score of religion;--and so tell those
+ buffoons who accuse me of attacking the Liturgy.
+
+ "I write in the greatest haste, it being the hour of the Corso, and
+ I must go and buffoon with the rest. My daughter Allegra is just
+ gone with the Countess G. in Count G.'s coach and six to join the
+ cavalcade, and I must follow with all the rest of the Ravenna
+ world. Our old Cardinal is dead, and the new one not appointed yet;
+ but the masquing goes on the same, the vice-legate being a good
+ governor. We have had hideous frost and snow, but all is mild
+ again.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 356. TO MR. BANKES.
+
+ "Ravenna, February 19. 1820.
+
+ "I have room for you in the house here, as I had in Venice, if you
+ think fit to make use of it; but do not expect to find the same
+ gorgeous suite of tapestried halls. Neither dangers nor tropical
+ heats have ever prevented your penetrating wherever you had a mind
+ to it, and why should the snow now?--Italian snow--fie on it!--so
+ pray come. Tita's heart yearns for you, and mayhap for your silver
+ broad pieces; and your playfellow, the monkey, is alone and
+ inconsolable.
+
+ "I forget whether you admire or tolerate red hair, so that I rather
+ dread showing you all that I have about me and around me in this
+ city. Come, nevertheless,--you can pay Dante a morning visit, and I
+ will undertake that Theodore and Honoria will be most happy to see
+ you in the forest hard by. We Goths, also, of Ravenna, hope you
+ will not despise our arch-Goth, Theodoric. I must leave it to these
+ worthies to entertain you all the fore part of the day, seeing that
+ I have none at all myself--the lark that rouses me from my
+ slumbers, being an afternoon bird. But, then, all your evenings,
+ and as much as you can give me of your nights, will be mine. Ay!
+ and you will find me eating flesh, too, like yourself or any other
+ cannibal, except it be upon Fridays. Then, there are more Cantos
+ (and be d----d to them) of what the courteous reader, Mr. S----,
+ calls Grub Street, in my drawer, which I have a little scheme to
+ commit to your charge for England; only I must first cut up (or cut
+ down) two aforesaid Cantos into three, because I am grown base and
+ mercenary, and it is an ill precedent to let my Mecænas, Murray,
+ get too much for his money. I am busy, also, with
+ Pulci--translating--servilely translating, stanza for stanza, and
+ line for line--two octaves every night,--the same allowance as at
+ Venice.
+
+ "Would you call at your banker's at Bologna, and ask him for some
+ letters lying there for me, and burn them?--or I will--so do not
+ burn them, but bring them,--and believe me ever and very
+ affectionately Yours,
+
+ "BYRON.
+
+ "P.S. I have a particular wish to hear from yourself something
+ about Cyprus, so pray recollect all that you can.--Good night."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 357. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, February 21. 1820.
+
+ "The bull-dogs will be very agreeable. I have only those of this
+ country, who, though good, have not the tenacity of tooth and
+ stoicism in endurance of my canine fellow-citizens: then pray send
+ them by the readiest conveyance--perhaps best by sea. Mr. Kinnaird
+ will disburse for them, and deduct from the amount on your
+ application or that of Captain Tyler.
+
+ "I see the good old King is gone to his place. One can't help being
+ sorry, though blindness, and age, and insanity, are supposed to be
+ drawbacks on human felicity; but I am not at all sure that the
+ latter, at least, might not render him happier than any of his
+ subjects.
+
+ "I have no thoughts of coming to the coronation, though I should
+ like to see it, and though I have a right to be a puppet in it; but
+ my division with Lady Byron, which has drawn an equinoctial line
+ between me and mine in all other things, will operate in this also
+ to prevent my being in the same procession.
+
+ "By Saturday's post I sent you four packets, containing Cantos
+ third and fourth. Recollect that these two cantos reckon only as
+ _one_ with you and me, being, in fact, the third canto cut into
+ two, because I found it too long. Remember this, and don't imagine
+ that there could be any other motive. The whole is about 225
+ stanzas, more or less, and a lyric of 96 lines, so that they are no
+ longer than the first _single_ cantos: but the truth is, that I
+ made the first too long, and should have cut those down also had I
+ thought better. Instead of saying in future for so many cantos, say
+ so many stanzas or pages: it was Jacob Tonson's way, and certainly
+ the best; it prevents mistakes. I might have sent you a dozen
+ cantos of 40 stanzas each,--those of 'The Minstrel' (Beattie's) are
+ no longer,--and ruined you at once, if you don't suffer as it is.
+ But recollect that you are not _pinned down_ to any thing you say
+ in a letter, and that, calculating even these two cantos as _one_
+ only (which they were and are to be reckoned), you are not bound by
+ your offer. Act as may seem fair to all parties.
+
+ "I have finished my translation of the first Canto of 'The Morgante
+ Maggiore' of Pulci, which I will transcribe and send. It is the
+ parent, not only of Whistlecraft, but of all jocose Italian poetry.
+ You must print it side by side with the original Italian, because I
+ wish the reader to judge of the fidelity: it is stanza for stanza,
+ and often line for line, if not word for word.
+
+ "You ask me for a volume of manners, &c. on Italy. Perhaps I am in
+ the case to know more of them than most Englishmen, because I have
+ lived among the natives, and in parts of the country where
+ Englishmen never resided before (I speak of Romagna and this place
+ particularly); but there are many reasons why I do not choose to
+ treat in print on such a subject. I have lived in their houses and
+ in the heart of their families, sometimes merely as 'amico di
+ casa,' and sometimes as 'amico di cuore' of the Dama, and in
+ neither case do I feel myself authorised in making a book of them.
+ Their moral is not your moral; their life is not your life; you
+ would not understand it; it is not English, nor French, nor German,
+ which you would all understand. The conventual education, the
+ cavalier servitude, the habits of thought and living are so
+ entirely different, and the difference becomes so much more
+ striking the more you live intimately with them, that I know not
+ how to make you comprehend a people who are at once temperate and
+ profligate, serious in their characters and buffoons in their
+ amusements, capable of impressions and passions, which are at once
+ _sudden_ and _durable_ (what you find in no other nation), and who
+ actually have no society (what we would call so), as you may see by
+ their comedies; they have no real comedy, not even in Goldoni, and
+ that is because they have no society to draw it from.
+
+ "Their conversazioni are not society at all. They go to the theatre
+ to talk, and into company to hold their tongues. The _women_ sit in
+ a circle, and the men gather into groups, or they play at dreary
+ faro, or 'lotto reale,' for small sums. Their academic are concerts
+ like our own, with better music and more form. Their best things
+ are the carnival balls and masquerades, when every body runs mad
+ for six weeks. After their dinners and suppers they make extempore
+ verses and buffoon one another; but it is in a humour which you
+ would not enter into, ye of the north.
+
+ "In their houses it is better. I should know something of the
+ matter, having had a pretty general experience among their women,
+ from the fisherman's wife up to the Nobil Dama, whom I serve. Their
+ system has its rules, and its fitnesses, and its decorums, so as to
+ be reduced to a kind of discipline or game at hearts, which admits
+ few deviations, unless you wish to lose it. They are extremely
+ tenacious, and jealous as furies, not permitting their lovers even
+ to marry if they can help it, and keeping them always close to them
+ in public as in private, whenever they can. In short, they transfer
+ marriage to adultery, and strike the _not_ out of that commandment.
+ The reason is, that they marry for their parents, and love for
+ themselves. They exact fidelity from a lover as a debt of honour,
+ while they pay the husband as a tradesman, that is, not at all. You
+ hear a person's character, male or female, canvassed not as
+ depending on their conduct to their husbands or wives, but to their
+ mistress or lover. If I wrote a quarto, I don't know that I could
+ do more than amplify what I have here noted. It is to be observed
+ that while they do all this, the greatest outward respect is to be
+ paid to the husbands, not only by the ladies, but by their
+ Serventi--particularly if the husband serves no one himself (which
+ is not often the case, however); so that you would often suppose
+ them relations--the Servente making the figure of one adopted into
+ the family. Sometimes the ladies run a little restive and elope, or
+ divide, or make a scene: but this is at starting, generally, when
+ they know no better, or when they fall in love with a foreigner, or
+ some such anomaly,--and is always reckoned unnecessary and
+ extravagant.
+
+ "You enquire after Dante's Prophecy: I have not done more than six
+ hundred lines, but will vaticinate at leisure.
+
+ "Of the bust I know nothing. No cameos or seals are to be cut here
+ or elsewhere that I know of, in any good style. Hobhouse should
+ write himself to Thorwaldsen: the bust was made and paid for three
+ years ago.
+
+ "Pray tell Mrs. Leigh to request Lady Byron to urge forward the
+ transfer from the funds. I wrote to Lady Byron on business this
+ post, addressed to the care of Mr. D. Kinnaird."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 358. TO MR. BANKES.
+
+ "Ravenna, February 26. 1820.
+
+ "Pulci and I are waiting for you with impatience; but I suppose we
+ must give way to the attraction of the Bolognese galleries for a
+ time. I know nothing of pictures myself, and care almost as little:
+ but to me there are none like the Venetian--above all, Giorgione. I
+ remember well his Judgment of Solomon in the Mariscalchi in
+ Bologna. The real mother is beautiful, exquisitely beautiful. Buy
+ her, by all means, if you can, and take her home with you: put her
+ in safety: for be assured there are troublous times brewing for
+ Italy; and as I never could keep out of a row in my life, it will
+ be my fate, I dare say, to be over head and ears in it; but no
+ matter, these are the stronger reasons for coming to see me soon.
+
+ "I have more of Scott's novels (for surely they are Scott's) since
+ we met, and am more and more delighted. I think that I even prefer
+ them to his poetry, which (by the way) I redde for the first time
+ in my life in your rooms in Trinity College.
+
+ "There are some curious commentaries on Dante preserved here,
+ which you should see. Believe me ever, faithfully and most
+ affectionately, yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 359. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, March 1. 1820.
+
+ "I sent you by last post the translation of the first Canto of the
+ Morgante Maggiore, and wish you to ask Rose about the word
+ 'sbergo,' _i.e._ 'usbergo,' which I have translated _cuirass_. I
+ suspect that it means _helmet_ also. Now, if so, which of the
+ senses is best accordant with the text? I have adopted cuirass, but
+ will be amenable to reasons. Of the natives, some say one, and some
+ t'other: but they are no great Tuscans in Romagna. However, I will
+ ask Sgricci (the famous improvisatore) to-morrow, who is a native
+ of Arezzo. The Countess Guiccioli who is reckoned a very cultivated
+ young lady, and the dictionary, say _cuirass_. I have written
+ cuirass, but _helmet_ runs in my head nevertheless--and will run in
+ verse very well, whilk is the principal point. I will ask the Sposa
+ Spina Spinelli, too, the Florentine bride of Count Gabriel Rusponi,
+ just imported from Florence, and get the sense out of somebody.
+
+ "I have just been visiting the new Cardinal, who arrived the day
+ before yesterday in his legation. He seems a good old gentleman,
+ pious and simple, and not quite like his predecessor, who was a
+ bon-vivant, in the worldly sense of the words.
+
+ "Enclosed is a letter which I received some time ago from Dallas.
+ It will explain itself. I have not answered it. This comes of doing
+ people good. At one time or another (including copyrights) this
+ person has had about fourteen hundred pounds of my money, and he
+ writes what he calls a posthumous work about me, and a scrubby
+ letter accusing me of treating him ill, when I never did any such
+ thing. It is true that I left off letter-writing, as I have done
+ with almost everybody else; but I can't see how that was misusing
+ him.
+
+ "I look upon his epistle as the consequence of my not sending him
+ another hundred pounds, which he wrote to me for about two years
+ ago, and which I thought proper to withhold, he having had his
+ share, methought, of what I could dispone upon others.
+
+ "In your last you ask me after my articles of domestic wants; I
+ believe they are as usual: the bull-dogs, magnesia, soda-powders,
+ tooth-powders, brushes, and every thing of the kind which are here
+ unattainable. You still ask me to return to England: alas! to what
+ purpose? You do not know what you are requiring. Return I must,
+ probably, some day or other (if I live), sooner or later; but it
+ will not be for pleasure, nor can it end in good. You enquire after
+ my health and SPIRITS in large letters: my health can't be very
+ bad, for I cured myself of a sharp tertian ague, in three weeks,
+ with cold water, which had held my stoutest gondolier for months,
+ notwithstanding all the bark of the apothecary,--a circumstance
+ which surprised Dr. Aglietti, who said it was a proof of great
+ stamina, particularly in so epidemic a season. I did it out of
+ dislike to the taste of bark (which I can't bear), and succeeded,
+ contrary to the prophecies of every body, by simply taking nothing
+ at all. As to _spirits_, they are unequal, now high, now low, like
+ other people's I suppose, and depending upon circumstances.
+
+ "Pray send me W. Scott's new novels. What are their names and
+ characters? I read some of his former ones, at least once a day,
+ for an hour or so. The last are too hurried: he forgets
+ Ravenswood's name, and calls him _Edgar_ and then _Norman_; and
+ Girder, the cooper, is styled now _Gilbert_, and now _John_; and he
+ don't make enough of Montrose; but Dalgetty is excellent, and so is
+ Lucy Ashton, and the b----h her mother. What is _Ivanhoe_? and what
+ do you call his other? are there _two_? Pray make him write at
+ least two a year: I like no reading so well.
+
+ "The editor of the Bologna Telegraph has sent me a paper with
+ extracts from Mr. Mulock's (his name always reminds me of Muley
+ Moloch of Morocco) 'Atheism answered,' in which there is a long
+ eulogium of my poesy, and a great 'compatimento' for my misery. I
+ never could understand what they mean by accusing me of irreligion.
+ However, they may have it their own way. This gentleman seems to be
+ my great admirer, so I take what he says in good part, as he
+ evidently intends kindness, to which I can't accuse myself of being
+ invincible.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 360. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, March 5. 1820.
+
+ "In case, in your country, you should not readily lay hands on the
+ Morgante Maggiore, I send you the original text of the first Canto,
+ to correspond with the translation which I sent you a few days ago.
+ It is from the Naples edition in quarto of 1732,--_dated Florence_,
+ however, by a trick of _the trade_, which you, as one of the allied
+ sovereigns of the profession, will perfectly understand without any
+ further spiegazione.
+
+ "It is strange that here nobody understands the real precise
+ meaning of 'sbergo,' or 'usbergo[68],' an old Tuscan word, which I
+ have rendered _cuirass_ (but am not sure it is not _helmet_). I
+ have asked at least twenty people, learned and ignorant, male and
+ female, including poets, and officers civil and military. The
+ dictionary says _cuirass_, but gives no authority; and a female
+ friend of mine says _positively cuirass_, which makes me doubt the
+ fact still more than before. Ginguené says 'bonnet de fer,' with
+ the usual superficial decision of a Frenchman, so that I can't
+ believe him: and what between the dictionary, the Italian woman,
+ and the Frenchman, there's no trusting to a word they say. The
+ context, too, which should decide, admits equally of either
+ meaning, as you will perceive. Ask Rose, Hobhouse, Merivale, and
+ Foscolo, and vote with the majority. Is Frere a good Tuscan? if he
+ be, bother him too. I have tried, you see, to be as accurate as I
+ well could. This is my third or fourth letter, or packet, within
+ the last twenty days."
+
+[Footnote 68: It has been suggested to me that usbergo is obviously the
+same as hauberk, habergeon, &c. all from the German _halsberg_, or
+covering of the neck.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 361. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, March 14. 1820.
+
+ "Enclosed is Dante's Prophecy--Vision--or what not.[69] Where I
+ have left more than one reading (which I have done often), you may
+ adopt that which Gifford, Frere, Rose, and Hobhouse, and others of
+ your Utican Senate think the best or least bad. The preface will
+ explain all that is explicable. These are but the four first
+ cantos: if approved, I will go on.
+
+ "Pray mind in printing; and let some good Italian scholar correct
+ the Italian quotations.
+
+ "Four days ago I was overturned in an open carriage between the
+ river and a steep bank:--wheels dashed to pieces, slight bruises,
+ narrow escape, and all that; but no harm done, though coachman,
+ foot-man, horses, and vehicle, were all mixed together like
+ macaroni. It was owing to bad driving, as I say; but the coachman
+ swears to a start on the part of the horses. We went against a post
+ on the verge of a steep bank, and capsized. I usually go out of
+ the town in a carriage, and meet the saddle horses at the bridge;
+ it was in going there that we boggled; but I got my ride, as usual,
+ after the accident. They say here it was all owing to St. Antonio
+ of Padua, (serious, I assure you,)--who does thirteen miracles a
+ day,--that worse did not come of it. I have no objection to this
+ being his fourteenth in the four-and-twenty-hours. He presides over
+ overturns and all escapes therefrom, it seems: and they dedicate
+ pictures, &c. to him, as the sailors once did to Neptune, after
+ 'the high Roman fashion.'
+
+ "Yours, in haste."
+
+[Footnote 69: There were in this Poem, originally, three lines of
+remarkable strength and severity, which, as the Italian poet against
+whom they were directed was then living, were omitted in the
+publication. I shall here give them from memory.
+
+ "The prostitution of his Muse and wife,
+ Both beautiful, and both by him debased,
+ Shall salt his bread and give him means of life."
+]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 362. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, March 20. 1820.
+
+ "Last post I sent you 'The Vision of Dante,'--four first Cantos.
+ Enclosed you will find, _line for line_, in _third rhyme_ (_terza
+ rima_), of which your British blackguard reader as yet understands
+ nothing, Fanny of Rimini. You know that she was born here, and
+ married, and slain, from Gary, Boyd, and such people. I have done
+ it into _cramp_ English, line for line, and rhyme for rhyme, to try
+ the possibility. You had best append it to the poems already sent
+ by last three posts. I shall not allow you to play the tricks you
+ did last year, with the prose you _post_-scribed to Mazeppa, which
+ I sent to you _not_ to be published, if not in a periodical
+ paper,--and there you tacked it, without a word of explanation. If
+ this is published, publish it _with the original_, and _together_
+ with the _Pulci_ translation, _or_ the _Dante imitation_. I suppose
+ you have both by now, and the _Juan_ long before.
+
+ "FRANCESCA OF RIMINI.
+
+ "_Translation from the Inferno of Dante, Canto 5th._
+
+ "'The land where I was born sits by the seas,
+ Upon that shore to which the Po descends,
+ With all his followers, in search of peace.
+ Love, which the gentle heart soon apprehends,
+ Seized him for the fair person which was ta'en
+ From me, and me even yet the mode offends.
+ Love, who to none beloved to love again
+ Remits, seized me with wish to please, so strong,
+ That, as thou seest, yet, yet it doth remain.
+ Love to one death conducted us along,
+ But Caina waits for him our life who ended:'
+ These were the accents utter'd by her tongue,--
+ Since first I listen'd to these souls offended,
+ I bow'd my visage and so kept it till--
+
+ {_then_}
+ 'What think'st thou?' said the bard; { when } I unbended,
+ And recommenced: 'Alas! unto such ill
+ How many sweet thoughts, what strong ecstasies
+ Led these their evil fortune to fulfil!'
+ And then I turn'd unto their side my eyes,
+ And said, 'Francesca, thy sad destinies
+ Have made me sorrow till the tears arise.
+ But tell me, in the season of sweet sighs,
+ By what and how thy Love to Passion rose,
+ So as his dim desires to recognise?'
+ Then she to me: 'The greatest of all woes
+ {_recall to mind_}
+ Is to { remind us of } our happy days
+ {_this_}
+ In misery, and { that } thy teacher knows.
+
+ But if to learn our passion's first root preys
+ Upon thy spirit with such sympathy,
+ { _relate_ }
+ I will {do[70] even} as he who weeps and says.--
+ We read one day for pastime, seated nigh,
+ Of Lancilot, how Love enchain'd him too.
+ We were alone, quite unsuspiciously,
+ But oft our eyes met, and our cheeks in hue
+ All o'er discolour'd by that reading were;
+ { _overthrew_ }
+ But one point only wholly {us o'erthrew;}
+ { _desired_ }
+ When we read the {long-sighed-for} smile of her,
+ {_a fervent_}
+ To be thus kiss'd by such { devoted } lover,
+ He who from me can be divided ne'er
+ Kiss'd my mouth, trembling in the act all over.
+ Accursed was the book and he who wrote!
+ That day no further leaf we did uncover.--
+ While thus one Spirit told us of their lot,
+ The other wept, so that with pity's thralls
+ I swoon'd as if by death I had been smote,
+ And fell down even as a dead body falls.'"
+
+
+[Footnote 70: "In some of the editions, it is, 'diro,' in others
+'faro;'--an essential difference between 'saying' and 'doing,' which I
+know not how to decide. Ask Foscolo. The d----d editions drive me mad."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 363. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, March 23. 1820.
+
+ "I have received your letter of the 7th. Besides the four packets
+ you have already received, I have sent the Pulci a few days after,
+ and since (a few days ago) the four first Cantos of Dante's
+ Prophecy, (the best thing I ever wrote, if it be not
+ _unintelligible_,) and by last post a literal translation, word for
+ word (versed like the original), of the episode of Francesca of
+ Rimini. I want to hear what you think of the new Juans, and the
+ translations, and the Vision. They are all things that are, or
+ ought to be, very different from one another.
+
+ "If you choose to make a print from the Venetian, you may; but she
+ don't correspond at all to the character you mean her to represent.
+ On the contrary, the Contessa G. does (except that she is fair),
+ and is much prettier than the Fornarina; but I have no picture of
+ her except a miniature, which is very ill done; and, besides, it
+ would not be proper, on any account whatever, to make such a use of
+ it, even if you had a copy.
+
+ "Recollect that the two new Cantos only count with us for one. You
+ may put the Pulci and Dante together: perhaps that were best. So
+ you have put your name to Juan, after all your panic. You are a
+ rare fellow. I must now put myself in a passion to continue my
+ prose. Yours," &c.
+
+ "I have caused write to Thorwaldsen. Pray be careful in sending my
+ daughter's picture--I mean, that it be not hurt in the carriage,
+ for it is a journey rather long and jolting."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 364. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, March 28. 1820.
+
+ "Enclosed is a 'Screed of Doctrine' for you, of which I will
+ trouble you to acknowledge the receipt by next post. Mr. Hobhouse
+ must have the correction of it for the press. You may show it first
+ to whom you please.
+
+ "I wish to know what became of my two Epistles from St. Paul
+ (translated from the Armenian three years ago and more), and of the
+ letter to R----ts of last autumn, which you never have attended to?
+ There are two packets with this.
+
+ "P.S. I have some thoughts of publishing the 'Hints from Horace,'
+ written ten years ago[71],--if Hobhouse can rummage them out of my
+ papers left at his father's,--with some omissions and alterations
+ previously to be made when I see the proofs."
+
+[Footnote 71: When making the observations which occur in the early part
+of this work, on the singular preference given by the noble author to the
+"Hints from Horace," I was not aware of the revival of this strange
+predilection, which (as it appears from the above letter, and, still more
+strongly, from some that follow) took place so many years after, in the
+full maturity of his powers and taste. Such a delusion is hardly
+conceivable, and can only, perhaps, be accounted for by that tenaciousness
+of early opinions and impressions by which his mind, in other respects so
+versatile, was characterised.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 365. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, March 29. 1820.
+
+ "Herewith you will receive a note (enclosed) on Pope, which you
+ will find tally with a part of the text of last post. I have at
+ last lost all patience with the atrocious cant and nonsense about
+ Pope, with which our present * *s are overflowing, and am
+ determined to make such head against it as an individual can, by
+ prose or verse; and I will at least do it with good will. There is
+ no bearing it any longer; and if it goes on, it will destroy what
+ little good writing or taste remains amongst us. I hope there are
+ still a few men of taste to second me; but if not, I'll battle it
+ alone, convinced that it is in the best cause of English
+ literature.
+
+ "I have sent you so many packets, verse and prose, lately, that you
+ will be tired of the postage, if not of the perusal. I want to
+ answer some parts of your last letter, but I have not time, for I
+ must 'boot and saddle,' as my Captain Craigengelt (an officer of
+ the old Napoleon Italian army) is in waiting, and my groom and
+ cattle to boot.
+
+ "You have given me a screed of metaphor and what not about _Pulci_,
+ and manners, and 'going without clothes, like our Saxon ancestors.'
+ Now, the _Saxons did not go without clothes_; and, in the next
+ place, they are not my ancestors, nor yours either; for mine were
+ Norman, and yours, I take it by your name, were _Gael_. And, in the
+ next, I differ from you about the 'refinement' which has banished
+ the comedies of Congreve. Are not the comedies of _Sheridan_? acted
+ to the thinnest houses? I know (as _ex-committed_) that 'The School
+ for Scandal' was the worst stock piece upon record. I also know
+ that Congreve gave up writing because Mrs. Centlivre's balderdash
+ drove his comedies off. So it is not decency, but stupidity, that
+ does all this; for Sheridan is as decent a writer as need be, and
+ Congreve no worse than Mrs. Centlivre, of whom Wilks (the actor)
+ said, 'not only her play would be damned, but she too.' He alluded
+ to 'A Bold Stroke for a Wife.' But last, and most to the purpose,
+ Pulci is _not_ an _indecent_ writer--at least in his first Canto,
+ as you will have perceived by this time.
+
+ "You talk of _refinement_:--are you all _more_ moral? are you _so_
+ moral? No such thing. _I_ know what the world is in England, by my
+ own proper experience of the best of it--at least of the loftiest;
+ and I have described it every where as it is to be found in all
+ places.
+
+ "But to return. I should like to see the _proofs_ of mine answer,
+ because there will be something to omit or to alter. But pray let
+ it be carefully printed. When convenient let me have an answer.
+
+ "Yours."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 366. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "Ravenna, March 31. 1820.
+
+ "Ravenna continues much the same as I described it. Conversazioni
+ all Lent, and much better ones than any at Venice. There are small
+ games at hazard, that is, faro, where nobody can point more than a
+ shilling or two;--other card-tables, and as much talk and coffee as
+ you please. Every body does and says what they please; and I do not
+ recollect any disagreeable events, except being three times falsely
+ accused of flirtation, and once being robbed of six sixpences by a
+ nobleman of the city, a Count * * *. I did not suspect the
+ illustrious delinquent; but the Countess V * * * and the Marquis L
+ * * * told me of it directly, and also that it was a way he had, of
+ filching money when he saw it before him; but I did not ax him for
+ the cash, but contented myself with telling him that if he did it
+ again, I should anticipate the law.
+
+ "There is to be a theatre in April, and a fair, and an opera, and
+ another opera in June, besides the fine weather of nature's giving,
+ and the rides in the Forest of Pine. With my best respects to Mrs.
+ Hoppner, believe me ever, &c. BYRON.
+
+ "P.S. Could you give me an item of what books remain at Venice? I
+ don't want them, but want to know whether the few that are not here
+ are there, and were not lost by the way. I hope and trust you have
+ got all your wine safe, and that it is drinkable. Allegra is
+ prettier, I think, but as obstinate as a mule, and as ravenous as a
+ vulture: health good, to judge of the complexion--temper tolerable,
+ but for vanity and pertinacity. She thinks herself handsome, and
+ will do as she pleases."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 367. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, April 9. 1820.
+
+ "In the name of all the devils in the printing-office, why don't
+ you write to acknowledge the receipt of the second, third, and
+ fourth packets, viz. the Pulci translation and original, the
+ _Danticles_, the Observations on, &c.? You forget that you keep me
+ in hot water till I know whether they are arrived, or if I must
+ have the bore of re-copying.
+
+ "Have you gotten the cream of translations, Francesca of Rimini,
+ from the Inferno? Why, I have sent you a warehouse of trash within
+ the last month, and you have no sort of feeling about you: a
+ pastry-cook would have had twice the gratitude, and thanked me at
+ least for the quantity.
+
+ "To make the letter heavier, I enclose you the Cardinal Legate's
+ (our Campeius) circular for his conversazione this evening. It is
+ the anniversary of the Pope's _tiara_-tion, and all polite
+ Christians, even of the Lutheran creed, must go and be civil. And
+ there will be a circle, and a faro-table, (for shillings, that is,
+ they don't allow high play,) and all the beauty, nobility, and
+ sanctity of Ravenna present. The Cardinal himself is a very
+ good-natured little fellow, bishop of Muda, and legate here,--a
+ decent believer in all the doctrines of the church. He has kept his
+ housekeeper these forty years * * * *; but is reckoned a pious man,
+ and a moral liver.
+
+ "I am not quite sure that I won't be among you this autumn, for I
+ find that business don't go on--what with trustees and lawyers--as
+ it should do, 'with all deliberate speed.' They differ about
+ investments in Ireland.
+
+ "Between the devil and deep sea,
+ Between the lawyer and trustee,
+
+ I am puzzled; and so much time is lost by my not being upon the
+ spot, what with answers, demurs, rejoinders, that it may be I must
+ come and look to it; for one says do, and t'other don't, so that I
+ know not which way to turn: but perhaps they can manage without
+ me.
+
+ "Yours, &c.
+
+ "P.S. I have begun a tragedy on the subject of Marino Faliero, the
+ Doge of Venice; but you sha'n't see it these six years, if you
+ don't acknowledge my packets with more quickness and precision.
+ _Always write, if but a line_, by return of post, when any thing
+ arrives, which is not a mere letter.
+
+ "Address direct to Ravenna; it saves a week's time, and much
+ postage."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 368. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, April 16. 1820.
+
+ "Post after post arrives without bringing any acknowledgment from
+ you of the different packets (excepting the first) which I sent
+ within the last two months, all of which ought to be arrived long
+ ere now; and as they were announced in other letters, you ought at
+ least to say whether they are come or not. You are not expected to
+ write frequent, or long letters, as your time is much occupied; but
+ when parcels that have cost some pains in the composition, and
+ great trouble in the copying, are sent to you, I should at least be
+ put out of suspense, by the immediate acknowledgment, per return of
+ post, addressed _directly_ to _Ravenna_. I am naturally--knowing
+ what continental posts are--anxious to hear that they are arrived;
+ especially as I loathe the task of copying so much, that if there
+ was a human being that could copy my blotted MSS. he should have
+ all they can ever bring for his trouble. All I desire is two lines,
+ to say, such a day I received such a packet. There are at least six
+ unacknowledged. This is neither kind nor courteous.
+
+ "I have, besides, another reason for desiring you to be speedy,
+ which is, that there is THAT brewing in Italy which will speedily
+ cut off all security of communication, and set all your
+ Anglo-travellers flying in every direction, with their usual
+ fortitude in foreign tumults. The Spanish and French affairs have
+ set the Italians in a ferment; and no wonder: they have been too
+ long trampled on. This will make a sad scene for your exquisite
+ traveller, but not for the resident, who naturally wishes a people
+ to redress itself. I shall, if permitted by the natives, remain to
+ see what will come of it, and perhaps to take a turn with them,
+ like Dugald Dalgetty and his horse, in case of business; for I
+ shall think it by far the most interesting spectacle and moment in
+ existence, to see the Italians send the barbarians of all nations
+ back to their own dens. I have lived long enough among them to feel
+ more for them as a nation than for any other people in existence.
+ But they want union, and they want principle; and I doubt their
+ success. However, they will try, probably, and if they do, it will
+ be a good cause. No Italian can hate an Austrian more than I do:
+ unless it be the English, the Austrians seem to me the most
+ obnoxious race under the sky.
+
+ "But I doubt, if any thing be done, it won't be so quietly as in
+ Spain. To be sure, revolutions are not to be made with rose-water,
+ where there are foreigners as masters.
+
+ "Write while you can; for it is but the toss up of a paul that
+ there will not be a row that will somewhat retard the mail by and
+ by.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 369. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "Ravenna, April 18. 1820.
+
+ "I have caused write to Siri and Willhalm to send with Vincenza, in
+ a boat, the camp-beds and swords left in their care when I quitted
+ Venice. There are also several pounds of Mantons best powder in a
+ Japan case; but unless I felt sure of getting it away from V.
+ without seizure, I won't have it ventured. I can get it in here, by
+ means of an acquaintance in the customs, who has offered to get it
+ ashore for me; but should like to be certiorated of its safety in
+ leaving Venice. I would not lose it for its weight in gold--there
+ is none such in Italy, as I take it to be.
+
+ "I wrote to you a week or so ago, and hope you are in good plight
+ and spirits. Sir Humphry Davy is here, and was last night at the
+ Cardinal's. As I had been there last Sunday, and yesterday was
+ warm, I did not go, which I should have done, if I had thought of
+ meeting the man of chemistry. He called this morning, and I shall
+ go in search of him at Corso time. I believe to-day, being Monday,
+ there is no great conversazione, and only the family one at the
+ Marchese Cavalli's, where I go as a relation sometimes, so that,
+ unless he stays a day or two, we should hardly meet in public.
+
+ "The theatre is to open in May for the fair, if there is not a row
+ in all Italy by that time,--the Spanish business has set them all a
+ constitutioning, and what will be the end, no one knows--it is also
+ necessary thereunto to have a beginning.
+
+ "Yours, &c.
+
+ "P.S. My benediction to Mrs. Hoppner. How is your little boy?
+ Allegra is growing, and has increased in good looks and obstinacy."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 370. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, April 23. 1820.
+
+ "The proofs don't contain the _last_ stanzas of Canto second, but
+ end abruptly with the 105th stanza.
+
+ "I told you long ago that the new Cantos[72] were _not_ good, and I
+ also _told you a reason_. Recollect, I do not oblige you to publish
+ them; you may suppress them, if you like, but I can alter nothing.
+ I have erased the six stanzas about those two impostors * * * *
+ (which I suppose will give you great pleasure), but I can do no
+ more. I can neither recast, nor replace; but I give you leave to
+ put it all into the fire, if you like, or _not_ to publish, and I
+ think that's sufficient.
+
+ "I told you that I wrote on with no good will--that I had been,
+ _not_ frightened, but _hurt_ by the outcry, and, besides, that when
+ I wrote last November, I was ill in body, and in very great
+ distress of mind about some private things of my own; but you would
+ have it: so I sent it to you, and to make it lighter, cut it in
+ two--but I can't piece it together again. I can't cobble: I must
+ 'either make a spoon or spoil a horn,'--and there's an end; for
+ there's no remeid: but I leave you free will to suppress the whole,
+ if you like it.
+
+ "About the _Morgante Maggiore, I won't have a line omitted_. It may
+ circulate, or it may not; but all the criticism on earth sha'n't
+ touch a line, unless it be because it is badly translated. Now you
+ say, and I say, and others say, that the translation is a good one;
+ and so it shall go to press as it is. Pulci must answer for his own
+ irreligion: I answer for the translation only.
+
+ "Pray let Mr. Hobhouse look to the Italian next time in the proofs:
+ this time, while I am scribbling to you, they are corrected by one
+ who passes for the prettiest woman in Romagna, and even the
+ Marches, as far as Ancona, be the other who she may.
+
+ "I am glad you like my answer to your enquiries about Italian
+ society. It is fit you should like _something_, and be d----d to
+ you.
+
+ "My love to Scott. I shall think higher of knighthood ever after
+ for his being dubbed. By the way, he is the first poet titled for
+ his talent in Britain: it has happened abroad before now; but on
+ the Continent titles are universal and worthless. Why don't you
+ send me Ivanhoe and the Monastery? I have never written to Sir
+ Walter, for I know he has a thousand things, and I a thousand
+ nothings, to do; but I hope to see him at Abbotsford before very
+ long, and I will sweat his claret for him, though Italian
+ abstemiousness has made my brain but a shilpit concern for a Scotch
+ sitting 'inter pocula.' I love Scott, and Moore, and all the better
+ brethren; but I hate and abhor that puddle of water-worms whom you
+ have taken into your troop.
+
+ "Yours, &c.
+
+ "P.S. You say that _one half_ is very good: you are _wrong_; for,
+ if it were, it would be the finest poem in existence. _Where_ is
+ the poetry of which _one half_ is good? is it the _Æneid_? is it
+ _Milton's_? is it _Dryden's_? is it any one's except _Pope's_ and
+ _Goldsmith's_, of which _all_ is good? and yet these two last are
+ the poets your pond poets would explode. But if _one half_ of the
+ two new Cantos be good in your opinion, what the devil would you
+ have more? No--no; no poetry is _generally_ good--only by fits and
+ starts--and you are lucky to get a sparkle here and there. You
+ might as well want a midnight _all stars_ as rhyme all perfect.
+
+ "We are on the verge of a _row_ here. Last night they have
+ overwritten all the city walls with 'Up with the republic!' and
+ 'Death to the Pope!' &c. &c. This would be nothing in London, where
+ the walls are privileged. But here it is a different thing: they
+ are not used to such fierce political inscriptions, and the police
+ is all on the alert, and the Cardinal glares pale through all his
+ purple.
+
+ "April 24. 1820. 8 o'clock, P.M.
+
+ "The police have been, all noon and after, searching for the
+ inscribers, but have caught none as yet. They must have been all
+ night about it, for the 'Live republics--Death to Popes and
+ Priests,' are innumerable, and plastered over all the palaces: ours
+ has plenty. There is 'Down with the Nobility,' too; they are down
+ enough already, for that matter. A very heavy rain and wind having
+ come on, I did not go out and 'skirr the country;' but I shall
+ mount to-morrow, and take a canter among the peasantry, who are a
+ savage, resolute race, always riding with guns in their hands. I
+ wonder they don't suspect the serenaders, for they play on the
+ guitar here all night, as in Spain, to their mistresses.
+
+ "Talking of politics, as Caleb Quotem says, pray look at the
+ _conclusion_ of my Ode on _Waterloo_, written in the year 1815,
+ and, comparing it with the Duke de Berri's catastrophe in 1820,
+ tell me if I have not as good a right to the character of '_Vates_'
+ in both senses of the word, as Fitzgerald and Coleridge?
+
+ "'Crimson tears will follow yet--'
+
+ and have not they?
+
+ "I can't pretend to foresee what will happen among you Englishers
+ at this distance, but I vaticinate a row in Italy; in whilk case, I
+ don't know that I won't have a finger in it. I dislike the
+ Austrians, and think the Italians infamously oppressed; and if they
+ begin, why, I will recommend 'the erection of a sconce upon
+ Drumsnab,' like Dugald Dalgetty."
+
+[Footnote 72: Of Don Juan.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 371. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, May 8. 1820.
+
+ "From your not having written again, an intention which your letter
+ of the 7th ultimo indicated, I have to presume that the 'Prophecy
+ of Dante' has not been found more worthy than its predecessors in
+ the eyes of your illustrious synod. In that case, you will be in
+ some perplexity; to end which, I repeat to you, that you are not to
+ consider yourself as bound or pledged to publish any thing because
+ it is _mine_, but always to act according to your own views, or
+ opinions, or those of your friends; and to be sure that you will in
+ no degree offend me by 'declining the article,' to use a technical
+ phrase. The _prose_ observations on John Wilson's attack, I do not
+ intend for publication at this time; and I send a copy of verses to
+ Mr. Kinnaird (they were written last year on crossing the Po) which
+ must _not_ be published either. I mention this, because it is
+ probable he may give you a copy. Pray recollect this, as they are
+ mere verses of society, and written upon private feelings and
+ passions. And, moreover, I can't consent to any mutilations or
+ omissions of _Pulci_: the original has been ever free from such in
+ Italy, the capital of Christianity, and the translation may be so
+ in England; though you will think it strange that they should have
+ allowed such _freedom_ for many centuries to the Morgante, while
+ the other day they confiscated the whole translation of the fourth
+ Canto of Childe Harold, and have persecuted Leoni, the
+ translator--so he writes me, and so I could have told him, had he
+ consulted me before his publication. This shows how much more
+ politics interest men in these parts than religion. Half a dozen
+ invectives against tyranny confiscate Childe Harold in a month; and
+ eight and twenty cantos of quizzing monks and knights, and church
+ government, are let loose for centuries. I copy Leoni's account.
+
+ "'Non ignorerà forse che la mia versione del 4° Canto del Childe
+ Harold fu confiscata in ogni parte: ed io stesso ho dovuto soffrir
+ vessazioni altrettanto ridicole quanto illiberaii, ad arte che
+ alcuni versi fossero esclusi dalla censura. Ma siccome il divieto
+ non fa d'ordinario che accrescere la curiosita cos! quel carme
+ sull' Italia è ricercato più che mai, e penso di farlo ristampare
+ in Inghil-terra senza nulla escludere. Sciagurata condizione di
+ questa mia patria! se patria si può chiamare una terra così
+ avvilita dalla fortuna, dagli uomini, da se medesima.'
+
+ "Rose will translate this to you. Has he had his letter? I enclosed
+ it to you months ago.
+
+ "This intended piece of publication I shall dissuade him from, or
+ he may chance to see the inside of St. Angelo's. The last sentence
+ of his letter is the common and pathetic sentiment of all his
+ countrymen.
+
+ "Sir Humphry Davy was here last fortnight, and I was in his company
+ in the house of a very pretty Italian lady of rank, who, by way of
+ displaying her learning in presence of the great chemist, then
+ describing his fourteenth ascension to Mount Vesuvius, asked 'if
+ there was not a similar volcano in _Ireland_?' My only notion of an
+ Irish volcano consisted of the lake of Killarney, which I naturally
+ conceived her to mean; but, on second thoughts, I divined that she
+ alluded to _Ice_land and to Hecla--and so it proved, though she
+ sustained her volcanic topography for some time with all the
+ amiable pertinacity of 'the feminie.' She soon after turned to me
+ and asked me various questions about Sir Humphry's philosophy, and
+ I explained as well as an oracle his skill in gasen safety lamps,
+ and ungluing the Pompeian MSS. 'But what do you call him?' said
+ she. 'A great chemist,' quoth I. 'What can he do?' repeated the
+ lady. 'Almost any thing,' said I. 'Oh, then, mio caro, do pray beg
+ him to give me something to dye my eyebrows black. I have tried a
+ thousand things, and the colours all come off; and besides, they
+ don't grow; can't he invent something to make them grow?' All this
+ with the greatest earnestness; and what you will be surprised at,
+ she is neither ignorant nor a fool, but really well educated and
+ clever. But they speak like children, when first out of their
+ convents; and, after all, this is better than an English
+ blue-stocking.
+
+ "I did not tell Sir Humphry of this last piece of philosophy, not
+ knowing how he might take it. Davy was much taken with Ravenna, and
+ the PRIMITIVE _Italianism_ of the people, who are unused to
+ foreigners: but he only stayed a day.
+
+ "Send me Scott's novels and some news.
+
+ "P.S. I have begun and advanced into the second act of a tragedy
+ on the subject of the Doge's conspiracy (_i.e._ the story of Marino
+ Faliero); but my present feeling is so little encouraging on such
+ matters, that I begin to think I have mined my talent out, and
+ proceed in no great phantasy of finding a new vein.
+
+ "P.S. I sometimes think (if the Italians don't rise) of coming over
+ to England in the autumn after the coronation, (at which I would
+ not appear, on account of my family schism,) but as yet I can
+ decide nothing. The place must be a great deal changed since I left
+ it, now more than four years ago."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 372. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, May 20. 1820.
+
+ "Murray, my dear, make my respects to Thomas Campbell, and tell him
+ from me, with faith and friendship, three things that he must right
+ in his poets: Firstly, he says Anstey's Bath Guide characters are
+ taken from Smollett. 'Tis impossible:--the Guide was published in
+ 1766, and Humphrey Clinker in 1771--_dunque_, 'tis Smollett who has
+ taken from Anstey. Secondly, he does not know to whom Cowper
+ alludes, when he says that there was one who 'built a church to
+ _God_, and then blasphemed his name:' it was 'Deo erexit
+ _Voltaire_' to whom that maniacal Calvinist and coddled poet
+ alludes. Thirdly, he misquotes and spoils a passage from
+ Shakspeare, 'to gild refined gold, to paint the lily,' &c.; for
+ _lily_ he puts rose, and bedevils in more words than one the whole
+ quotation.
+
+ "Now, Tom is a fine fellow; but he should be correct; for the first
+ is an _injustice_ (to Anstey), the second an _ignorance_, and the
+ third a _blunder_. Tell him all this, and let him take it in good
+ part; for I might have rammed it into a review and rowed
+ him--instead of which, I act like a Christian.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 373. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, May 20. 1820.
+
+ "First and foremost, you must forward my letter to _Moore_ dated 2d
+ _January_, which I said you might open, but desired you _to
+ forward_. Now, you should really not forget these little things,
+ because they do mischief among friends. You are an excellent man, a
+ great man, and live among great men, but do pray recollect your
+ absent friends and authors.
+
+ "In the first place, _your packets_; then a letter from Kinnaird,
+ on the most urgent business; another from Moore, about a
+ communication to Lady Byron of importance; a fourth from the mother
+ of Allegra; and, fifthly, at Ravenna, the Countess G. is on the eve
+ of being separated. But the Italian public are on her side,
+ particularly the women,--and the men also, because they say that
+ _he_ had no business to take the business up now after a year of
+ toleration. All her relations (who are numerous, high in rank, and
+ powerful) are furious _against him_ for his conduct. I am warned to
+ be on my guard, as he is very capable of employing _sicarii_--this
+ is Latin as well as Italian, so you can understand it; but I have
+ arms, and don't mind them, thinking that I could pepper his
+ ragamuffins, if they don't come unawares, and that, if they do, one
+ may as well end that way as another; and it would besides serve
+ _you_ as an advertisement:--
+
+ "Man may escape from rope or gun, &c.
+ But he who takes woman, woman, woman, &c.
+
+ "Yours.
+
+ "P.S. I have looked over the press, but heaven knows how. Think
+ what I have on hand and the post going out to-morrow. Do you
+ remember the epitaph on Voltaire?
+
+ "'Ci-git l'enfant gâté,' &c.
+
+ "'Here lies the spoilt child
+ Of the world which he spoil'd.'
+
+ The original is in Grimm and Diderot, &c. &c. &c."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 374. TO MR. MOORE.
+
+ "Ravenna, May 24. 1820.
+
+ "I wrote to you a few days ago. There is also a letter of January
+ last for you at Murray's, which will explain to you why I am here.
+ Murray ought to have forwarded it long ago. I enclose you an
+ epistle from a countrywoman of yours at Paris, which has moved my
+ entrails. You will have the goodness, perhaps, to enquire into the
+ truth of her story, and I will help her as far as I can,--though
+ not in the useless way she proposes. Her letter is evidently
+ unstudied, and so natural, that the orthography is also in a state
+ of nature.
+
+ "Here is a poor creature, ill and solitary, who thinks, as a last
+ resource, of translating you or me into French! Was there ever such
+ a notion? It seems to me the consummation of despair. Pray enquire,
+ and let me know, and, if you could draw a bill on me _here_ for a
+ few hundred francs, at your banker's, I will duly honour it,--that
+ is, if she is not an impostor.[73] If not, let me know, that I may
+ get something remitted by my banker Longhi, of Bologna, for I have
+ no correspondence myself, at Paris: but tell her she must not
+ translate;--if she does, it will be the height of ingratitude.
+
+ "I had a letter (not of the same kind, but in French and flattery)
+ from a Madame Sophie Gail, of Paris, whom I take to be the spouse
+ of a Gallo-Greek of that name. Who is she? and what is she? and how
+ came she to take an interest in my _poeshie_ or its author? If you
+ know her, tell her, with my compliments, that, as I only _read_
+ French, I have not answered her letter; but would have done so in
+ Italian, if I had not thought it would look like an affectation. I
+ have just been scolding my monkey for tearing the seal of her
+ letter, and spoiling a mock book, in which I put rose leaves. I had
+ a civet-cat the other day, too; but it ran away, after scratching
+ my monkey's cheek, and I am in search of it still. It was the
+ fiercest beast I ever saw, and like * * in the face and manner.
+
+ "I have a world of things to say; but, as they are not come to a
+ _dénouement_, I don't care to begin their history till it is wound
+ up. After you went, I had a fever, but got well again without bark.
+ Sir Humphry Davy was here the other day, and liked Ravenna very
+ much. He will tell you any thing you may wish to know about the
+ place and your humble servitor.
+
+ "Your apprehensions (arising from Scott's) were unfounded. There
+ are _no damages_ in this country, but there will probably be a
+ separation between them, as her family, which is a principal one,
+ by its connections, are very much against _him_, for the whole of
+ his conduct;--and he is old and obstinate, and she is young and a
+ woman, determined to sacrifice every thing to her affections. I
+ have given her the best advice, viz. to stay with him,--pointing
+ out the state of a separated woman, (for the priests won't let
+ lovers live openly together, unless the husband sanctions it,) and
+ making the most exquisite moral reflections,--but to no purpose.
+ She says, 'I will stay with him, if he will let you remain with me.
+ It is hard that I should be the only woman in Romagna who is not to
+ have her Amico; but, if not, I will not live with him; and as for
+ the consequences, love, &c. &c. &c.'--you know how females reason
+ on such occasions.
+
+ "He says he has let it go on till he can do so no longer. But he
+ wants her to stay, and dismiss me; for he doesn't like to pay back
+ her dowry and to make an alimony. Her relations are rather for the
+ separation, as they detest him,--indeed, so does every body. The
+ populace and the women are, as usual, all for those who are in the
+ wrong, viz. the lady and her lover. I should have retreated, but
+ honour, and an erysipelas which has attacked her, prevent me,--to
+ say nothing of love, for I love her most entirely, though not
+ enough to persuade her to sacrifice every thing to a frenzy. 'I see
+ how it will end; she will be the sixteenth Mrs. Shuffleton.'
+
+ "My paper is finished, and so must this letter.
+
+ "Yours ever, B.
+
+ "P.S. I regret that you have not completed the Italian Fudges.
+ Pray, how come you to be still in Paris? Murray has four or five
+ things of mine in hand--the new Don Juan, which his back-shop synod
+ don't admire;--a translation of the first Canto of Pulci's Morgante
+ Maggiore, excellent;--short ditto from Dante, not so much approved;
+ the Prophecy of Dante, very grand and worthy, &c. &c. &c.;--a
+ furious prose answer to Blackwood's Observations on Don Juan, with
+ a savage Defence of Pope--likely to make a row. The opinions above
+ I quote from Murray and his Utican senate;--you will form your own,
+ when you see the things.
+
+ "You will have no great chance of seeing me, for I begin to think
+ I must finish in Italy. But, if you come my way, you shall have a
+ tureen of macaroni. Pray tell me about yourself, and your intents.
+
+ "My trustees are going to lend Earl Blessington sixty thousand
+ pounds (at six per cent.) on a Dublin mortgage. Only think of my
+ becoming an Irish absentee!"
+
+[Footnote 73: According to his desire, I waited upon this young lady,
+having provided myself with a rouleau of fifteen or twenty Napoleons to
+present to her from his Lordship; but, with a very creditable spirit, my
+young countrywoman declined the gift, saying that Lord Byron had
+mistaken the object of her application to him, which was to request
+that, by allowing her to have the sheets of some of his works before
+publication, he would enable her to prepare early translations for the
+French booksellers, and thus afford her the means of acquiring something
+towards a livelihood.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 375. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "Ravenna, May 25. 1820.
+
+ "A German named Ruppsecht has sent me, heaven knows why, several
+ Deutsche Gazettes, of all which I understand neither word nor
+ letter. I have sent you the enclosed to beg you to translate to me
+ some remarks, which appear to be _Goethe's upon_ Manfred--and if I
+ may judge by _two_ notes of _admiration_ (generally put after
+ something ridiculous by us) and the word '_hypocondrisch_,' are any
+ thing but favourable. I shall regret this, for I should have been
+ proud of Goethe's good word; but I sha'n't alter my opinion of him,
+ even though he should be savage.
+
+ "Will you excuse this trouble, and do me this favour?--Never
+ mind--soften nothing--I am literary proof--having had good and evil
+ said in most modern languages.
+
+ "Believe me," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 376. TO MR. MOORE.
+
+ "Ravenna, June 1. 1820,
+
+ "I have received a Parisian letter from W.W., which I prefer
+ answering through you, if that worthy be still at Paris, and, as
+ he says, an occasional visiter of yours. In November last he wrote
+ to me a well-meaning letter, stating, for some reasons of his own,
+ his belief that a re-union might be effected between Lady B. and
+ myself. To this I answered as usual; and he sent me a second
+ letter, repeating his notions, which letter I have never answered,
+ having had a thousand other things to think of. He now writes as if
+ he believed that he had offended me by touching on the topic; and I
+ wish you to assure him that I am not at all so,--but, on the
+ contrary, obliged by his good nature. At the same time acquaint him
+ the _thing is impossible. You know this_, as well as I,--and there
+ let it end.
+
+ "I believe that I showed you his epistle in autumn last. He asks me
+ if I have heard of _my_ 'laureat' at Paris[74],--somebody who has
+ written 'a most sanguinary Epître' against me; but whether in
+ French, or Dutch, or on what score, I know not, and he don't
+ say,--except that (for my satisfaction) he says it is the best
+ thing in the fellow's volume. If there is any thing of the kind
+ that I _ought_ to know, you will doubtless tell me. I suppose it to
+ be something of the usual sort;--he says, he don't remember the
+ author's name.
+
+ "I wrote to you some ten days ago, and expect an answer at your
+ leisure.
+
+ "The separation business still continues, and all the world are
+ implicated, including priests and cardinals. The public opinion is
+ furious against _him_, because he ought to have cut the matter
+ short _at first_, and not waited twelve months to begin. He has
+ been trying at evidence, but can get none _sufficient_; for what
+ would make fifty divorces in England won't do here--there must be
+ the _most decided_ proofs.
+
+ "It is the first cause of the kind attempted in Ravenna for these
+ two hundred years; for, though they often separate, they assign a
+ different motive. You know that the continental incontinent are
+ more delicate than the English, and don't like proclaiming their
+ coronation in a court, even when nobody doubts it.
+
+ "All her relations are furious against him. The father has
+ challenged him--a superfluous valour, for he don't fight, though
+ suspected of two assassinations--one of the famous Monzoni of
+ Forli. Warning was given me not to take such long rides in the Pine
+ Forest without being on my guard; so I take my stiletto and a pair
+ of pistols in my pocket during my daily rides.
+
+ "I won't stir from this place till the matter is settled one way or
+ the other. She is as femininely firm as possible; and the opinion
+ is so much against him, that the _advocates_ decline to undertake
+ his cause, because they say that he is either a fool or a
+ rogue--fool, if he did not discover the liaison till now; and
+ rogue, if he did know it, and waited, for some bad end, to divulge
+ it. In short, there has been nothing like it since the days of
+ Guido di Polenta's family, in these parts.
+
+ "If the man has me taken off, like Polonius 'say, he made a good
+ end,'--for a melodrama. The principal security is, that he has not
+ the courage to spend twenty scudi--the average price of a
+ clean-handed bravo--otherwise there is no want of opportunity, for
+ I ride about the woods every evening, with one servant, and
+ sometimes an acquaintance, who latterly looks a little queer in
+ solitary bits of bushes.
+
+ "Good bye.--Write to yours ever," &c.
+
+[Footnote 74: M. Lamartine.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 377. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, June 7. 1820.
+
+ "Enclosed is something which will interest you, to wit, the opinion
+ of _the_ greatest man of Germany--perhaps of Europe--upon one of
+ the great men of your advertisements, (all 'famous hands,' as Jacob
+ Tonson used to say of his ragamuffins,)--in short, a critique of
+ _Goethe's_ upon _Manfred_. There is the original, an English
+ translation, and an Italian one; keep them all in your
+ archives,--for the opinions of such a man as Goethe, whether
+ favourable or not, are always interesting--and this is more so, as
+ favourable. His _Faust_ I never read, for I don't know German; but
+ Matthew Monk Lewis, in 1816, at Coligny, translated most of it to
+ me _vivâ voce_, and I was naturally much struck with it; but it was
+ the _Steinbach_ and the _Jungfrau_, and something else, much more
+ than Faustus, that made me write Manfred. The first scene, however,
+ and that of Faustus are very similar. Acknowledge this letter.
+
+ "Yours ever.
+
+ "P.S. I have received _Ivanhoe_;--_good_. Pray send me some
+ tooth-powder and tincture of myrrh, by _Waite_, &c. Ricciardetto
+ should have been _translated literally, or not at all_. As to
+ puffing _Whistlecraft_, it _won't_ do. I'll tell you why some day
+ or other. Cornwall's a poet, but spoilt by the detestable schools
+ of the day. Mrs. Hemans is a poet also, but too stiltified and
+ apostrophic,--and quite wrong. Men died calmly before the Christian
+ era, and since, without Christianity: witness the Romans, and,
+ lately, Thistlewood, Sandt, and Lovel--_men who ought to have been
+ weighed down with their crimes, even had they believed_. A deathbed
+ is a matter of nerves and constitution, and not of religion.
+ Voltaire was frightened, Frederick of Prussia not: Christians the
+ same, according to their strength rather than their creed. What
+ does H * * H * * mean by his stanza? which is octave got drunk or
+ gone mad. He ought to have his ears boxed with Thor's hammer for
+ rhyming so fantastically."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The following is the article from Goethe's "Kunst und Alterthum,"
+enclosed in this letter. The grave confidence with which the venerable
+critic traces the fancies of his brother poet to real persons and
+events, making no difficulty even of a double murder at Florence to
+furnish grounds for his theory, affords an amusing instance of the
+disposition so prevalent throughout Europe, to picture Byron as a man of
+marvels and mysteries, as well in his life as his poetry. To these
+exaggerated, or wholly false notions of him, the numerous fictions
+palmed upon the world of his romantic tours and wonderful adventures in
+places he never saw, and with persons that never existed[75], have, no
+doubt, considerably contributed; and the consequence is, so utterly out
+of truth and nature are the representations of his life and character
+long current upon the Continent, that it may be questioned whether the
+real "flesh and blood" hero of these pages,--the social,
+practical-minded, and, with all his faults and eccentricities, _English_
+Lord Byron,--may not, to the over-exalted imaginations of most of his
+foreign admirers, appear but an ordinary, unromantic, and prosaic
+personage.
+
+[Footnote 75: Of this kind are the accounts, filled with all sorts of
+circumstantial wonders, of his residence in the island of Mytilene;--his
+voyages to Sicily,--to Ithaca, with the Countess Guiccioli, &c. &c. But
+the most absurd, perhaps, of all these fabrications, are the stories
+told by Pouqueville, of the poet's religious conferences in the cell of
+Father Paul, at Athens; and the still more unconscionable fiction in
+which Rizo has indulged, in giving the details of a pretended theatrical
+scene, got up (according to this poetical historian) between Lord Byron
+and the Archbishop of Arta, at the tomb of Botzaris, in Missolonghi.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"GOETHE ON MANFRED.
+
+[1820.]
+
+"Byron's tragedy, Manfred, was to me a wonderful phenomenon, and one
+that closely touched me. This singular intellectual poet has taken my
+Faustus to himself, and extracted from it the strongest nourishment for
+his hypochondriac humour. He has made use of the impelling principles in
+his own way, for his own purposes, so that no one of them remains the
+same; and it is particularly on this account that I cannot enough admire
+his genius. The whole is in this way so completely formed anew, that it
+would be an interesting task for the critic to point out not only the
+alterations he has made, but their degree of resemblance with, or
+dissimilarity to, the original: in the course of which I cannot deny
+that the gloomy heat of an unbounded and exuberant despair becomes at
+last oppressive to us. Yet is the dissatisfaction we feel always
+connected with esteem and admiration.
+
+"We find thus in this tragedy the quintessence of the most astonishing
+talent born to be its own tormentor. The character of Lord Byron's life
+and poetry hardly permits a just and equitable appreciation. He has
+often enough confessed what it is that torments him. He has repeatedly
+pourtrayed it; and scarcely any one feels compassion for this
+intolerable suffering, over which he is ever laboriously ruminating.
+There are, properly speaking, two females whose phantoms for ever haunt
+him, and which, in this piece also, perform principal parts--one under
+the name of Astarte, the other without form or actual presence, and
+merely a voice. Of the horrid occurrence which took place with the
+former, the following is related:--When a bold and enterprising young
+man, he won the affections of a Florentine lady. Her husband discovered
+the amour, and murdered his wife; but the murderer was the same night
+found dead in the street, and there was no one on whom any suspicion
+could be attached. Lord Byron removed from Florence, and these spirits
+haunted him all his life after.
+
+"This romantic incident is rendered highly probable by innumerable
+allusions to it in his poems. As, for instance, when turning his sad
+contemplations inwards, he applies to himself the fatal history of the
+king of Sparta. It is as follows:--Pausanias, a Lacedemonian general,
+acquires glory by the important victory at Platæa, but afterwards
+forfeits the confidence of his countrymen through his arrogance,
+obstinacy, and secret intrigues with the enemies of his country. This
+man draws upon himself the heavy guilt of innocent blood, which attends
+him to his end; for, while commanding the fleet of the allied Greeks, in
+the Black Sea, he is inflamed with a violent passion for a Byzantine
+maiden. After long resistance, he at length obtains her from her
+parents, and she is to be delivered up to him at night. She modestly
+desires the servant to put out the lamp, and, while groping her way in
+the dark, she overturns it. Pausanias is awakened from his
+sleep--apprehensive of an attack from murderers, he seizes his sword,
+and destroys his mistress. The horrid sight never leaves him. Her shade
+pursues him unceasingly, and he implores for aid in vain from the gods
+and the exorcising priests.
+
+"That poet must have a lacerated heart who selects such a scene from
+antiquity, appropriates it to himself, and burdens his tragic image with
+it. The following soliloquy, which is overladen with gloom and a
+weariness of life, is, by this remark, rendered intelligible. We
+recommend it as an exercise to all friends of declamation. Hamlet's
+soliloquy appears improved upon here."[76]
+
+[Footnote 76: The critic here subjoins the soliloquy from Manfred,
+beginning "We are the fools of time and terror," in which the allusion
+to Pausanias occurs.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 378. TO MR. MOORE.
+
+ "Ravenna, June 9. 1820.
+
+ "Galignani has just sent me the Paris edition of your works (which
+ I wrote to order), and I am glad to see my old friends with a
+ French face. I have been skimming and dipping, in and over them,
+ like a swallow, and as pleased as one. It is the first time that I
+ had seen the Melodies without music; and, I don't know how, but I
+ can't read in a music-book--the crotchets confound the words in my
+ head, though I recollect them perfectly when _sung_. Music assists
+ my memory through the ear, not through the eye; I mean, that her
+ quavers perplex me upon paper, but they are a help when heard. And
+ thus I was glad to see the words without their borrowed robes;--to
+ my mind they look none the worse for their nudity.
+
+ "The biographer has made a botch of your life--calling your father
+ 'a _venerable old_ gentleman,' and prattling of 'Addison,' and
+ 'dowager countesses.' If that damned fellow was to _write my_ life,
+ I would certainly _take his_. And then, at the Dublin dinner, you
+ have 'made a speech' (do you recollect, at Douglas K.'s, 'Sir, he
+ made me a speech?') too complimentary to the 'living poets,' and
+ somewhat redolent of universal praise. _I_ am but too well off in
+ it, but * * *.
+
+ "You have not sent me any poetical or personal news of yourself.
+ Why don't you complete an Italian Tour of the Fudges? I have just
+ been turning over Little, which I knew by heart in 1803, being then
+ in my fifteenth summer. Heigho! I believe all the mischief I have
+ ever done, or sung, has been owing to that confounded book of
+ yours.
+
+ "In my last I told you of a cargo of 'Poeshie,' which I had sent to
+ M. at his own impatient desire;--and, now he has got it, he don't
+ like it, and demurs. Perhaps he is right. I have no great opinion
+ of any of my last shipment, except a translation from Pulci, which
+ is word for word, and verse for verse.
+
+ "I am in the third Act of a Tragedy; but whether it will be
+ finished or not, I know not: I have, at this present, too many
+ passions of my own on hand to do justice to those of the dead.
+ Besides the vexations mentioned in my last, I have incurred a
+ quarrel with the Pope's carabiniers, or gens d'armerie, who have
+ petitioned the Cardinal against my liveries, as resembling too
+ nearly their own lousy uniform. They particularly object to the
+ epaulettes, which all the world with us have on upon gala days. My
+ liveries are of the colours conforming to my arms, and have been
+ the family hue since the year 1066.
+
+ "I have sent a tranchant reply, as you may suppose; and have given
+ to understand that, if any soldados of that respectable corps
+ insult my servants, I will do likewise by their gallant commanders;
+ and I have directed my ragamuffins, six in number, who are
+ tolerably savage, to defend themselves, in case of aggression; and,
+ on holidays and gaudy days, I shall arm the whole set, including
+ myself, in case of accidents or treachery. I used to play pretty
+ well at the broad-sword, once upon a time, at Angelo's; but I
+ should like the pistol, our national buccaneer weapon, better,
+ though I am out of practice at present. However, I can 'wink and
+ hold out mine iron.' It makes me think (the whole thing does) of
+ Romeo and Juliet--'now, Gregory, remember thy _swashing_ blow.'
+
+ "All these feuds, however, with the Cavalier for his wife, and the
+ troopers for my liveries, are very tiresome to a quiet man, who
+ does his best to please all the world, and longs for fellowship and
+ good will. Pray write. I am yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 379. TO MR. MOORE.
+
+ "Ravenna, July 13. 1820.
+
+ "To remove or increase your Irish anxiety about my being 'in a
+ wisp[77],' I answer your letter forth-with; premising that, as I am
+ a '_Will_ of the wisp,' I may chance to flit out of it. But, first,
+ a word on the Memoir;--I have no objection, nay, I would rather
+ that _one_ correct copy was taken and deposited in honourable
+ hands, in case of accidents happening to the original; for you know
+ that I have none, and have never even _re_-read, nor, indeed,
+ _read_ at all what is there written; I only know that I wrote it
+ with the fullest intention to be 'faithful and true' in my
+ narrative, but _not_ impartial--no, by the Lord! I can't pretend to
+ be that, while I feel. But I wish to give every body concerned the
+ opportunity to contradict or correct me.
+
+ "I have no objection to any proper person seeing what is there
+ written,--seeing it was written, like every thing else, for the
+ purpose of being read, however much many writings may fail in
+ arriving at that object.
+
+ "With regard to 'the wisp,' the Pope has pronounced _their
+ separation_. The decree came yesterday from Babylon,--it was _she_
+ and _her friends_ who demanded it, on the grounds of her husband's
+ (the noble Count Cavalier's) extraordinary usage. _He_ opposed it
+ with all his might because of the alimony, which has been assigned,
+ with all her goods, chattels, carriage, &c. to be restored by him.
+ In Italy they can't divorce. He insisted on her giving me up, and
+ he would forgive every thing,--* * * * *
+ * * * * * * * * *
+ * * * * * * * But, in this
+ country, the very courts hold such proofs in abhorrence, the
+ Italians being as much more delicate in public than the English, as
+ they are more passionate in private.
+
+ "The friends and relatives, who are numerous and powerful, reply to
+ him--'_You_, yourself, are either fool or knave,--fool, if you did
+ not see the consequences of the approximation of these two young
+ persons,--knave, if you connive at it. Take your choice,--but don't
+ break out (after twelve months of the closest intimacy, under your
+ own eyes and positive sanction) with a scandal, which can only make
+ you ridiculous and her unhappy.'
+
+ "He swore that he thought our intercourse was purely amicable, and
+ that _I_ was more partial to him than to her, till melancholy
+ testimony proved the contrary. To this they answer, that 'Will of
+ _this_ wisp' was not an unknown person, and that 'clamosa Fama' had
+ not proclaimed the purity of my morals;--that _her_ brother, a year
+ ago, wrote from Rome to warn him that his wife would infallibly be
+ led astray by this ignis fatuus, unless he took proper measures,
+ all of which he neglected to take, &c. &c.
+
+ "Now he says that he encouraged my return to Ravenna, to see '_in
+ quanti piedi di acqua siamo_,' and he has found enough to drown him
+ in. In short,
+
+ "'Ce ne fut pas le tout; sa femme se plaignit--
+ Procès--La parenté se joint en excuse et dit
+ Que du _Docteur_ venoit tout le mauvais ménage;
+ Que cet homme étoit fou, que sa femme étoit sage.
+ On fit casser le mariage.'
+
+ It is but to let the women alone, in the way of conflict, for they
+ are sure to win against the field. She returns to her father's
+ house, and I can only see her under great restrictions--such is the
+ custom of the country. The relations behave very well:--I offered
+ any settlement, but they refused to accept it, and swear she
+ _shan't_ live with G. (as he has tried to prove her faithless), but
+ that he shall maintain her; and, in fact, a judgment to this
+ effect came yesterday. I am, of course, in an awkward situation
+ enough.
+
+ "I have heard no more of the carabiniers who protested against my
+ liveries. They are not popular, those same soldiers, and, in a
+ small row, the other night, one was slain, another wounded, and
+ divers put to flight, by some of the Romagnuole youth, who are
+ dexterous, and somewhat liberal of the knife. The perpetrators are
+ not discovered, but I hope and believe that none of my ragamuffins
+ were in it, though they are somewhat savage, and secretly armed,
+ like most of the inhabitants. It is their way, and saves sometimes
+ a good deal of litigation.
+
+ "There is a revolution at Naples. If so, it will probably leave a
+ card at Ravenna in its way to Lombardy.
+
+ "Your publishers seem to have used you like mine. M. has shuffled,
+ and almost insinuated that my last productions are _dull_. Dull,
+ sir!--damme, dull! I believe he is right. He begs for the
+ completion of my tragedy on Marino Faliero, none of which is yet
+ gone to England. The fifth act is nearly completed, but it is
+ dreadfully long--40 sheets of long paper of 4 pages each--about 150
+ when printed; but 'so full of pastime and prodigality' that I think
+ it will do.
+
+ "Pray send and publish your _Pome_ upon me; and don't be afraid of
+ praising me too highly. I shall pocket my blushes.
+
+ "'Not actionable!'--_Chantre d'enfer!_[78]--by * * that's 'a
+ speech,' and I won't put up with it. A pretty title to give a man
+ for doubting if there be any such place!
+
+ "So my Gail is gone--and Miss Mah_ony_ won't take _Mo_ney. I am
+ very glad of it--I like to be generous free of expense. But beg her
+ not to translate me.
+
+ "Oh, pray tell Galignani that I shall send him a screed of doctrine
+ if he don't be more punctual. Somebody _regularly detains two_, and
+ sometimes _four_, of his Messengers by the way. Do, pray, entreat
+ him to be more precise. News are worth money in this remote kingdom
+ of the Ostrogoths.
+
+ "Pray, reply. I should like much to share some of your Champagne
+ and La Fitte, but I am too Italian for Paris in general. Make
+ Murray send my letter to you--it is full of _epigrams_.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+[Footnote 77: An Irish phrase for being in a scrape.]
+
+[Footnote 78: The title given him by M. Lamartine, in one of his Poems.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the separation that had now taken place between Count Guiccioli and
+his wife, it was one of the conditions that the lady should, in future,
+reside under the paternal roof:--in consequence of which, Madame
+Guiccioli, on the 16th of July, left Ravenna and retired to a villa
+belonging to Count Gamba, about fifteen miles distant from that city.
+Here Lord Byron occasionally visited her--about once or twice, perhaps,
+in a month--passing the rest of his time in perfect solitude. To a mind
+like his, whose world was within itself, such a mode of life could have
+been neither new nor unwelcome; but to the woman, young and admired,
+whose acquaintance with the world and its pleasures had but just begun,
+this change was, it must be confessed, most sudden and trying. Count
+Guiccioli was rich, and, as a young wife, she had gained absolute power
+over him. She was proud, and his station placed her among the highest in
+Ravenna. They had talked of travelling to Naples, Florence, Paris,--and
+every luxury, in short, that wealth could command was at her disposal.
+
+All this she now voluntarily and determinedly sacrificed for Byron. Her
+splendid home abandoned--her relations all openly at war with her--her
+kind father but tolerating, from fondness, what he could not
+approve--she was now, upon a pittance of 200_l._ a year, living apart
+from the world, her sole occupation the task of educating herself for
+her illustrious friend, and her sole reward the few brief glimpses of
+him which their now restricted intercourse allowed. Of the man who could
+inspire and keep alive so devoted a feeling, it may be pronounced with
+confidence that he could not have been such as, in the freaks of his own
+wayward humour, he represented himself; while, on the lady's side, the
+whole history of her attachment goes to prove how completely an Italian
+woman, whether by nature or from her social position, is led to invert
+the usual course of such frailties among ourselves, and, weak in
+resisting the first impulses of passion, to reserve the whole strength
+of her character for a display of constancy and devotedness afterwards.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 380. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, July 17. 1820.
+
+ "I have received some books, and Quarterlies, and Edinburghs, for
+ all which I am grateful: they contain all I know of England, except
+ by Galignani's newspaper.
+
+ "The tragedy is completed, but now comes the task of copy and
+ correction. It is very long, (42 _sheets_ of long paper, of four
+ pages each,) and I believe must make more than 140 or 150 pages,
+ besides many historical extracts as notes, which I mean to append.
+ History is closely followed. Dr. Moore's account is in some
+ respects false, and in all foolish and flippant. _None_ of the
+ chronicles (and I have consulted Sanuto, Sandi, Navagero, and an
+ anonymous Siege of Zara, besides the histories of Laugier, Daru,
+ Sismondi, &c.) state, or even hint, that he begged his life; they
+ merely say that he did not deny the conspiracy. He was one of their
+ great men,--commanded at the siege of Zara,--beat 80,000
+ Hungarians, killing 8000, and at the same time kept the town he was
+ besieging in order,--took Capo d'Istria,--was ambassador at Genoa,
+ Rome, and finally Doge, where he fell for treason, in attempting to
+ alter the government, by what Sanuto calls a judgment on him for,
+ many years before (when Podesta and Captain of Treviso), having
+ knocked down a bishop, who was sluggish in carrying the host at a
+ procession. He 'saddles him,' as Thwackum did Square, 'with a
+ judgment;' but he does not mention whether he had been punished at
+ the time for what would appear very strange, even now, and must
+ have been still more so in an age of papal power and glory. Sanuto
+ says, that Heaven took away his senses for this buffet, and induced
+ him to conspire. 'Però fù permesso che il Faliero perdette
+ l'intelletto,' &c.
+
+ "I do not know what your parlour-boarders will think of the Drama I
+ have founded upon this extraordinary event. The only similar one in
+ history is the story of Agis, King of Sparta, a prince _with_ the
+ commons against the aristocracy, and losing his life therefor. But
+ it shall be sent when copied.
+
+ "I should be glad to know why your Quarter_ing_ Reviewers, at the
+ close of 'The Fall of Jerusalem,' accuse me of Manicheism? a
+ compliment to which the sweetener of 'one of the mightiest spirits'
+ by no means reconciles me. The poem they review is very noble; but
+ could they not do justice to the writer without converting him into
+ my religious antidote? I am not a Manichean, nor an _Any_-chean. I
+ should like to know what harm my 'poeshies' have done? I can't tell
+ what people mean by making me a hobgoblin."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 381. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, August 31. 1820.
+
+ "I have '_put my soul_' into the tragedy (as you _if_ it); but you
+ know that there are d----d souls as well as tragedies. Recollect
+ that it is not a political play, though it may look like it: it is
+ strictly historical. Read the history and judge.
+
+ "Ada's picture is her mother's. I am glad of it--the mother made a
+ good daughter. Send me Gifford's opinion, and never mind the
+ Archbishop. I can neither send you away, nor give you a hundred
+ pistoles, nor a better taste: I send you a tragedy, and you ask for
+ 'facetious epistles;' a little like your predecessor, who advised
+ Dr. Prideaux to 'put some more humour into his Life of Mahomet.'
+
+ "Bankes is a wonderful fellow. There is hardly one of my school or
+ college contemporaries that has not turned out more or less
+ celebrated. Peel, Palmerstone, Bankes, Hobhouse, Tavistock, Bob
+ Mills, Douglas Kinnaird, &c. &c. have all talked and been talked
+ about.
+
+ "We are here going to fight a little next month, if the Huns don't
+ cross the Po, and probably if they do. I can't say more now. If any
+ thing happens, you have matter for a posthumous work, in MS.; so
+ pray be civil. Depend upon it, there will be savage work, if once
+ they begin here. The French courage proceeds from vanity, the
+ German from phlegm, the Turkish from fanaticism and opium, the
+ Spanish from pride, the English from coolness, the Dutch from
+ obstinacy, the Russian from insensibility, but the _Italian_ from
+ _anger_; so you'll see that they will spare nothing."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 382. TO MR. MOORE.
+
+ "Ravenna, August 31, 1820.
+
+ "D----n your 'mezzo cammin[79]'--you should say 'the prime of
+ life,' a much more consolatory phrase. Besides, it is not correct.
+ I was born in 1788, and consequently am but thirty-two. You are
+ mistaken on another point. The 'Sequin Box' never came into
+ requisition, nor is it likely to do so. It were better that it had,
+ for then a man is not _bound_, you know. As to reform, I did
+ reform--what would you have? 'Rebellion lay in his way, and he
+ found it.' I verily believe that nor you, nor any man of poetical
+ temperament, can avoid a strong passion of some kind. It is the
+ poetry of life. What should I have known or written, had I been a
+ quiet, mercantile politician, or a lord in waiting? A man must
+ travel, and turmoil, or there is no existence. Besides, I only
+ meant to be a Cavalier Servente, and had no idea it would turn out
+ a romance, in the Anglo fashion.
+
+ "However, I suspect I know a thing or two of Italy--more than Lady
+ Morgan has picked up in her posting. What do Englishmen know of
+ Italians beyond their museums and saloons--and some hack * *, _en
+ passant_? Now, I have lived in the heart of their houses, in parts
+ of Italy freshest and least influenced by strangers,--have seen and
+ become (_pars magna fui_) a portion of their hopes, and fears, and
+ passions, and am almost inoculated into a family. This is to see
+ men and things as they are.
+
+ "You say that I called you 'quiet [80]'--I don't recollect any
+ thing of the sort. On the contrary, you are always in scrapes.
+
+ "What think you of the Queen? I hear Mr. Hoby says, 'that it makes
+ him weep to see her, she reminds him so much of Jane Shore.'
+
+ "Mr. Hoby the bootmaker's heart is quite sore,
+ For seeing the Queen makes him think of Jane Shore;
+ And, in fact, * *
+
+ Pray excuse this ribaldry. What is your poem about? Write and tell
+ me all about it and you.
+
+ "Yours, &c.
+
+ "P.S. Did you write the lively quiz on Peter Bell? It has wit
+ enough to be yours, and almost too much to be any body else's now
+ going. It was in Galignani the other day or week."
+
+[Footnote 79: I had congratulated him upon arriving at what Dante calls
+the "mezzo cammin" of life, the age of thirty-three.]
+
+[Footnote 80: I had mistaken the concluding words of his letter of the
+9th of June.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 383. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, September 7. 1820.
+
+ "In correcting the proofs you must refer to the _manuscript_,
+ because there are in it various readings. Pray attend to this, and
+ choose what Gifford thinks best, Let me hear what he thinks of the
+ whole.
+
+ "You speak of Lady * *'s illness; she is not of those who die:--the
+ amiable only do; and those whose death would _do good_ live.
+ Whenever she is pleased to return, it may be presumed she will take
+ her 'divining rod' along with her: it may be of use to her at home,
+ as well as to the 'rich man' of the Evangelists.
+
+ "Pray do not let the papers paragraph me back to England. They may
+ say what they please, any loathsome abuse but that. Contradict it.
+
+ "My last letters will have taught you to expect an explosion here:
+ it was primed and loaded, but they hesitated to fire the train. One
+ of the cities shirked from the league. I cannot write more at large
+ for a thousand reasons. Our 'puir hill folk' offered to strike, and
+ raise the first banner, but Bologna paused; and now 'tis autumn,
+ and the season half over. 'O Jerusalem! Jerusalem!' The Huns are on
+ the Po; but if once they pass it on their way to Naples, all Italy
+ will be behind them. The dogs--the wolves--may they perish like the
+ host of Sennacherib! If you want to publish the Prophecy of Dante,
+ you never will have a better time."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 384. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, Sept. 11. 1820.
+
+ "Here is another historical _note_ for you. I want to be as near
+ truth as the drama can be.
+
+ "Last post I sent you a note fierce as Faliero himself[81], in
+ answer to a trashy tourist, who pretends that he could have been
+ introduced to me. Let me have a proof of it, that I may cut its
+ lava into some shape.
+
+ "What Gifford says is very consolatory (of the first act). English,
+ sterling _genuine English_, is a desideratum amongst you, and I am
+ glad that I have got so much left; though Heaven knows how I
+ retain it: I _hear_ none but from my valet, and his is
+ _Nottinghamshire_: and I _see_ none but in your new publications,
+ and theirs is _no_ language at all, but jargon. Even your * * * *
+ is terribly stilted and affected, with '_very, very_' so soft and
+ pamby.
+
+ "Oh! if ever I do come amongst you again, I will give you such a
+ 'Baviad and Mæviad!' not as good as the old, but even _better
+ merited_. There never was such a _set_ as your _ragamuffins_ (I
+ mean _not_ yours only, but every body's). What with the Cockneys,
+ and the Lakers, and the _followers_ of Scott, and Moore, and Byron,
+ you are in the very uttermost decline and degradation of
+ literature. I can't think of it without all the remorse of a
+ murderer. I wish that Johnson were alive again to crush them!"
+
+[Footnote 81: The angry note against English travellers appended to this
+tragedy, in consequence of an assertion made by some recent tourist,
+that he (or as it afterwards turned out, she) "had repeatedly declined
+an introduction to Lord Byron while in Italy."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 385. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, Sept. 14. 1820.
+
+ "What! not a line? Well, have it your own way.
+
+ "I wish you would inform Perry, that his stupid paragraph is the
+ cause of all my newspapers being stopped in Paris. The fools
+ believe me in your infernal country, and have not sent on their
+ gazettes, so that I know nothing of your beastly trial of the
+ Queen.
+
+ "I cannot avail myself of Mr. Gifford's remarks, because I have
+ received none, except on the first act. Yours, &c.
+
+ "P.S. Do, pray, beg the editors of papers to say any thing
+ blackguard they please; but not to put me amongst their arrivals.
+ They do me more mischief by such nonsense than all their abuse can
+ do."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 386. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, Sept. 21. 1820.
+
+ "So you are at your old tricks again. This is the second packet I
+ have received unaccompanied by a single line of good, bad, or
+ indifferent. It is strange that you have never forwarded any
+ further observations of Gifford's. How am I to alter or amend, if I
+ hear no further? or does this silence mean that it is well enough
+ as it is, or too bad to be repaired? If the last, why do you not
+ say so at once, instead of playing pretty, while you know that soon
+ or late you must out with the truth.
+
+ "Yours, &c.
+
+ "P.S. My sister tells me that you sent to her to enquire where I
+ was, believing in my arrival, _driving a curricle_, &c. &c. into
+ Palace-yard. Do you think me a coxcomb or a madman, to be capable
+ of such an exhibition? My sister knew me better, and told you, that
+ could not be me. You might as well have thought me entering on 'a
+ pale horse,' like Death in the Revelations."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 387. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, Sept. '23. 1820.
+
+ "Get from Mr. Hobhouse, and send me a proof (with the Latin) of my
+ Hints from Horace; it has now the _nonum prematur in annum_
+ complete for its production, being written at Athens in 1811. I
+ have a notion that, with some omissions of names and passages, it
+ will do; and I could put my late observations _for_ Pope amongst
+ the notes, with the date of 1820, and so on. As far as
+ versification goes, it is good; and, on looking back to what I
+ wrote about that period, I am astonished to see how _little_ I have
+ trained on. I wrote better then than now; but that comes of my
+ having fallen into the atrocious bad taste of the times. If I can
+ trim it for present publication, what with the other things you
+ have of mine, you will have a volume or two of _variety_ at least,
+ for there will be all measures, styles, and topics, whether good or
+ no. I am anxious to hear what Gifford thinks of the tragedy: pray
+ let me know. I really do not know what to think myself.
+
+ "If the Germans pass the Po, they will be treated to a mass out of
+ the Cardinal de Retz's _Breviary_. * *'s a fool, and could not
+ understand this: Frere will. It is as pretty a conceit as you would
+ wish to see on a summer's day.
+
+ "Nobody here believes a word of the evidence against the Queen. The
+ very mob cry shame against their countrymen, and say, that for half
+ the money spent upon the trial, any testimony whatever may be
+ brought out of Italy. This you may rely upon as fact. I told you as
+ much before. As to what travellers report, what _are travellers_?
+ Now I have _lived_ among the Italians--not _Florenced_, and
+ _Romed_, and galleried, and conversationed it for a few months, and
+ then home again; but been of their families, and friendships, and
+ feuds, and loves, and councils, and correspondence, in a part of
+ Italy least known to foreigners,--and have been amongst them of all
+ classes, from the Conte to the Contadine; and you may be sure of
+ what I say to you.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 388. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, Sept. 28. 1820.
+
+ "I thought that I had told you long ago, that it never was intended
+ nor written with any view to the stage. I have said so in the
+ preface too. It is too long and too regular for your stage, the
+ persons too few, and the _unity_ too much observed. It is more like
+ a play of Alfieri's than of your stage (I say this humbly in
+ speaking of that great man); but there is poetry, and it is equal
+ to Manfred, though I know not what esteem is held of Manfred.
+
+ "I have now been nearly as long _out_ of England as I was there
+ during the time I saw you frequently. I came home July 14th, 1811,
+ and left again April 25th, 1816: so that Sept. 28th, 1820, brings
+ me within a very few months of the same duration of time of my stay
+ and my absence. In course, I can know nothing of the public taste
+ and feelings, but from what I glean from letters, &c. Both seem to
+ be as bad as possible.
+
+ "I thought _Anastasius excellent_: did I not say so? Matthews's
+ Diary most excellent; it, and Forsyth, and parts of Hobhouse, are
+ all we have of truth or sense upon Italy. The Letter to Julia very
+ good indeed, I do not despise * * * * * *; but if she knit blue
+ stockings instead of wearing them, it would be better. _You_ are
+ taken in by that false stilted trashy style, which is a mixture of
+ all the styles of the day, which are _all bombastic_ (I don't
+ except my _own_--no one has done more through negligence to corrupt
+ the language); but it is neither English nor poetry. Time will
+ show.
+
+ "I am sorry Gifford has made no further remarks beyond the first
+ Act: does he think all the English equally sterling as he thought
+ the first? You did right to send the proofs: I was a fool; but I do
+ really detest the sight of proofs: it is an absurdity; but comes
+ from laziness.
+
+ "You can steal the two Juans into the world quietly, tagged to the
+ others. The play as you will--the Dante too; but the _Pulci_ I am
+ proud of: it is superb; you have no such translation. It is the
+ best thing I ever did in my life. I wrote the play from beginning
+ to end, and not a _single scene without interruption_, and being
+ obliged to break off in the middle; for I had my hands full, and my
+ head, too, just then; so it can be no great shakes--I mean the
+ play; and the head too, if you like.
+
+ "P.S. Politics here still savage and uncertain. However, we are all
+ in our 'bandaliers,' to join the 'Highlanders if they cross the
+ Forth,' _i.e._ to crush the Austrians if they cross the Po. The
+ rascals!--and that dog Liverpool, to say their subjects are
+ _happy_! If ever I come back, I'll work some of these ministers.
+
+ "Sept. 29.
+
+ "I opened my letter to say, that on reading _more_ of the four
+ volumes on Italy, where the author says 'declined an introduction,'
+ I perceive (_horresco referens_) it is written by a WOMAN!!! In
+ that case you must suppress my note and answer, and all I have said
+ about the book and the writer. I never dreamed of it until now, in
+ my extreme wrath at that precious note. I can only say that I am
+ sorry that a lady should say any thing of the kind. What I would
+ have said to one of the other sex you know already. Her book too
+ (as a _she_ book) is not a bad one; but she evidently don't know
+ the Italians, or rather don't like them, and forgets the _causes_
+ of their misery and profligacy (_Matthews_ and _Forsyth_ are your
+ men for truth and tact), and has gone over Italy in
+ _company_--_always_ a _bad_ plan: you must be _alone_ with people
+ to know them well. Ask her, who was the '_descendant of Lady M.W.
+ Montague_,' and by whom? by Algarotti?
+
+ "I suspect that, in Marino Faliero, you and yours won't like the
+ _politics_, which are perilous to you in these times; but recollect
+ that it is _not a political_ play, and that I was obliged to put
+ into the mouths of the characters the sentiments upon which they
+ acted. I hate all things written like Pizarro, to represent France,
+ England, and so forth. All I have done is meant to be purely
+ Venetian, even to the very prophecy of its present state.
+
+ "Your Angles in general know little of the _Italians_, who detest
+ them for their numbers and their GENOA treachery. Besides, the
+ English travellers have not been composed of the best company. How
+ could they?--out of 100,000, how many gentlemen were there, or
+ honest men?
+
+ "Mitchell's Aristophanes is excellent. Send me the rest of it.
+
+ "These fools will force me to write a book about Italy myself, to
+ give them 'the loud lie.' They prate about assassination; what is
+ it but the origin of duelling--and '_a wild justice_,' as Lord
+ Bacon calls it? It is the fount of the modern point of honour in
+ what the laws can't or _won't_ reach. Every man is liable to it
+ more or less, according to circumstances or place. For instance, I
+ am living here exposed to it daily, for I have happened to make a
+ powerful and unprincipled man my enemy;--and I never sleep the
+ worse for it, or ride in less solitary places, because precaution
+ is useless, and one thinks of it as of a disease which may or may
+ not strike. It is true that there are those here, who, if he did,
+ would 'live to think on't;' but that would not awake my bones: I
+ should be sorry if it would, were they once at rest."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 389. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, 8bre 6°, 1820.
+
+ "You will have now received all the Acts, corrected, of the Marino
+ Faliero. What you say of the 'bet of 100 guineas' made by some one
+ who says that he saw me last week, reminds me of what happened in
+ 1810: you can easily ascertain the fact, and it is an odd one.
+
+ "In the latter end of 1811, I met one evening at the Alfred my old
+ school and form fellow (for we were within two of each other, _he_
+ the higher, though both very near the top of our remove,) _Peel_,
+ the Irish secretary. He told me that, in 1810, he met me, as he
+ thought, in St. James's Street, but we passed without speaking. He
+ mentioned this, and it was denied as impossible, I being then in
+ Turkey. A day or two afterward, he pointed out to his brother a
+ person on the opposite side of the way:--'There,' said he, 'is the
+ man whom I took for Byron.' His brother instantly answered, 'Why,
+ it is Byron, and no one else.' But this is not all:--I was _seen_
+ by somebody to _write down my name_ amongst the enquirers after the
+ King's health, then attacked by insanity. Now, at this very period,
+ as nearly as I could make out, I was ill of a _strong fever_ at
+ Patras, caught in the marshes near Olympia, from the _malaria_. If
+ I had died there, this would have been a new ghost story for you.
+ You can easily make out the accuracy of this from Peel himself, who
+ told it in detail. I suppose you will be of the opinion of
+ Lucretius, who (denies the immortality of the soul, but) asserts
+ that from the 'flying off of the surfaces of bodies, these surfaces
+ or cases, like the coats of an onion, are sometimes seen entire
+ when they are separated from it, so that the shapes and shadows of
+ both the dead and living are frequently beheld.'
+
+ "But if they are, are their coats and waistcoats also seen? I do
+ not disbelieve that we may be two by some unconscious process, to a
+ certain sign, but which of these two I happen at present to be, I
+ leave you to decide. I only hope that _t'other me_ behaves like a
+ gemman.
+
+ "I wish you would get Peel asked how far I am accurate in my
+ recollection of what he told me; for I don't like to say such
+ things without authority.
+
+ "I am not sure that I was _not spoken_ with; but this also you can
+ ascertain. I have written to you such letters that I stop.
+
+ "Yours, &c.
+
+ "P.S. Last year (in June, 1819), I met at Count Mosti's, at
+ Ferrara, an Italian who asked me 'if I knew Lord Byron?' I told him
+ _no_ (no one knows himself, _you_ know). 'Then,' says he, 'I do; I
+ met him at Naples the other day.' I pulled out my card and asked
+ him if that was the way he spelt his name: he answered, _yes_. I
+ suspect that it was a blackguard navy surgeon, who attended a young
+ travelling madam about, and passed himself for a lord at the
+ post-houses. He was a vulgar dog--quite of the cock-pit order--and
+ a precious representative I must have had of him, if it was even
+ so; but I don't know. He passed himself off as a gentleman, and
+ squired about a Countess * * (of this place), then at Venice, an
+ ugly battered woman, of bad morals even for Italy."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 390. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, 8bre 8°, 1820.
+
+ "Foscolo's letter is exactly the thing wanted; firstly, because he
+ is a man of genius; and, next, because he is an Italian, and
+ therefore the best judge of Italics. Besides,
+
+ "He's more an antique Roman than a Dane;
+
+ that is, he is more of the ancient Greek than of the modern
+ Italian. Though 'somewhat,' as Dugald Dalgetty says, 'too wild and
+ sa_l_vage' (like 'Ronald of the Mist'), 'tis a wonderful man, and
+ my friends Hobhouse and Rose both swear by him; and they are good
+ judges of men and of Italian humanity.
+
+ "Here are in all _two_ worthy voices gain'd:
+
+ Gifford says it is good 'sterling genuine English,' and Foscolo
+ says that the characters are right Venetian. Shakspeare and Otway
+ had a million of advantages over me, besides the incalculable one
+ of being _dead_ from one to two centuries, and having been both
+ born blackguards (which ARE such attractions to the gentle living
+ reader); let me then preserve the only one which I could possibly
+ have--that of having been at Venice, and entered more into the
+ local spirit of it. I claim no more.
+
+ "I know what Foscolo means about Calendaro's _spitting_ at Bertram;
+ _that's_ national--the objection, I mean. The Italians and French,
+ with those 'flags of abomination,' their pocket handkerchiefs, spit
+ there, and here, and every where else--in your face almost, and
+ therefore _object_ to it on the stage as _too familiar_. But we who
+ _spit_ nowhere--but in a man's face when we grow savage--are not
+ likely to feel this. Remember _Massinger_, and Kean's Sir Giles
+ Overreach--
+
+ "Lord! _thus_ I _spit_ at thee and at thy counsel!
+
+ Besides, Calendaro does _not_ spit in Bertram's face; he spits _at_
+ him, as I have seen the Mussulmans do upon the ground when they are
+ in a rage. Again, he _does not in fact despise_ Bertram, though he
+ affects it--as we all do, when angry with one we think our
+ inferior. He is angry at not being allowed to die in his own way
+ (although not afraid of death); and recollect that he suspected and
+ hated Bertram from the first. Israel Bertuccio, on the other hand,
+ is a cooler and more concentrated fellow: he acts upon _principle
+ and impulse_; Calendaro upon _impulse_ and _example_.
+
+ "So there's argument for you.
+
+ "The Doge _repeats_;--_true_, but it is from engrossing passion,
+ and because he sees _different_ persons, and is always obliged to
+ recur to the _cause_ uppermost in his mind. His speeches are
+ long:--true, but I wrote for the _closet_, and on the French and
+ Italian model rather than yours, which I think not very highly of,
+ for all your _old_ dramatists, who are long enough too, God
+ knows:--_look_ into any of them.
+
+ "I return you Foscolo's letter, because it alludes also to his
+ private affairs. I am sorry to see such a man in straits, because I
+ know what they are, or what they were. I never met but three men
+ who would have held out a finger to me: one was yourself, the other
+ William Bankes, and the other a nobleman long ago dead: but of
+ these the first was the only one who offered it while I _really_
+ wanted it; the second from good will--but I was not in need of
+ Bankes's aid, and would not have accepted it if I had (though I
+ love and esteem him); and the _third_ --------.[82]
+
+ "So you see that I have seen some strange things in my time. As for
+ your own offer, it was in 1815, when I was in actual uncertainty of
+ five pounds. I rejected it; but I have not forgotten it, although
+ you probably have.
+
+ "P.S. Foscolo's Ricciardo was lent, with the _leaves uncut_, to
+ some Italians, now in villeggiatura, so that I have had no
+ opportunity of hearing their decision, or of reading it. They
+ seized on it as Foscolo's, and on account of the beauty of the
+ paper and printing, directly. If I find it takes, I will reprint it
+ _here_. The Italians think as highly of Foscolo as they can of any
+ man, divided and miserable as they are, and with neither leisure at
+ present to read, nor head nor heart to judge of any thing but
+ extracts from French newspapers and the Lugano Gazette.
+
+ "We are all looking at one another, like wolves on their prey in
+ pursuit, only waiting for the first falling on to do unutterable
+ things. They are a great world in chaos, or angels in hell, which
+ you please; but out of chaos came Paradise, and out of hell--I
+ don't know what; but the devil went _in_ there, and he was a fine
+ fellow once, you know.
+
+ "You need never favour me with any periodical publication, except
+ the Edinburgh Quarterly, and an occasional Blackwood; or now and
+ then a Monthly Review; for the rest I do not feel curiosity enough
+ to look beyond their covers.
+
+ "To be sure I took in the British finely. He fell precisely into
+ the glaring trap laid for him. It was inconceivable how he could be
+ so absurd as to imagine us serious with him.
+
+ "Recollect, that if you put my name to 'Don Juan' in these canting
+ days, any lawyer might oppose my guardian right of my daughter in
+ Chancery, on the plea of its containing the _parody_;--such are the
+ perils of a foolish jest. I was not aware of this at the time, but
+ you will find it correct, I believe; and you may be sure that the
+ Noels would not let it slip. Now I prefer my child to a poem at any
+ time, and so should you, as having half a dozen.
+
+ "Let me know your notions.
+
+ "If you turn over the earlier pages of the Huntingdon peerage
+ story, you will see how common a name Ada was in the early
+ Plantagenet days. I found it in my own pedigree in the reign of
+ John and Henry, and gave it to my daughter. It was also the name of
+ Charlemagne's sister. It is in an early chapter of Genesis, as the
+ name of the wife of Lamech; and I suppose Ada is the feminine of
+ _Adam_. It is short, ancient, vocalic, and had been in my family;
+ for which reason I gave it to my daughter."
+
+[Footnote 82: The paragraph is left thus imperfect in the original.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 391. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, 8bre 12°, 1820.
+
+ "By land and sea carriage a considerable quantity of books have
+ arrived; and I am obliged and grateful: but 'medio de fonte
+ leporum, surgit amari aliquid,' &c. &c.; which, being interpreted,
+ means,
+
+ "I'm thankful for your books, dear Murray;
+ But why not send Scott's Monast_ery_?
+
+ the only book in four _living_ volumes I would give a baioccolo to
+ see--'bating the rest of the same author, and an occasional
+ Edinburgh and Quarterly, as brief chroniclers of the times. Instead
+ of this, here are Johnny Keats's * * poetry, and three novels by
+ God knows whom, except that there is Peg * * *'s name to one of
+ them--a spinster whom I thought we had sent back to her spinning.
+ Crayon is very good; Hogg's Tales rough, but RACY, and welcome.
+
+ "Books of travels are expensive, and I don't want them, having
+ travelled already; besides, they lie. Thank the author of 'The
+ Profligate' for his (or her) present. Pray send me _no more_ poetry
+ but what is rare and decidedly good. There is such a trash of Keats
+ and the like upon my tables that I am ashamed to look at them. I
+ say nothing against your parsons, your S * *s and your C * *s--it
+ is all very fine--but pray dispense me from the pleasure. Instead
+ of poetry, if you will favour me with a few soda-powders, I shall
+ be delighted: but all prose ('bating _travels_ and novels NOT by
+ Scott) is welcome, especially Scott's Tales of my Landlord, and so
+ on.
+
+ "In the notes to Marino Faliero, it may be as well to say that
+ '_Benintende_' was not really of _the Ten_, but merely _Grand
+ Chancellor_, a separate office (although important): it was an
+ arbitrary alteration of mine. The Doges too were all _buried_ in
+ St. _Mark's before_ Faliero. It is singular that when his
+ predecessor, Andrea Dandolo, died, _the Ten_ made a law that _all_
+ the _future Doges_ should be _buried with their families, in their
+ own churches,--one would think by a kind of presentiment_. So that
+ all that is said of his _ancestral Doges_, as buried at St. John's
+ and Paul's, is altered from the fact, _they being in St. Mark's.
+ Make a note_ of this, and put _Editor_ as the subscription to it.
+
+ "As I make such pretensions to accuracy, I should not like to be
+ _twitted_ even with such trifles on that score. Of the play they
+ may say what they please, but not so of my costume and _dram.
+ pers._ they having been real existences.
+
+ "I omitted Foscolo in my list of living _Venetian worthies, in the
+ notes_, considering him as an _Italian_ in general, and not a mere
+ provincial like the rest; and as an Italian I have spoken of him in
+ the preface to Canto 4th of Childe Harold.
+
+ "The French translation of us!!! _oimè! oimè!_--the German; but I
+ don't understand the latter and his long dissertation at the end
+ about the Fausts. Excuse haste. Of politics it is not safe to
+ speak, but nothing is decided as yet.
+
+ "I am in a very fierce humour at not having Scott's Monastery. You
+ are _too liberal_ in quantity, and somewhat careless of the
+ quality, of your missives. All the _Quarterlies_ (four in number) I
+ had had before from you, and _two_ of the Edinburgh; but no matter;
+ we shall have new ones by and by. No more Keats, I entreat:--flay
+ him alive; if some of you don't, I must skin him myself. There is
+ no bearing the drivelling idiotism of the manikin.
+
+ "I don't feel inclined to care further about 'Don Juan.' What do
+ you think a very pretty Italian lady said to me the other day? She
+ had read it in the French, and paid me some compliments, with due
+ DRAWBACKS, upon it. I answered that what she said was true, but
+ that I suspected it would live longer than Childe Harold. '_Ah
+ but_' (said she). '_I would rather have the fame of Childe Harold
+ for three years than an_ IMMORTALITY _of Don Juan!_' The truth is
+ that _it is_ TOO TRUE, and the women hate many things which strip
+ off the tinsel of _sentiment_; and they are right, as it would rob
+ them of their weapons. I never knew a woman who did not hate _De
+ Grammont's Memoirs_ for the same reason: even Lady * * used to
+ abuse them.
+
+ "Rose's work I never received. It was seized at Venice. Such is the
+ liberality of the Huns, with their two hundred thousand men, that
+ they dare not let such a volume as his circulate."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 392. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, 8bre 16°, 1820.
+
+ "The Abbot has just arrived; many thanks; as also for the
+ _Monastery--when you send it!!!_
+
+ "The Abbot will have a more than ordinary interest for me, for an
+ ancestor of mine by the mother's side, Sir J. Gordon of Gight, the
+ handsomest of his day, died on a scaffold at Aberdeen for his
+ loyalty to Mary, of whom he was an imputed paramour as well as her
+ relation. His fate was much commented on in the Chronicles of the
+ times. If I mistake not, he had something to do with her escape
+ from Loch Leven, or with her captivity there. But this you will
+ know better than I.
+
+ "I recollect Loch Leven as it were but yesterday. I saw it in my
+ way to England in 1798, being then ten years of age. My mother, who
+ was as haughty as Lucifer with her descent from the Stuarts, and
+ her right line from the _old Gordons, not the Seyton Gordons_, as
+ she disdainfully termed the ducal branch, told me the story, always
+ reminding me how superior _her_ Gordons were to the southern
+ Byrons, notwithstanding our Norman, and always masculine descent,
+ which has never lapsed into a female, as my mother's Gordons had
+ done in her own person.
+
+ "I have written to you so often lately, that the brevity of this
+ will be welcome. Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 393. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, 8bre 17°, 1820.
+
+ "Enclosed is the Dedication of Marino Faliero to _Goethe_.
+ Query,--is his title _Baron_ or not? I think yes. Let me know your
+ opinion, and so forth.
+
+ "P.S. Let me know what Mr. Hobhouse and you have decided about the
+ two prose letters and their publication.
+
+ "I enclose you an Italian abstract of the German translator of
+ Manfred's Appendix, in which you will perceive quoted what Goethe
+ says of the _whole body_ of English poetry (and _not_ of me in
+ particular). On this the Dedication is founded, as you will
+ perceive, though I had thought of it before, for I look upon him as
+ a great man."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The very singular Dedication transmitted with this letter has never
+before been published, nor, as far as I can learn, ever reached the
+hands of the illustrious German. It is written in the poet's most
+whimsical and mocking mood; and the unmeasured severity poured out in it
+upon the two favourite objects of his wrath and ridicule compels me to
+deprive the reader of some of its most amusing passages.
+
+DEDICATION TO BARON GOETHE, &c. &c. &c.
+
+ "Sir,--In the Appendix to an English work lately translated into
+ German and published at Leipsic, a judgment of yours upon English
+ poetry is quoted as follows: 'That in English poetry, great genius,
+ universal power, a feeling of profundity, with sufficient
+ tenderness and force, are to be found; but that _altogether these
+ do not constitute poets_,' &c. &c.
+
+ "I regret to see a great man falling into a great mistake. This
+ opinion of yours only proves that the '_Dictionary of ten thousand
+ living English Authors_' has not been translated into German. You
+ will have read, in your friend Schlegel's version, the dialogue in
+ Macbeth--
+
+ "'There are _ten thousand_!
+ _Macbeth_. _Geese_, villain?
+ _Answer_. _Authors_, sir.'
+
+ Now, of these 'ten thousand authors,' there are actually nineteen
+ hundred and eighty-seven poets, all alive at this moment, whatever
+ their works may be, as their booksellers well know; and amongst
+ these there are several who possess a far greater reputation than
+ mine, although considerably less than yours. It is owing to this
+ neglect on the part of your German translators that you are not
+ aware of the works of * * *.
+
+ "There is also another, named * * * *
+
+ "I mention these poets by way of sample to enlighten you. They form
+ but two bricks of our Babel, (WINDSOR bricks, by the way,) but may
+ serve for a specimen of the building.
+
+ "It is, moreover, asserted that 'the predominant character of the
+ whole body of the present English poetry is a _disgust_ and
+ _contempt_ for life.' But I rather suspect that, by one single work
+ of _prose_, _you_ yourself have excited a greater contempt for life
+ than all the English volumes of poesy that ever were written.
+ Madame de Staël says, that 'Werther has occasioned more suicides
+ than the most beautiful woman;' and I really believe that he has
+ put more individuals out of this world than Napoleon himself,
+ except in the way of his profession. Perhaps, Illustrious Sir, the
+ acrimonious judgment passed by a celebrated northern journal upon
+ you in particular, and the Germans in general, has rather
+ indisposed you towards English poetry as well as criticism. But you
+ must not regard our critics, who are at bottom good-natured
+ fellows, considering their two professions,--taking up the law in
+ court, and laying it down out of it. No one can more lament their
+ hasty and unfair judgment, in your particular, than I do; and I so
+ expressed myself to your friend Schlegel, in 1816, at Coppet.
+
+ "In behalf of my 'ten thousand' living brethren, and of myself, I
+ have thus far taken notice of an opinion expressed with regard to
+ 'English poetry' in general, and which merited notice, because it
+ was YOURS.
+
+ "My principal object in addressing you was to testify my sincere
+ respect and admiration of a man, who, for half a century, has led
+ the literature of a great nation, and will go down to posterity as
+ the first literary character of his age.
+
+ "You have been fortunate, Sir, not only in the writings which have
+ illustrated your name, but in the name itself, as being
+ sufficiently musical for the articulation of posterity. In this you
+ have the advantage of some of your countrymen, whose names would
+ perhaps be immortal also--if any body could pronounce them.
+
+ "It may, perhaps, be supposed, by this apparent tone of levity,
+ that I am wanting in intentional respect towards you; but this will
+ be a mistake: I am always flippant in prose. Considering you, as I
+ really and warmly do, in common with all your own, and with most
+ other nations, to be by far the first literary character which has
+ existed in Europe since the death of Voltaire, I felt, and feel,
+ desirous to inscribe to you the following work,--_not_ as being
+ either a tragedy or a _poem_, (for I cannot pronounce upon its
+ pretensions to be either one or the other, or both, or neither,)
+ but as a mark of esteem and admiration from a foreigner to the man
+ who has been hailed in Germany 'THE GREAT GOETHE.'
+
+ "I have the honour to be,
+
+ "With the truest respect,
+
+ "Your most obedient and
+
+ "Very humble servant,
+
+ "BYRON.
+
+ "Ravenna, 8bre 14°, 1820.
+
+ "P.S. I perceive that in Germany, as well as in Italy, there is a
+ great struggle about what they call '_Classical_' and
+ '_Romantic_,'--terms which were not subjects of classification in
+ England, at least when I left it four or five years ago. Some of
+ the English scribblers, it is true, abused Pope and Swift, but the
+ reason was that they themselves did not know how to write either
+ prose or verse; but nobody thought them worth making a sect of.
+ Perhaps there may be something of the kind sprung up lately, but I
+ have not heard much about it, and it would be such bad taste that I
+ shall be very sorry to believe it."
+
+
+END OF THE FOURTH VOLUME.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Life of Lord Byron, Vol. IV, by Thomas Moore
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Life of Lord Byron, Vol. IV, by Thomas Moore
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Life of Lord Byron, Vol. IV
+ With His Letters and Journals
+
+Author: Thomas Moore
+
+Release Date: August 19, 2005 [EBook #16549]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LIFE OF LORD BYRON, VOL. IV ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Taavi Kalju and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<h1>LIFE</h1>
+
+<h3>OF</h3>
+
+<h1>LORD BYRON:</h1>
+
+<h3>WITH HIS LETTERS AND JOURNALS.</h3>
+
+<h2>BY THOMAS MOORE, ESQ.</h2>
+
+<h4>IN SIX VOLUMES.&mdash;VOL. IV.</h4>
+
+<h4>NEW EDITION.</h4>
+
+<h5>LONDON: JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET. 1854.</h5>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>CONTENTS OF VOL. IV.</h3>
+
+
+
+
+<p><span style="margin-left: 10em;">LETTERS AND JOURNALS OF LORD BYRON, WITH NOTICES OF HIS LIFE, from</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 10em;">April, 1817, to October, 1820.</span><span class="pagenum"><a id="page1" name="page1"></a>Pg 1</span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>NOTICES</h3>
+
+<h3>OF THE</h3>
+
+<h3>LIFE OF LORD BYRON.</h3>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><b>LETTER 272. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, April 9. 1817.</p>
+
+<p>"Your letters of the 18th and 20th are arrived. In my own I have
+given you the rise, progress, decline, and fall, of my recent
+malady. It is gone to the devil: I won't pay him so bad a
+compliment as to say it came from him;&mdash;he is too much of a
+gentleman. It was nothing but a slow fever, which quickened its
+pace towards the end of its journey. I had been bored with it some
+weeks&mdash;with nocturnal burnings and morning perspirations; but I am
+quite well again, which I attribute to having had neither medicine
+nor doctor thereof.</p>
+
+<p>"In a few days I set off for Rome: such is my purpose. I shall
+change it very often before Monday next, but do you continue to
+direct and address to <i>Venice</i>, as heretofore. If I go, letters
+will be forwarded: I say '<i>if</i>,' because I never know what I shall
+do till it is done; and as I mean most firmly to<span class="pagenum"><a id="page2" name="page2"></a>Pg 2</span> set out for Rome,
+it is not unlikely I may find myself at St. Petersburg.</p>
+
+<p>"You tell me to 'take care of myself;'&mdash;faith, and I will. I won't
+be posthumous yet, if I can help it. Notwithstanding, only think
+what a 'Life and Adventures,' while I am in full scandal, would be
+worth, together with the 'membra' of my writing-desk, the sixteen
+beginnings of poems never to be finished! Do you think I would not
+have shot myself last year, had I not luckily recollected that Mrs.
+C * * and Lady N * *, and all the old women in England would have
+been delighted;&mdash;besides the agreeable 'Lunacy,' of the 'Crowner's
+Quest,' and the regrets of two or three or half a dozen? Be assured
+that I <i>would live</i> for two reasons, or more;&mdash;there are one or two
+people whom I have to put out of the world, and as many into it,
+before I can 'depart in peace;' if I do so before, I have not
+fulfilled my mission. Besides, when I turn thirty, I will turn
+devout; I feel a great vocation that way in Catholic churches, and
+when I hear the organ.</p>
+
+<p>"So * * is writing again! Is there no Bedlam in Scotland? nor
+thumb-screw? nor gag? nor hand-cuff? I went upon my knees to him
+almost, some years ago, to prevent him from publishing a political
+pamphlet, which would have given him a livelier idea of 'Habeas
+Corpus' than the world will derive from his present production upon
+that suspended subject, which will doubtless be followed by the
+suspension of other of his Majesty's subjects.</p>
+
+<p>"I condole with Drury Lane and rejoice with * *,&mdash;<span class="pagenum"><a id="page3" name="page3"></a>Pg 3</span>that is, in a
+modest way,&mdash;on the tragical end of the new tragedy.</p>
+
+<p>"You and Leigh Hunt have quarrelled then, it seems? I introduce him
+and his poem to you, in the hope that (malgr&eacute; politics) the union
+would be beneficial to both, and the end is eternal enmity; and yet
+I did this with the best intentions: I introduce * * *, and * * *
+runs away with your money: my friend Hobhouse quarrels, too, with
+the Quarterly: and (except the last) I am the innocent Istmhus
+(damn the word! I can't spell it, though I have crossed that of
+Corinth a dozen times) of these enmities.</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell you something about Chillon.&mdash;A Mr. <i>De Luc</i>, ninety
+years old, a Swiss, had it read to him, and is pleased with it,&mdash;so
+my sister writes. He said that he was <i>with Rousseau</i> at <i>Chillon</i>,
+and that the description is perfectly correct. But this is not all:
+I recollected something of the name, and find the following passage
+in 'The Confessions,' vol. iii. page 247. liv. viii.:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"'De tous ces amusemens celui qui me pl&ucirc;t davantage fut une
+promenade autour du Lac, que je fis en bateau avec <i>De Luc</i> p&egrave;re,
+sa bru, ses <i>deux fils</i>, et ma Ther&eacute;se. Nous mimes sept jours &agrave;
+cette tourn&eacute;e par le plus beau temps du monde. J'en gardai le vif
+souvenir des sites qui m'avoient frapp&eacute; &agrave; l'autre extr&eacute;mit&eacute; du Lac,
+et dont je fis la description, quelques ann&eacute;es apr&egrave;s, dans la
+Nouvelle Heloise'</p>
+
+<p>"This nonagenarian, De Luc, must be one of the 'deux fils.' He is
+in England&mdash;infirm, but still in<span class="pagenum"><a id="page4" name="page4"></a>Pg 4</span> faculty. It is odd that he should
+have lived so long, and not wanting in oddness that he should have
+made this voyage with Jean Jacques, and afterwards, at such an
+interval, read a poem by an Englishman (who had made precisely the
+same circumnavigation) upon the same scenery.</p>
+
+<p>"As for 'Manfred,' it is of no use sending <i>proofs</i>; nothing of
+that kind comes. I sent the whole at different times. The two first
+Acts are the best; the third so so; but I was blown with the first
+and second heats. You must call it 'a Poem,' for it is <i>no Drama</i>,
+and I do not choose to have it called by so * * a name&mdash;a 'Poem in
+dialogue,' or&mdash;Pantomime, if you will; any thing but a green-room
+synonyme; and this is your motto&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"'There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Than are dreamt of in your philosophy.'<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"Yours ever, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"My love and thanks to Mr. Gifford."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 273. TO MR. MOORE.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, April 11. 1817.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall continue to write to you while the fit is on me, by way of
+penance upon you for your former complaints of long silence. I dare
+say you would blush, if you could, for not answering. Next week I
+set out for Rome. Having seen Constantinople, I should like to look
+at t'other fellow. Besides, I want to see the Pope, and shall take
+care to tell him that I vote for the Catholics and no Veto.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page5" name="page5"></a>Pg 5</span></p>
+
+<p>"I sha'n't go to Naples. It is but the second best sea-view, and I
+have seen the first and third, viz. Constantinople and Lisbon, (by
+the way, the last is but a river-view; however, they reckon it
+after Stamboul and Naples, and before Genoa,) and Vesuvius is
+silent, and I have passed by &AElig;tna. So I shall e'en return to Venice
+in July; and if you write, I pray you to address to Venice, which
+is my head, or rather my <i>heart</i>, quarters.</p>
+
+<p>"My late physician, Dr. Polidori, is here on his way to England,
+with the present Lord G * * and the widow of the late earl. Dr.
+Polidori has, just now, no more patients, because his patients are
+no more. He had lately three, who are now all dead&mdash;one embalmed.
+Horner and a child of Thomas Hope's are interred at Pisa and Rome.
+Lord G * * died of an inflammation of the bowels: so they took them
+out, and sent them (on account of their discrepancies), separately
+from the carcass, to England. Conceive a man going one way, and his
+intestines another, and his immortal soul a third!&mdash;was there ever
+such a distribution? One certainly has a soul; but how it came to
+allow itself to be enclosed in a body is more than I can imagine. I
+only know if once mine gets out, I'll have a bit of a tussle before
+I let it get in again to that or any other.</p>
+
+<p>"And so poor dear Mr. Maturin's second tragedy has been neglected
+by the discerning public! * * will be d&mdash;&mdash;d glad of this, and
+d&mdash;&mdash;d without being glad, if ever his own plays come upon 'any
+stage.'</p>
+
+<p>"I wrote to Rogers the other day, with a message for you. I hope
+that he flourishes. He is the<span class="pagenum"><a id="page6" name="page6"></a>Pg 6</span> Tithonus of poetry&mdash;immortal
+already. You and I must wait for it.</p>
+
+<p>"I hear nothing&mdash;know nothing. You may easily suppose that the
+English don't seek me, and I avoid them. To be sure, there are but
+few or none here, save passengers. Florence and Naples are their
+Margate and Ramsgate, and much the same sort of company too, by all
+accounts, which hurts us among the Italians.</p>
+
+<p>"I want to hear of Lalla Rookh&mdash;are you out? Death and fiends! why
+don't you tell me where you are, what you are, and how you are? I
+shall go to Bologna by Ferrara, instead of Mantua: because I would
+rather see the cell where they caged Tasso, and where he became mad
+and * *, than his own MSS. at Modena, or the Mantuan birthplace of
+that harmonious plagiary and miserable flatterer, whose cursed
+hexameters were drilled into me at Harrow. I saw Verona and Vicenza
+on my way here&mdash;Padua too.</p>
+
+<p>"I go alone,&mdash;but alone, because I mean to return here. I only want
+to see Rome. I have not the least curiosity about Florence, though
+I must see it for the sake of the Venus, &amp;c. &amp;c.; and I wish also
+to see the Fall of Terni. I think to return to Venice by Ravenna
+and Rimini, of both of which I mean to take notes for Leigh Hunt,
+who will be glad to hear of the scenery of his Poem. There was a
+devil of a review of him in the Quarterly, a year ago, which he
+answered. All answers are imprudent: but, to be sure, poetical
+flesh and blood must have the last word&mdash;that's certain. I
+thought,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page7" name="page7"></a>Pg 7</span> and think, very highly of his Poem; but I warned him of
+the row his favourite antique phraseology would bring him into.</p>
+
+<p>"You have taken a house at Hornsey: I had much rather you had taken
+one in the Apennines. If you think of coming out for a summer, or
+so, tell me, that I may be upon the hover for you.</p>
+
+<p>"Ever," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 274. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, April 14. 1817.</p>
+
+<p>"By the favour of Dr. Polidori, who is here on his way to England
+with the present Lord G * *, (the late earl having gone to England
+by another road, accompanied by his bowels in a separate coffer,) I
+remit to you, to deliver to Mrs. Leigh, <i>two miniatures</i>;
+previously you will have the goodness to desire Mr. Love (as a
+peace-offering between him and me) to set them in plain gold, with
+my arms complete, and 'Painted by Prepiani&mdash;Venice, 1817,' on the
+back. I wish also that you would desire Holmes to make a copy of
+<i>each</i>&mdash;that is, both&mdash;for myself, and that you will retain the
+said copies till my return. One was done while I was very unwell;
+the other in my health, which may account for their dissimilitude.
+I trust that they will reach their destination in safety.</p>
+
+<p>"I recommend the Doctor to your good offices with your government
+friends; and if you can be of any use to him in a literary point of
+view, pray be so.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page8" name="page8"></a>Pg 8</span></p>
+
+<p>"To-day, or rather yesterday, for it is past midnight, I have been
+up to the battlements of the highest tower in Venice, and seen it
+and its view, in all the glory of a clear Italian sky. I also went
+over the Manfrini Palace, famous for its pictures. Amongst them,
+there is a portrait of <i>Ariosto</i> by <i>Titian</i>, surpassing all my
+anticipation of the power of painting or human expression: it is
+the poetry of portrait, and the portrait of poetry. There was also
+one of some learned lady, centuries old, whose name I forget, but
+whose features must always be remembered. I never saw greater
+beauty, or sweetness, or wisdom:&mdash;it is the kind of face to go mad
+for, because it cannot walk out of its frame. There is also a
+famous dead Christ and live Apostles, for which Buonaparte offered
+in vain five thousand louis; and of which, though it is a capo
+d'opera of Titian, as I am no connoisseur, I say little, and
+thought less, except of one figure in it. There are ten thousand
+others, and some very fine Giorgiones amongst them, &amp;c. &amp;c. There
+is an original Laura and Petrarch, very hideous both. Petrarch has
+not only the dress, but the features and air of an old woman, and
+Laura looks by no means like a young one, or a pretty one. What
+struck me most in the general collection was the extreme
+resemblance of the style of the female faces in the mass of
+pictures, so many centuries or generations old, to those you see
+and meet every day among the existing Italians. The queen of Cyprus
+and Giorgione's wife, particularly the latter, are Venetians as it
+were of yesterday;<span class="pagenum"><a id="page9" name="page9"></a>Pg 9</span> the same eyes and expression, and, to my mind,
+there is none finer.</p>
+
+<p>"You must recollect, however, that I know nothing of painting; and
+that I detest it, unless it reminds me of something I have seen, or
+think it possible to see, for which reason I spit upon and abhor
+all the Saints and subjects of one half the impostures I see in the
+churches and palaces; and when in Flanders, I never was so
+disgusted in my life, as with Rubens and his eternal wives and
+infernal glare of colours, as they appeared to me; and in Spain I
+did not think much of Murillo and Velasquez. Depend upon it, of all
+the arts, it is the most artificial and unnatural, and that by
+which the nonsense of mankind is most imposed upon. I never yet saw
+the picture or the statue which came a league within my conception
+or expectation; but I have seen many mountains, and seas, and
+rivers, and views, and two or three women, who went as far beyond
+it,&mdash;besides some horses; and a lion (at Veli Pacha's) in the
+Morea; and a tiger at supper in Exeter Change.</p>
+
+<p>"When you write, continue to address to me at <i>Venice</i>. Where do
+you suppose the books you sent to me are? At <i>Turin</i>! This comes of
+'<i>the Foreign Office</i>' which is foreign enough, God knows, for any
+good it can be of to me, or any one else, and be d&mdash;&mdash;d to it, to
+its last clerk and first charlatan, Castlereagh.</p>
+
+<p>"This makes my hundredth letter at least.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours," &amp;c.</p></div><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page10" name="page10"></a>Pg 10</span></p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, April 14. 1817.</p>
+
+<p>"The present proofs (of the whole) begin only at the 17th page; but
+as I had corrected and sent back the first Act, it does not
+signify.</p>
+
+<p>"The third Act is certainly d&mdash;&mdash;d bad, and, like the Archbishop of
+Grenada's homily (which savoured of the palsy), has the dregs of my
+fever, during which it was written. It must on <i>no account</i> be
+published in its present state. I will try and reform it, or
+rewrite it altogether; but the impulse is gone, and I have no
+chance of making any thing out of it. I would not have it published
+as it is on any account. The speech of Manfred to the Sun is the
+only part of this act I thought good myself; the rest is certainly
+as bad as bad can be, and I wonder what the devil possessed me.</p>
+
+<p>"I am very glad indeed that you sent me Mr. Gifford's opinion
+without <i>deduction</i>. Do you suppose me such a booby as not to be
+very much obliged to him? or that in fact I was not, and am not,
+convinced and convicted in my conscience of this same overt act of
+nonsense?</p>
+
+<p>"I shall try at it again: in the mean time, lay it upon the shelf
+(the whole Drama, I mean): but pray correct your copies of the
+first and second Acts from the original MS.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not coming to England; but going to Rome in a few days. I
+return to Venice in <i>June</i>; so, pray, address all letters, &amp;c. to
+me <i>here</i>, as usual, that is, to <i>Venice</i>. Dr. Polidori this day
+left this city with<span class="pagenum"><a id="page11" name="page11"></a>Pg 11</span> Lord G * * for England. He is charged with
+some books to your care (from me), and two miniatures also to the
+same address, <i>both</i> for my sister.</p>
+
+<p>"Recollect not to publish, upon pain of I know not what, until I
+have tried again at the third Act. I am not sure that I <i>shall</i>
+try, and still less that I shall succeed, if I do; but I am very
+sure, that (as it is) it is unfit for publication or perusal; and
+unless I can make it out to my own satisfaction, I won't have any
+part published.</p>
+
+<p>"I write in haste, and after having lately written very often.
+Yours," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 276. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Foligno, April 26. 1817.</p>
+
+<p>"I wrote to you the other day from Florence, inclosing a MS.
+entitled 'The Lament of Tasso.' It was written in consequence of my
+having been lately at Ferrara. In the last section of this MS. <i>but
+one</i> (that is, the penultimate), I think that I have omitted a line
+in the copy sent to you from Florence, viz. after the line&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"And woo compassion to a blighted name,<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>insert,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"Sealing the sentence which my foes proclaim.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The <i>context</i> will show you <i>the sense</i>, which is not clear in this
+quotation. <i>Remember, I write this in the supposition that you have
+received my Florentine packet.</i></p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page12" name="page12"></a>Pg 12</span></p>
+
+<p>"At Florence I remained but a day, having a hurry for Rome, to
+which I am thus far advanced. However, I went to the two galleries,
+from which one returns drunk with beauty. The Venus is more for
+admiration than love; but there are sculpture and painting, which
+for the first time at all gave me an idea of what people mean by
+their <i>cant</i>, and what Mr. Braham calls 'entusimusy' (<i>i.e.</i>
+enthusiasm) about those two most artificial of the arts. What
+struck me most were, the mistress of Raphael, a portrait; the
+mistress of Titian, a portrait; a Venus of Titian in the Medici
+gallery&mdash;<i>the</i> Venus; Canova's Venus also in the other gallery:
+Titian's mistress is also in the other gallery (that is, in the
+Pitti Palace gallery): the Parc&aelig; of Michael Angelo, a picture: and
+the Antinous, the Alexander, and one or two not very decent groups
+in marble; the Genius of Death, a sleeping figure, &amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"I also went to the Medici chapel&mdash;fine frippery in great slabs of
+various expensive stones, to commemorate fifty rotten and forgotten
+carcasses. It is unfinished, and will remain so.</p>
+
+<p>"The church of 'Santa Croce' contains much illustrious nothing. The
+tombs of Machiavelli, Michael Angelo, Galileo Galilei, and Alfieri,
+make it the Westminster Abbey of Italy. I did not admire any of
+these tombs&mdash;beyond their contents. That of Alfieri is heavy, and
+all of them seem to me overloaded. What is necessary but a bust and
+name? and perhaps a date? the last for the unchronological, of whom
+I am one. But all your allegory and eulogy is infernal, and worse
+than the long wigs<span class="pagenum"><a id="page13" name="page13"></a>Pg 13</span> of English numskulls upon Roman bodies in the
+statuary of the reigns of Charles II., William, and Anne.</p>
+
+<p>"When you write, write to <i>Venice</i>, as usual; I mean to return
+there in a fortnight. I shall not be in England for a long time.
+This afternoon I met Lord and Lady Jersey, and saw them for some
+time: all well; children grown and healthy; she very pretty, but
+sunburnt; he very sick of travelling; bound for Paris. There are
+not many English on the move, and those who are, mostly homewards.
+I shall not return till business makes me, being much better where
+I am in health, &amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"For the sake of my personal comfort, I pray you send me
+immediately <i>to Venice</i>&mdash;<i>mind, Venice</i>&mdash;viz. <i>Waites'
+tooth-powder</i>, <i>red</i>, a quantity; <i>calcined magnesia</i>, of the best
+quality, a quantity; and all this by safe, sure, and speedy means;
+and, by the Lord! do it.</p>
+
+<p>"I have done nothing at Manfred's third Act. You must wait; I'll
+have at it in a week or two, or so. Yours ever," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 277. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Rome, May 5. 1817.</p>
+
+<p>"By this post, (or next at farthest) I send you in two <i>other</i>
+covers, the new third Act of 'Manfred.' I have re-written the
+greater part, and returned what is not altered in the <i>proof</i> you
+sent me. The Abbot is become a good man, and the Spirits are
+brought in at the death. You will find I think,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page14" name="page14"></a>Pg 14</span> some good poetry
+in this new act, here and there; and if so, print it, without
+sending me farther proofs, <i>under Mr. Gifford's correction</i>, if he
+will have the goodness to overlook it. Address all answers to
+Venice, as usual; I mean to return there in ten days.</p>
+
+<p>"'The Lament of Tasso,' which I sent from Florence, has, I trust,
+arrived: I look upon it as a 'these be good rhymes,' as Pope's papa
+said to him when he was a boy. For the two&mdash;it and the Drama&mdash;you
+will disburse to me (<i>via</i> Kinnaird) <i>six</i> hundred guineas. You
+will perhaps be surprised that I set the same price upon this as
+upon the Drama; but, besides that I look upon it as <i>good</i>, I won't
+take less than three hundred guineas for any thing. The two
+together will make you a larger publication than the 'Siege' and
+'Parisina;' so you may think yourself let off very easy: that is to
+say, if these poems are good for any thing, which I hope and
+believe.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been some days in Rome the Wonderful. I am seeing sights,
+and have done nothing else, except the new third Act for you. I
+have this morning seen a live pope and a dead cardinal: Pius VII.
+has been burying Cardinal Bracchi, whose body I saw in state at the
+Chiesa Nuova. Rome has delighted me beyond every thing, since
+Athens and Constantinople. But I shall not remain long this visit.
+Address to Venice.</p>
+
+<p>"Ever, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. I have got my saddle-horses here, and have ridden, and am
+riding, all about the country."</p></div><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page15" name="page15"></a>Pg 15</span></p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>From the foregoing letters to Mr. Murray, we may collect some curious
+particulars respecting one of the most original and sublime of the noble
+poet's productions, the Drama of Manfred. His failure (and to an extent
+of which the reader shall be enabled presently to judge), in the
+completion of a design which he had, through two Acts, so magnificently
+carried on,&mdash;the impatience with which, though conscious of this
+failure, he as usual hurried to the press, without deigning to woo, or
+wait for, a happier moment of inspiration,&mdash;his frank docility in, at
+once, surrendering up his third Act to reprobation, without urging one
+parental word in its behalf,&mdash;the doubt he evidently felt, whether, from
+his habit of striking off these creations at a heat, he should be able
+to rekindle his imagination on the subject,&mdash;and then, lastly, the
+complete success with which, when his mind <i>did</i> make the spring, he at
+once cleared the whole space by which he before fell short of
+perfection,&mdash;all these circumstances, connected with the production of
+this grand poem, lay open to us features, both of his disposition and
+genius, in the highest degree interesting, and such as there is a
+pleasure, second only to that of perusing the poem itself, in
+contemplating.</p>
+
+<p>As a literary curiosity, and, still more, as a lesson to genius, never
+to rest satisfied with imperfection or mediocrity, but to labour on till
+even failures are converted into triumphs, I shall here transcribe the
+third Act, in its original shape, as first sent to the publisher:&mdash;</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page16" name="page16"></a>Pg 16</span></p>
+
+<p>
+<b>ACT III.&mdash;SCENE I.</b><br />
+<br />
+A Hall in the Castle of Manfred.<br />
+<br />
+<span class="stage2">MANFRED and HERMAN.</span><br />
+<br />
+<i>Man.</i> What is the hour?<br />
+<br />
+<i>Her.</i><span style="margin-left: 8em;">It wants but one till sunset,</span><br />
+And promises a lovely twilight.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Man.</i><span style="margin-left: 10em;">Say,</span><br />
+Are all things so disposed of in the tower<br />
+As I directed?<br />
+<br />
+<i>Her.</i><span style="margin-left: 4em;">All, my lord, are ready:</span><br />
+Here is the key and casket.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Man.</i><span style="margin-left: 9em;">It is well:</span><br />
+Thou may'st retire. <span class="stage1">[<i>Exit</i> HERMAN.</span><br />
+<br />
+<i>Man.</i> (<i>alone.</i>) <span style="margin-left: 2em;">There is a calm upon me&mdash;</span><br />
+Inexplicable stillness! which till now<br />
+Did not belong to what I knew of life.<br />
+If that I did not know philosophy<br />
+To be of all our vanities the motliest,<br />
+The merest word that ever fool'd the ear<br />
+From out the schoolman's jargon, I should deem<br />
+The golden secret, the sought 'Kalon,' found,<br />
+And seated in my soul. It will not last,<br />
+But it is well to have known it, though but once:<br />
+It hath enlarged my thoughts with a new sense,<br />
+And I within my tablets would note down<br />
+That there is such a feeling. Who is there?<br />
+<br />
+<span class="stage2"><i>Re-enter</i> HERMAN.</span><br />
+<br />
+<i>Her.</i> My lord, the Abbot of St. Maurice craves<br />
+To greet your presence.<br />
+<br />
+<span class="stage2"><i>Enter the</i> ABBOT OF ST. MAURICE.</span><br />
+<br />
+<i>Abbot.</i><span style="margin-left: 7em;">Peace be with Count Manfred!</span><br />
+<br />
+<i>Man.</i> Thanks, holy father! welcome to these walls;<br />
+Thy presence honours them, and blesseth those<br />
+Who dwell within them.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Abbot.</i><span style="margin-left: 7em;">Would it were so, Count!</span><br />
+But I would fain confer with thee alone.<br /><span class="pagenum"><a id="page17" name="page17"></a>Pg 17</span>
+<br />
+<i>Man.</i> Herman, retire. What would my reverend guest?<br />
+<br />
+<span class="stage1"><i>Exit</i> HERMAN.</span><br />
+<br />
+<i>Abbot.</i> Thus, without prelude:&mdash;Age and zeal, my office,<br />
+And good intent, must plead my privilege;<br />
+Our near, though not acquainted neighbourhood,<br />
+May also be my herald. Rumours strange,<br />
+And of unholy nature, are abroad,<br />
+And busy with thy name&mdash;a noble name<br />
+For centuries; may he who bears it now<br />
+Transmit it unimpair'd.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Man.</i><span style="margin-left: 7em;">Proceed,&mdash;I listen.</span><br />
+<br />
+<i>Abbot.</i> 'Tis said thou boldest converse with the things<br />
+Which are forbidden to the search of man;<br />
+That with the dwellers of the dark abodes,<br />
+The many evil and unheavenly spirits<br />
+Which walk the valley of the shade of death,<br />
+Thou communest. I know that with mankind,<br />
+Thy fellows in creation, thou dost rarely<br />
+Exchange thy thoughts, and that thy solitude<br />
+Is as an anchorite's, were it but holy.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Man.</i> And what are they who do avouch these things?<br />
+<br />
+<i>Abbot.</i> My pious brethren&mdash;the scared peasantry&mdash;<br />
+Even thy own vassals&mdash;who do look on thee<br />
+With most unquiet eyes. Thy life's in peril.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Man.</i> Take it.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Abbot.</i><span style="margin-left: 3em;">I come to save, and not destroy&mdash;</span><br />
+I would not pry into thy secret soul;<br />
+But if these things be sooth, there still is time<br />
+For penitence and pity: reconcile thee<br />
+With the true church, and through the church to heaven.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Man.</i> I hear thee. This is my reply; Whate'er<br />
+I may have been, or am, doth rest between<br />
+Heaven and myself.&mdash;I shall not choose a mortal<br />
+To be my mediator. Have I sinn'd<br />
+Against your ordinances? prove and punish!<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a><br /><span class="pagenum"><a id="page18" name="page18"></a>Pg 18</span>
+<br />
+<i>Abbot.</i> Then, hear and tremble! For the headstrong wretch<br />
+Who in the mail of innate hardihood<br />
+Would shield himself, and battle for his sins,<br />
+There is the stake on earth, and beyond earth eternal&mdash;<br />
+<br />
+<i>Man.</i> Charity, most reverend father,<br />
+Becomes thy lips so much more than this menace,<br />
+That I would call thee back to it; but say,<br />
+What wouldst thou with me?<br />
+<br />
+<i>Abbot.</i><span style="margin-left: 9em;">It may be there are</span><br />
+Things that would shake thee&mdash;but I keep them back,<br />
+And give thee till to-morrow to repent.<br />
+Then if thou dost not all devote thyself<br />
+To penance, and with gift of all thy lands<br />
+To the monastery&mdash;<br />
+<br />
+<i>Man.</i><span style="margin-left: 6em;">I understand thee,&mdash;well!</span><br />
+<br />
+<i>Abbot.</i> Expect no mercy; I have warned thee.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Man.</i> (<i>opening the casket.</i>) Stop&mdash;<br />
+There is a gift for thee within this casket.<br />
+<br />
+<span class="stage2">MANFRED <i>opens the casket, strikes a light, and burns some incense.</i></span><br />
+<br />
+Ho! Ashtaroth!<br />
+<br />
+<span class="stage2"><i>The</i> DEMON ASHTAROTH <i>appears, singing as follows:&mdash;</i></span><br />
+</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The raven sits<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">On the raven-stone,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And his black wing flits<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">O'er the milk-white bone;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To and fro, as the night-winds blow,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">The carcass of the assassin swings;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And there alone, on the raven-stone<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a>,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">The raven flaps his dusky wings.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The fetters creak&mdash;and his ebon beak<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Croaks to the close of the hollow sound;<br /></span><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page19" name="page19"></a>Pg 19</span></p>
+<span class="i0">And this is the tune by the light of the moon<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">To which the witches dance their round&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Merrily, merrily, cheerily, cheerily,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Merrily, speeds the ball:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The dead in their shrouds, and the demons in clouds,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Flock to the witches' carnival.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>
+<i>Abbot.</i> I fear thee not&mdash;hence&mdash;hence&mdash;<br />
+Avaunt thee, evil one!&mdash;help, ho! without there!<br />
+<br />
+<i>Man.</i> Convey this man to the Shreckhorn&mdash;to its peak&mdash;<br />
+To its extremest peak&mdash;watch with him there<br />
+From now till sunrise; let him gaze, and know<br />
+He ne'er again will be so near to heaven.<br />
+But harm him not; and, when the morrow breaks,<br />
+Set him down safe in his cell&mdash;away with him!<br />
+<br />
+<i>Ash.</i> Had I not better bring his brethren too,<br />
+Convent and all, to bear him company?<br />
+<br />
+<i>Man.</i> No, this will serve for the present. Take him up.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Ash.</i> Come, friar! now an exorcism or two,<br />
+And we shall fly the lighter.<br />
+<br />
+<span class="stage2">ASHTAROTH <i>disappears with the</i> ABBOT, <i>singing as follows:&mdash;</i></span><br />
+</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">A prodigal son and a maid undone,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And a widow re-wedded within the year;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And a worldly monk and a pregnant nun,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Are things which every day appear.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>
+<span class="stage2">MANFRED <i>alone.</i></span><br />
+<br />
+<i>Man.</i> Why would this fool break in on me, and force<br />
+My art to pranks fantastical?&mdash;no matter,<br />
+It was not of my seeking. My heart sickens,<br />
+And weighs a fix'd foreboding on my soul;<br />
+But it is calm&mdash;calm as a sullen sea<br />
+After the hurricane; the winds are still,<br />
+But the cold waves swell high and heavily,<br />
+And there is danger in them. Such a rest<br />
+Is no repose. My life hath been a combat.<br />
+And every thought a wound, till I am scarr'd<br />
+In the immortal part of me&mdash;What now?<br /><span class="pagenum"><a id="page20" name="page20"></a>Pg 20</span>
+<br />
+<span class="stage2"><i>Re-enter</i> HERMAN.</span><br />
+<br />
+<i>Her.</i> My lord, you bade me wait on you at sunset:<br />
+He sinks behind the mountain.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Man.</i><span style="margin-left: 10em;">Doth he so?</span><br />
+I will look on him.<br />
+<br />
+<span class="stage1">[MANFRED <i>advances to the window of the hall.</i></span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 8em;">Glorious orb!<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> the idol</span><br />
+Of early nature, and the vigorous race<br />
+Of undiseased mankind, the giant sons<br />
+Of the embrace of angels, with a sex<br />
+More beautiful than they, which did draw down<br />
+The erring spirits who can ne'er return.&mdash;<br />
+Most glorious orb! that wert a worship, ere<br />
+The mystery of thy making was reveal'd!<br />
+Thou earliest minister of the Almighty,<br />
+Which gladden'd, on their mountain tops, the hearts<br />
+Of the Chaldean shepherds, till they pour'd<br />
+Themselves in orisons! Thou material God!<br />
+And representative of the Unknown&mdash;<br />
+Who chose thee for his shadow! Thou chief star!<br />
+Centre of many stars! which mak'st our earth<br />
+Endurable, and temperest the hues<br />
+And hearts of all who walk within thy rays!<br />
+Sire of the seasons! Monarch of the climes,<br />
+And those who dwell in them! for, near or far,<br />
+Our inborn spirits have a tint of thee,<br />
+Even as our outward aspects;&mdash;thou dost rise,<br />
+And shine, and set in glory. Fare thee well!<br />
+I ne'er shall see thee more. As my first glance<br />
+Of love and wonder was for thee, then take<br />
+My latest look: thou wilt not beam on one<br />
+To whom the gifts of life and warmth have been<br />
+Of a more fatal nature. He is gone:<br />
+I follow.<span class="stage1">[<i>Exit</i> MANFRED.</span><br />
+<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a id="page21" name="page21"></a>Pg 21</span>
+<br />
+<b>SCENE II.</b><br />
+<br />
+<i>The Mountains&mdash;The Castle of Manfred at some distance&mdash;A Terrace before<br />
+a Tower&mdash;Time, Twilight.</i><br />
+<br />
+<span class="stage2">HERMAN, MANUEL, <i>and other dependants of</i> MANFRED.</span><br />
+<br />
+<i>Her.</i> 'Tis strange enough; night after night, for years,<br />
+He hath pursued long vigils in this tower,<br />
+Without a witness. I have been within it,&mdash;<br />
+So have we all been oft-times; but from it,<br />
+Or its contents, it were impossible<br />
+To draw conclusions absolute of aught<br />
+His studies tend to. To be sure, there is<br />
+One chamber where none enter; I would give<br />
+The fee of what I have to come these three years,<br />
+To pore upon its mysteries.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Manuel.</i><span style="margin-left: 8em;">'Twere dangerous;</span><br />
+Content thyself with what thou know'st already.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Her.</i> Ah! Manuel! thou art elderly and wise,<br />
+And couldst say much; thou hast dwelt within the castle&mdash;<br />
+How many years is't?<br />
+<br />
+<i>Manuel.</i><span style="margin-left: 6em;">Ere Count Manfred's birth,</span><br />
+I served his father, whom he nought resembles.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Her.</i> There be more sons in like predicament.<br />
+But wherein do they differ?<br />
+<br />
+<i>Manuel.</i><span style="margin-left: 8em;">I speak not</span><br />
+Of features or of form, but mind and habits:<br />
+Count Sigismund was proud,&mdash;but gay and free,&mdash;<br />
+A warrior and a reveller; he dwelt not<br />
+With books and solitude, nor made the night<br />
+A gloomy vigil, but a festal time,<br />
+Merrier than day; he did not walk the rocks<br />
+And forests like a wolf, nor turn aside<br />
+From men and their delights.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Her.</i><span style="margin-left: 10em;">Beshrew the hour,</span><br />
+But those were jocund times! I would that such<br />
+Would visit the old walls again; they look<br />
+As if they had forgotten them.<br /><span class="pagenum"><a id="page22" name="page22"></a>Pg 22</span>
+<br />
+<i>Manuel.</i><span style="margin-left: 9em;">These walls</span><br />
+Must change their chieftain first. Oh! I have seen<br />
+Some strange things in these few years.<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a><br />
+<br />
+<i>Her.</i><span style="margin-left: 14em;">Come, be friendly;</span><br />
+Relate me some, to while away our watch:<br />
+I've heard thee darkly speak of an event<br />
+Which happened hereabouts, by this same tower.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Manuel.</i> That was a night indeed! I do remember<br />
+'Twas twilight, as it may be now, and such<br />
+Another evening;&mdash;yon red cloud, which rests<br />
+On Eigher's pinnacle, so rested then,&mdash;<br />
+So like that it might be the same; the wind<br />
+Was faint and gusty, and the mountain snows<br />
+Began to glitter with the climbing moon;<br />
+Count Manfred was, as now, within his tower,&mdash;<br />
+How occupied, we knew not, but with him<br />
+The sole companion of his wanderings<br />
+And watchings&mdash;her, whom of all earthly things<br />
+That lived, the only thing he seemed to love,&mdash;<br />
+As he, indeed, by blood was bound to do,<br />
+The lady Astarte, his&mdash;<br />
+<br />
+<i>Her.</i><span style="margin-left: 8em;">Look&mdash;look&mdash;the tower&mdash;</span><br />
+The tower's on fire. Oh, heavens and earth! what sound,<br />
+What dreadful sound is that?<span class="stage1">[<i>A crash like thunder.</i></span><br />
+<br />
+<i>Manuel.</i> Help, help, there!&mdash;to the rescue of the Count,&mdash;<br />
+The Count's in danger,&mdash;what ho! there! approach!<br />
+<br />
+<span class="stage2"><i>The Servants, Vassals, and Peasantry approach, stupified with terror.</i></span><br />
+<br />
+If there be any of you who have heart<br />
+And love of human kind, and will to aid<br />
+Those in distress&mdash;pause not&mdash;but follow me&mdash;<br />
+The portal's open, follow.<span class="stage1">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[MANUEL <i>goes in.</i></span><br />
+<br />
+<i>Her.</i><span style="margin-left: 9em;">Come&mdash;who follows?</span><br />
+What, none of ye?&mdash;ye recreants! shiver then<br /><span class="pagenum"><a id="page23" name="page23"></a>Pg 23</span>
+Without. I will not see old Manuel risk<br />
+His few remaining years unaided.<span class="stage1">[HERMAN <i>goes in.</i></span><br />
+<br />
+<i>Vassal.</i><span style="margin-left: 10em;">Hark!&mdash;</span><br />
+No&mdash;all is silent&mdash;not a breath&mdash;the flame<br />
+Which shot forth such a blaze is also gone;<br />
+What may this mean? Let's enter!<br />
+<br />
+<i>Peasant.</i><span style="margin-left: 10em;">Faith, not I,&mdash;</span><br />
+Not that, if one, or two, or more, will join,<br />
+I then will stay behind; but, for my part,<br />
+I do not see precisely to what end.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Vassal.</i> Cease your vain prating&mdash;come.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Manuel.</i> (<i>speaking within.</i>)<span style="margin-left: 5em;">'Tis all in vain&mdash;</span><br />
+He's dead.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Her.</i> (<i>within.</i>) Not so&mdash;even now methought he moved;<br />
+But it is dark&mdash;so bear him gently out&mdash;<br />
+Softly&mdash;how cold he is! take care of his temples<br />
+In winding down the staircase.<br />
+<br />
+<span class="stage2"><i>Re-enter</i> MANUEL <i>and</i> HERMAN, <i>bearing</i> MANFRED <i>in their arms.</i></span><br />
+<br />
+<i>Manuel.</i> Hie to the castle, some of ye, and bring<br />
+What aid you can. Saddle the barb, and speed<br />
+For the leech to the city&mdash;quick! some water there!<br />
+<br />
+<i>Her.</i> His cheek is black&mdash;but there is a faint beat<br />
+Still lingering about the heart. Some water.<br />
+<br />
+<span class="stage1">[<i>They sprinkle</i> MANFRED <i>with water; after a pause, he gives some signs of life.</i></span><br />
+<br />
+<i>Manuel.</i> He seems to strive to speak&mdash;come&mdash;cheerly, Count!<br />
+He moves his lips&mdash;canst hear him? I am old,<br />
+And cannot catch faint sounds.<br />
+<br />
+<span class="stage1">[HERMAN <i>inclining his head and listening.</i></span><br />
+<br />
+<i>Her.</i><span style="margin-left: 11em;">I hear a word</span><br />
+Or two&mdash;but indistinctly&mdash;what is next?<br />
+What's to be done? let's bear him to the castle.<br />
+<br />
+<span class="stage1">[MANFRED <i>motions with his hand not to remove him.</i></span><br />
+<br />
+<i>Manuel.</i> He disapproves&mdash;and 'twere of no avail&mdash;<br />
+He changes rapidly.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Her.</i><span style="margin-left: 6em;">'Twill soon be over.</span><br /><span class="pagenum"><a id="page24" name="page24"></a>Pg 24</span>
+<br />
+<i>Manuel.</i> Oh! what a death is this! that I should live<br />
+To shake my gray hairs over the last chief<br />
+Of the house of Sigismund.&mdash;And such a death!<br />
+Alone&mdash;we know not how&mdash;unshrived&mdash;untended&mdash;<br />
+With strange accompaniments and fearful signs&mdash;<br />
+I shudder at the sight&mdash;but must not leave him.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Manfred.</i> (<i>speaking faintly and slowly.</i>) Old man! 'tis not so difficult to die.<span class="stage2">[MANFRED <i>having said this expires.</i></span><br />
+<br />
+<i>Her.</i> His eyes are fixed and lifeless.&mdash;He is gone.&mdash;<br />
+<br />
+<i>Manuel.</i> Close them.&mdash;My old hand quivers.&mdash;He departs&mdash;<br />
+Whither? I dread to think&mdash;but he is gone!<br />
+</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 278. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Rome, May 9. 1817.</p>
+
+<p>"Address all answers to Venice; for there I shall return in fifteen
+days, God willing.</p>
+
+<p>"I sent you from Florence 'The Lament of Tasso,' and from Rome the
+third Act of Manfred, both of which, I trust, will duly arrive. The
+terms of these two I mentioned in my last, and will repeat in this,
+it is three hundred for each, or <i>six</i> hundred guineas for the
+two&mdash;that is, if you like, and they are good for any thing.</p>
+
+<p>"At last one of the parcels is arrived. In the notes to Childe
+Harold there is a blunder of yours or mine: you talk of arrival at
+<i>St. Gingo</i>, and, immediately after, add&mdash;'on the height is the
+Ch&acirc;teau of Clarens.' This is sad work: Clarens is on the <i>other</i>
+side of the Lake, and it is quite impossible that I should have so
+bungled. Look at the MS.; and at any rate rectify it.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page25" name="page25"></a>Pg 25</span></p>
+
+<p>"The 'Tales of my Landlord' I have read with great pleasure, and
+perfectly understand now why my sister and aunt are so very
+positive in the very erroneous persuasion that they must have been
+written by me. If you knew me as well as they do, you would have
+fallen, perhaps, into the same mistake. Some day or other, I will
+explain to you <i>why</i>&mdash;when I have time; at present, it does not
+much matter; but you must have thought this blunder of theirs very
+odd, and so did I, till I had read the book. Croker's letter to you
+is a very great compliment; I shall return it to you in my next.</p>
+
+<p>"I perceive you are publishing a Life of Raffael d'Urbino: it may
+perhaps interest you to hear that a set of German artists here
+allow their <i>hair</i> to grow, and trim it into <i>his fashion</i>, thereby
+drinking the cummin of the disciples of the old philosopher; if
+they would cut their hair, convert it into brushes, and paint like
+him, it would be more '<i>German</i> to the matter.'</p>
+
+<p>"I'll tell you a story: the other day, a man here&mdash;an
+English&mdash;mistaking the statues of Charlemagne and Constantine,
+which are <i>equestrian</i>, for those of Peter and Paul, asked another
+<i>which</i> was Paul of these same horsemen?&mdash;to which the reply
+was,&mdash;'I thought, sir, that St. Paul had never got on <i>horseback</i>
+since his <i>accident</i>?'</p>
+
+<p>"I'll tell you another: Henry Fox, writing to some one from Naples
+the other day, after an illness, adds&mdash;'and I am so changed, that
+my <i>oldest creditors</i> would hardly know me.'</p>
+
+<p>"I am delighted with Rome&mdash;as I would be with<span class="pagenum"><a id="page26" name="page26"></a>Pg 26</span> a bandbox, that is,
+it is a fine thing to see, finer than Greece; but I have not been
+here long enough to affect it as a residence, and I must go back to
+Lombardy, because I am wretched at being away from Marianna. I have
+been riding my saddle-horses every day, and been to Albano, its
+Lakes, and to the top of the Alban Mount, and to Frescati, Aricia,
+&amp;c. &amp;c. with an &amp;c. &amp;c. &amp;c. about the city, and in the city: for
+all which&mdash;vide Guide-book. As a whole, ancient and modern, it
+beats Greece, Constantinople, every thing&mdash;at least that I have
+ever seen. But I can't describe, because my first impressions are
+always strong and confused, and my memory <i>selects</i> and reduces
+them to order, like distance in the landscape, and blends them
+better, although they may be less distinct. There must be a sense
+or two more than we have, us mortals; for * * * * * where there is
+much to be grasped we are always at a loss, and yet feel that we
+ought to have a higher and more extended comprehension.</p>
+
+<p>"I have had a letter from Moore, who is in some alarm about his
+poem. I don't see why.</p>
+
+<p>"I have had another from my poor dear Augusta, who is in a sad fuss
+about my late illness; do, pray, tell her (the truth) that I am
+better than ever, and in importunate health, growing (if not grown)
+large and ruddy, and congratulated by impertinent persons on my
+robustious appearance, when I ought to be pale and interesting.</p>
+
+<p>"You tell me that George Byron has got a son, and Augusta says, a
+daughter; which is it?&mdash;it is no great matter: the father is a good
+man, an ex<span class="pagenum"><a id="page27" name="page27"></a>Pg 27</span>cellent officer, and has married a very nice little
+woman, who will bring him more babes than income; howbeit she had a
+handsome dowry, and is a very charming girl;&mdash;but he may as well
+get a ship.</p>
+
+<p>"I have no thoughts of coming amongst you yet awhile, so that I can
+fight off business. If I could but make a tolerable sale of
+Newstead, there would be no occasion for my return; and I can
+assure you very sincerely, that I am much happier (or, at least,
+have been so) out of your island than in it.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours ever.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. There are few English here, but several of my acquaintance;
+amongst others, the Marquis of Lansdowne, with whom I dine
+to-morrow. I met the Jerseys on the road at Foligno&mdash;all well.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh&mdash;I forgot&mdash;the Italians have printed Chillon, &amp;c. a
+<i>piracy</i>,&mdash;a pretty little edition, prettier than yours&mdash;and
+published, as I found to my great astonishment on arriving here;
+and what is odd, is, that the English is quite correctly printed.
+Why they did it, or who did it, I know not; but so it is;&mdash;I
+suppose, for the English people. I will send you a copy."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 279. TO MR. MOORE.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Rome, May 12. 1817.</p>
+
+<p>"I have received your letter here, where I have taken a cruise
+lately; but I shall return back to Venice in a few days, so that if
+you write again, address there, as usual. I am not for returning
+to<span class="pagenum"><a id="page28" name="page28"></a>Pg 28</span> England so soon as you imagine; and by no means at all as a
+residence. If you cross the Alps in your projected expedition, you
+will find me somewhere in Lombardy, and very glad to see you. Only
+give me a word or two beforehand, for I would readily diverge some
+leagues to meet you.</p>
+
+<p>"Of Rome I say nothing; it is quite indescribable, and the
+Guide-book is as good as any other. I dined yesterday with Lord
+Lansdowne, who is on his return. But there are few English here at
+present; the winter is <i>their</i> time. I have been on horseback most
+of the day, all days since my arrival, and have taken it as I did
+Constantinople. But Rome is the elder sister, and the finer. I went
+some days ago to the top of the Alban Mount, which is superb. As
+for the Coliseum, Pantheon, St. Peter's, the Vatican, Palatine, &amp;c.
+&amp;c.&mdash;as I said, vide Guide-book. They are quite inconceivable, and
+must <i>be seen</i>. The Apollo Belvidere is the image of Lady Adelaide
+Forbes&mdash;I think I never saw such a likeness.</p>
+
+<p>"I have seen the Pope alive, and a cardinal dead,&mdash;both of whom
+looked very well indeed. The latter was in state in the Chiesa
+Nuova, previous to his interment.</p>
+
+<p>"Your poetical alarms are groundless; go on and prosper. Here is
+Hobhouse just come in, and my horses at the door, so that I must
+mount and take the field in the Campus Martius, which, by the way,
+is all built over by modern Rome.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours very and ever, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page29" name="page29"></a>Pg 29</span>"P.S. Hobhouse presents his remembrances, and is eager, with all
+the world, for your new poem."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 280. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, May 30. 1817.</p>
+
+<p>"I returned from Rome two days ago, and have received your letter;
+but no sign nor tidings of the parcel sent through Sir C. Stuart,
+which you mention. After an interval of months, a packet of
+'Tales,' &amp;c. found me at Rome; but this is all, and may be all that
+ever will find me. The post seems to be the only sure conveyance;
+and <i>that only for letters</i>. From Florence I sent you a poem on
+Tasso, and from Rome the new third Act of 'Manfred,' and by Dr.
+Polidori two portraits for my sister. I left Rome and made a rapid
+journey home. You will continue to direct here as usual. Mr.
+Hobhouse is gone to Naples: I should have run down there too for a
+week, but for the quantity of English whom I heard of there. I
+prefer hating them at a distance; unless an earthquake, or a good
+real irruption of Vesuvius, were ensured to reconcile me to their
+vicinity.</p>
+
+<p>"The day before I left Rome I saw three robbers guillotined. The
+ceremony&mdash;including the <i>masqued</i> priests; the half-naked
+executioners; the bandaged criminals; the black Christ and his
+banner; the scaffold; the soldiery; the slow procession, and the
+quick rattle and heavy fall of the axe; the splash of the blood,
+and the ghastliness of the exposed<span class="pagenum"><a id="page30" name="page30"></a>Pg 30</span> heads&mdash;is altogether more
+impressive than the vulgar and ungentlemanly dirty 'new drop,' and
+dog-like agony of infliction upon the sufferers of the English
+sentence. Two of these men behaved calmly enough, but the first of
+the three died with great terror and reluctance. What was very
+horrible, he would not lie down; then his neck was too large for
+the aperture, and the priest was obliged to drown his exclamations
+by still louder exhortations. The head was off before the eye could
+trace the blow; but from an attempt to draw back the head,
+notwithstanding it was held forward by the hair, the first head was
+cut off close to the ears: the other two were taken off more
+cleanly. It is better than the oriental way, and (I should think)
+than the axe of our ancestors. The pain seems little, and yet the
+effect to the spectator, and the preparation to the criminal, is
+very striking and chilling. The first turned me quite hot and
+thirsty, and made me shake so that I could hardly hold the
+opera-glass (I was close, but was determined to see, as one should
+see every thing, once, with attention); the second and third (which
+shows how dreadfully soon things grow indifferent), I am ashamed to
+say, had no effect on me as a horror, though I would have saved
+them if I could. Yours," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 281. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, June 4. 1817.</p>
+
+<p>"I have received the proofs of the 'Lament of Tasso,' which makes
+me hope that you have also<span class="pagenum"><a id="page31" name="page31"></a>Pg 31</span> received the reformed third Act of
+Manfred, from Rome, which I sent soon after my arrival there. My
+date will apprise you of my return home within these few days. For
+me, I have received <i>none</i> of your packets, except, after long
+delay, the 'Tales of my Landlord,' which I before acknowledged. I
+do not at all understand the <i>why nots</i>, but so it is; no Manuel,
+no letters, no tooth-powder, no <i>extract</i> from Moore's Italy
+concerning Marino Faliero, no NOTHING&mdash;as a man hallooed out at one
+of Burdett's elections, after a long ululatus of 'No Bastille! No
+governor-ities! No&mdash;'God knows who or what;&mdash;but his <i>ne plus
+ultra</i> was, 'No nothing!'&mdash;and my receipts of your packages amount
+to about his meaning. I want the extract from <i>Moore's</i> Italy very
+much, and the tooth-powder, and the magnesia; I don't care so much
+about the poetry, or the letters, or Mr. Maturin's by-Jasus
+tragedy. Most of the things sent by the post have come&mdash;I mean
+proofs and letters; therefore send me Marino Faliero by the post,
+in a letter.</p>
+
+<p>"I was delighted with Rome, and was on horseback all round it many
+hours daily, besides in it the rest of my time, bothering over its
+marvels. I excursed and skirred the country round to Alba, Tivoli,
+Frescati, Licenza, &amp;c. &amp;c.; besides, I visited twice the Fall of
+Terni, which beats every thing. On my way back, close to the temple
+by its banks, I got some famous trout out of the river
+Clitumnus&mdash;the prettiest little stream in all poesy, near the first
+post from Foligno and Spoletto.&mdash;I did not stay at Florence, being
+anxious to get home to Venice, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="page32" name="page32"></a>Pg 32</span> having already seen the
+galleries and other sights. I left my commendatory letters the
+evening before I went, so I saw nobody.</p>
+
+<p>"To-day, Pindemonte, the celebrated poet of Verona, called on me;
+he is a little thin man, with acute and pleasing features; his
+address good and gentle; his appearance altogether very
+philosophical; his age about sixty, or more. He is one of their
+best going. I gave him <i>Forsyth</i>, as he speaks, or reads rather, a
+little English, and will find there a favourable account of
+himself. He enquired after his old Cruscan friends, Parsons,
+Greathead, Mrs. Piozzi, and Merry, all of whom he had known in his
+youth. I gave him as bad an account of them as I could, answering,
+as the false 'Solomon Lob' does to 'Totterton' in the farce, 'all
+gone dead,' and damned by a satire more than twenty years ago; that
+the name of their extinguisher was Gifford; that they were but a
+sad set of scribes after all, and no great things in any other way.
+He seemed, as was natural, very much pleased with this account of
+his old acquaintances, and went away greatly gratified with that
+and Mr. Forsyth's sententious paragraph of applause in his own
+(Pindemonte's) favour. After having been a little libertine in his
+youth, he is grown devout, and takes prayers, and talks to himself,
+to keep off the devil; but for all that, he is a very nice little
+old gentleman.</p>
+
+<p>"I forgot to tell you that at Bologna (which is celebrated for
+producing popes, painters, and sausages) I saw an anatomical
+gallery, where there is a deal of waxwork, in which * *.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page33" name="page33"></a>Pg 33</span></p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry to hear of your row with Hunt; but suppose him to be
+exasperated by the Quarterly and your refusal to <i>deal</i>; and when
+one is angry and edites a paper, I should think the temptation too
+strong for literary nature, which is not always human. I can't
+conceive in what, and for what, he abuses you: what have you done?
+you are not an author, nor a politician, nor a public character; I
+know no scrape you have tumbled into. I am the more sorry for this
+because I introduced you to Hunt, and because I believe him to be a
+good man; but till I know the particulars, I can give no opinion.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me know about Lalla Rookh, which must be out by this time.</p>
+
+<p>"I restore the proofs, but the <i>punctuation</i> should be corrected. I
+feel too lazy to have at it myself; so beg and pray Mr. Gifford for
+me.&mdash;Address to Venice. In a few days I go to my <i>villeggiatura</i>,
+in a cassino near the Brenta, a few miles only on the main land. I
+have determined on another year, and <i>many years</i> of residence if I
+can compass them. Marianna is with me, hardly recovered of the
+fever, which has been attacking all Italy last winter. I am afraid
+she is a little hectic; but I hope the best.</p>
+
+<p>"Ever, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. Torwaltzen has done a bust of me at Rome for Mr. Hobhouse,
+which is reckoned very good. He is their best after Canova, and by
+some preferred to him.</p>
+
+<p>"I have had a letter from Mr. Hodgson. He is very happy, has got a
+living, but not a child: if he<span class="pagenum"><a id="page34" name="page34"></a>Pg 34</span> had stuck to a curacy, babes would
+have come of course, because he could not have maintained them.</p>
+
+<p>"Remember me to all friends, &amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"An Austrian officer, the other day, being in love with a Venetian,
+was ordered, with his regiment, into Hungary. Distracted between
+love and duty, he purchased a deadly drug, which dividing with his
+mistress, both swallowed. The ensuing pains were terrific, but the
+pills were purgative, and not poisonous, by the contrivance of the
+unsentimental apothecary; so that so much suicide was all thrown
+away. You may conceive the previous confusion and the final
+laughter; but the intention was good on all sides."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 282. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, June 8. 1817.</p>
+
+<p>"The present letter will be delivered to you by two Armenian
+friars, on their way, by England, to Madras. They will also convey
+some copies of the grammar, which I think you agreed to take. If
+you can be of any use to them, either amongst your naval or East
+Indian acquaintances, I hope you will so far oblige me, as they and
+their order have been remarkably attentive and friendly towards me
+since my arrival at Venice. Their names are Father Sukias Somalian
+and Father Sarkis Theodorosian. They speak Italian, and probably
+French, or a little English. Repeating earnestly my recommendatory
+request, believe me, very truly, yours,</p>
+
+<p>"BYRON.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page35" name="page35"></a>Pg 35</span></p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps you can help them to their passage, or give or get them
+letters for India."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 283. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"La Mira, near Venice, June 14. 1817.</p>
+
+<p>"I write to you from the banks of the Brenta, a few miles from
+Venice, where I have colonised for six months to come. Address, as
+usual, to Venice.</p>
+
+<p>"Three months after date (17th March),&mdash;like the unnegotiable bill
+despondingly received by the reluctant tailor,&mdash;your despatch has
+arrived, containing the extract from Moore's Italy and Mr.
+Maturin's bankrupt tragedy. It is the absurd work of a clever man.
+I think it might have done upon the stage, if he had made Manuel
+(by some trickery, in a masque or vizor) fight his own battle,
+instead of employing Molineux as his champion; and, after the
+defeat of Torismond, have made him spare the son of his enemy, by
+some revulsion of feeling, not incompatible with a character of
+extravagant and distempered emotions. But as it is, what with the
+Justiza, and the ridiculous conduct of the whole <i>dram. pers.</i> (for
+they are all as mad as Manuel, who surely must have had more
+interest with a corrupt bench than a distant relation and heir
+presumptive, somewhat suspect of homicide,) I do not wonder at its
+failure. As a play, it is impracticable; as a poem, no great
+things. Who was the 'Greek that grappled with glory naked?' the
+Olympic wrestlers? or Alexander the Great, when he ran stark round
+the tomb of t'other fellow? or the Spartan who was<span class="pagenum"><a id="page36" name="page36"></a>Pg 36</span> fined by the
+Ephori for fighting without his armour? or who? And as to 'flaying
+off life like a garment,' helas! that's in Tom Thumb&mdash;see king
+Arthur's soliloquy:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"'Life's a mere rag, not worth a prince's wearing;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">I'll cast it off.'<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>And the stage-directions&mdash;'Staggers among the bodies;'&mdash;the slain
+are too numerous, as well as the blackamoor knights-penitent being
+one too many: and De Zelos is such a shabby Monmouth Street
+villain, without any redeeming quality&mdash;Stap my vitals! Maturin
+seems to be declining into Nat. Lee. But let him try again; he has
+talent, but not much taste. I 'gin to fear, or to hope, that
+Sotheby, after all, is to be the Eschylus of the age, unless Mr.
+Shiel be really worthy his success. The more I see of the stage,
+the less I would wish to have any thing to do with it; as a proof
+of which, I hope you have received the third Act of Manfred, which
+will at least prove that I wish to steer very clear of the
+possibility of being put into scenery. I sent it from <i>Rome</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"I returned the proof of Tasso. By the way, have you never received
+a translation of St. Paul which I sent you, <i>not</i> for publication,
+before I went to Rome?</p>
+
+<p>"I am at present on the Brenta. Opposite is a Spanish marquis,
+ninety years old; next his casino is a Frenchman's,&mdash;besides the
+natives; so that, as somebody said the other day, we are exactly
+one of Goldoni's comedies (La Vedova Scaltra), where a<span class="pagenum"><a id="page37" name="page37"></a>Pg 37</span> Spaniard,
+English, and Frenchman are introduced: but we are all very good
+neighbours, Venetians, &amp;c. &amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"I am just getting on horseback for my evening ride, and a visit to
+a physician, who has an agreeable family, of a wife and four
+unmarried daughters, all under eighteen, who are friends of Signora
+S * *, and enemies to nobody. There are, and are to be, besides,
+conversaziones and I know not what, a Countess Labbia's and I know
+not whom. The weather is mild; the thermometer 110 in the <i>sun</i>
+this day, and 80 odd in the shade. Yours, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"N."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 284. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"La Mira, near Venice, June 17. 1817.</p>
+
+<p>"It gives me great pleasure to hear of Moore's success, and the
+more so that I never doubted that it would be complete. Whatever
+good you can tell me of him and his poem will be most acceptable: I
+feel very anxious indeed to receive it. I hope that he is as happy
+in his fame and reward as I wish him to be; for I know no one who
+deserves both more&mdash;if any so much.</p>
+
+<p>"Now to business; * * * * * * I say unto you, verily, it is not so;
+or, as the foreigner said to the waiter, after asking him to bring
+a glass of water, to which the man answered, 'I will, sir,'&mdash;'You
+will!&mdash;G&mdash;&mdash;d d&mdash;&mdash;n,&mdash;I say, you <i>mush</i>!' And I will submit this
+to the decision of any person or persons to be appointed by both,
+on a fair examin<span class="pagenum"><a id="page38" name="page38"></a>Pg 38</span>ation of the circumstances of this as compared
+with the preceding publications. So there's for you. There is
+always some row or other previously to all our publications: it
+should seem that, on approximating, we can never quite get over the
+natural antipathy of author and bookseller, and that more
+particularly the ferine nature of the latter must break forth.</p>
+
+<p>"You are out about the third Canto: I have not done, nor designed,
+a line of continuation to that poem. I was too short a time at Rome
+for it, and have no thought of recommencing.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot well explain to you by letter what I conceive to be the
+origin of Mrs. Leigh's notion about 'Tales of my Landlord;' but it
+is some points of the characters of Sir E. Manley and Burley, as
+well as one or two of the jocular portions, on which it is founded,
+probably.</p>
+
+<p>"If you have received Dr. Polidori as well as a parcel of books,
+and you can be of use to him, be so. I never was much more
+disgusted with any human production than with the eternal nonsense,
+and tracasseries, and emptiness, and ill humour, and vanity of that
+young person; but he has some talent, and is a man of honour, and
+has dispositions of amendment, in which he has been aided by a
+little subsequent experience, and may turn out well. Therefore, use
+your government interest for him, for he is improved and
+improvable.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours," &amp;c.</p></div><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page39" name="page39"></a>Pg 39</span></p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 285. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"La Mira, near Venice, June 18. 1817.</p>
+
+<p>"Enclosed is a letter to <i>Dr.</i> Holland from Pindemonte. Not knowing
+the Doctor's address, I am desired to enquire, and, perhaps, being
+a literary man, you will know or discover his haunt near some
+populous churchyard. I have written to you a scolding letter&mdash;I
+believe, upon a misapprehended passage in your letter&mdash;but never
+mind: it will do for next time, and you will surely deserve it.
+Talking of doctors reminds me once more to recommend to you one who
+will not recommend himself,&mdash;the Doctor Polidori. If you can help
+him to a publisher, do; or, if you have any sick relation, I would
+advise his advice: all the patients he had in Italy are dead&mdash;Mr. *
+*'s son, Mr. Horner, and Lord G * *, whom he embowelled with great
+success at Pisa.</p>
+
+<p>"Remember me to Moore, whom I congratulate. How is Rogers? and what
+is become of Campbell and all t'other fellows of the Druid order? I
+got Maturin's Bedlam at last, but no other parcel; I am in fits for
+the tooth-powder, and the magnesia. I want some of Burkitt's
+<i>soda</i>-powders. Will you tell Mr. Kinnaird that I have written him
+two letters on pressing business, (about Newstead, &amp;c.) to which I
+humbly solicit his attendance. I am just returned from a gallop
+along the banks of the Brenta&mdash;time, sunset. Yours,</p>
+
+<p>"B."</p></div><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page40" name="page40"></a>Pg 40</span></p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 286. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"La Mira, near Venice, July 1. 1817.</p>
+
+<p>"Since my former letter, I have been working up my impressions into
+a <i>fourth</i> Canto of Childe Harold, of which I have roughened off
+about rather better than thirty stanzas, and mean to go on; and
+probably to make this 'Fytte' the concluding one of the poem, so
+that you may propose against the autumn to draw out the
+conscription for 1818. You must provide moneys, as this new
+resumption bodes you certain disbursements. Somewhere about the end
+of September or October, I propose to be under way (<i>i.e.</i> in the
+press); but I have no idea yet of the probable length or calibre of
+the Canto, or what it will be good for; but I mean to be as
+mercenary as possible, an example (I do not mean of any individual
+in particular, and least of all, any person or persons of our
+mutual acquaintance) which I should have followed in my youth, and
+I might still have been a prosperous gentleman.</p>
+
+<p>"No tooth-powder, no letters, no recent tidings of you.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Lewis is at Venice, and I am going up to stay a week with him
+there&mdash;as it is one of his enthusiasms also to like the city.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"I stood in Venice on the 'Bridge of Sighs,' &amp;c. &amp;c.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"The 'Bridge of Sighs' (<i>i.e.</i> Ponte de'i Sospiri) is that which
+divides, or rather joins, the palace of the Doge to the prison of
+the state. It has two passages: the criminal went by the one to
+judgment,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page41" name="page41"></a>Pg 41</span> and returned by the other to death, being strangled in a
+chamber adjoining, where there was a mechanical process for the
+purpose.</p>
+
+<p>"This is the first stanza of our new Canto; and now for a line of
+the second:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"In Venice, Tasso's echoes are no more,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">And silent rows the songless gondolier,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Her palaces, &amp;c. &amp;c.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"You know that formerly the gondoliers sung always, and Tasso's
+Gierusalemme was their ballad. Venice is built on seventy-two
+islands.</p>
+
+<p>"There! there's a brick of your new Babel! and now, sirrah! what
+say you to the sample?</p>
+
+<p>"Yours, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. I shall write again by and by."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 287. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"La Mira, near Venice, July 8. 1817</p>
+
+<p>"If you can convey the enclosed letter to its address, or discover
+the person to whom it is directed, you will confer a favour upon
+the Venetian creditor of a deceased Englishman. This epistle is a
+dun to his executor, for house-rent. The name of the insolvent
+defunct is, or was, <i>Porter Valter</i>, according to the account of
+the plaintiff, which I rather suspect ought to be <i>Walter Porter</i>,
+according to our mode of collocation. If you are acquainted with
+any dead man of the like name a good deal in debt, pray dig him up,
+and tell him that 'a pound of his fair flesh' or the ducats are
+required, and that 'if you deny them, fie upon your law!'</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page42" name="page42"></a>Pg 42</span></p>
+
+<p>"I hear nothing more from you about Moore's poem, Rogers, or other
+literary phenomena; but to-morrow, being post-day, will bring
+perhaps some tidings. I write to you with people talking Venetian
+all about, so that you must not expect this letter to be all
+English.</p>
+
+<p>"The other day, I had a squabble on the highway, as follows: I was
+riding pretty quickly from Dolo home about eight in the evening,
+when I passed a party of people in a hired carriage, one of whom,
+poking his head out of the window, began bawling to me in an
+inarticulate but insolent manner. I wheeled my horse round, and
+overtaking, stopped the coach, and said, 'Signor, have you any
+commands for me?' He replied, impudently as to manner, 'No.' I then
+asked him what he meant by that unseemly noise, to the discomfiture
+of the passers-by. He replied by some piece of impertinence, to
+which I answered by giving him a violent slap in the face. I then
+dismounted, (for this passed at the window, I being on horseback
+still,) and opening the door desired him to walk out, or I would
+give him another. But the first had settled him except as to words,
+of which he poured forth a profusion in blasphemies, swearing that
+he would go to the police and avouch a battery sans provocation. I
+said he lied, and was a * *, and if he did not hold his tongue,
+should be dragged out and beaten anew. He then held his tongue. I
+of course told him my name and residence, and defied him to the
+death, if he were a gentleman, or not a gentleman, and had the
+inclination to be genteel in the way of combat. He went to the
+police, but there<span class="pagenum"><a id="page43" name="page43"></a>Pg 43</span> having been bystanders in the
+road,&mdash;particularly a soldier, who had seen the business,&mdash;as well
+as my servant, notwithstanding the oaths of the coachman and five
+insides besides the plaintiff, and a good deal of paying on all
+sides, his complaint was dismissed, he having been the
+aggressor;&mdash;and I was subsequently informed that, had I not given
+him a blow, he might have been had into durance.</p>
+
+<p>"So set down this,&mdash;'that in Aleppo once' I 'beat a Venetian;' but
+I assure you that he deserved it, for I am a quiet man, like
+Candide, though with somewhat of his fortune in being forced to
+forego my natural meekness every now and then.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours, &amp;c. B."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 288. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, July 9, 1817.</p>
+
+<p>"I have got the sketch and extracts from Lalla Rookh. The plan, as
+well as the extracts, I have seen, please me very much indeed, and
+I feel impatient for the whole.</p>
+
+<p>"With regard to the critique on 'Manfred,' you have been in such a
+devil of a hurry, that you have only sent me the half: it breaks
+off at page 294. Send me the rest; and also page 270., where there
+is 'an account of the supposed origin of this dreadful story,'&mdash;in
+which, by the way, whatever it may be, the conjecturer is out, and
+knows nothing of the matter. I had a better origin than he can
+devise or divine, for the soul of him.</p>
+
+<p>"You say nothing of Manfred's luck in the world;<span class="pagenum"><a id="page44" name="page44"></a>Pg 44</span> and I care not.
+He is one of the best of my misbegotten, say what they will.</p>
+
+<p>"I got at last an extract, but <i>no parcels</i>. They will come, I
+suppose, some time or other. I am come up to Venice for a day or
+two to bathe, and am just going to take a swim in the Adriatic; so,
+good evening&mdash;the post waits. Yours, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"B.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. Pray, was Manfred's speech to <i>the Sun</i> still retained in Act
+third? I hope so: it was one of the best in the thing, and better
+than the Colosseum. I have done <i>fifty-six</i> of Canto fourth, Childe
+Harold; so down with your ducats."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 289. TO MR. MOORE.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"La Mira, Venice, July 10. 1817.</p>
+
+<p>"Murray, the Mokanna of booksellers, has contrived to send me
+extracts from Lalla Rookh by the post. They are taken from some
+magazine, and contain a short outline and quotations from the two
+first Poems. I am very much delighted with what is before me, and
+very thirsty for the rest. You have caught the colours as if you
+had been in the rainbow, and the tone of the East is perfectly
+preserved. I am glad you have changed the title from 'Persian
+Tale.'</p>
+
+<p>"I suspect you have written a devilish fine composition, and I
+rejoice in it from my heart; because 'the Douglas and the Percy
+both together are confident against a world in arms.' I hope you
+won't<span class="pagenum"><a id="page45" name="page45"></a>Pg 45</span> be affronted at my looking on us as 'birds of a feather;'
+though on whatever subject you had written, I should have been very
+happy in your success.</p>
+
+<p>"There is a simile of an orange-tree's 'flowers and fruits,' which
+I should have liked better if I did not believe it to be a
+reflection on * * *.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you remember Thurlow's poem to Sam&mdash;'<i>When</i> Rogers;' and that
+d&mdash;&mdash;d supper of Rancliffe's that ought to have been a <i>dinner</i>?
+'Ah, Master Shallow, we have heard the chimes at midnight.' But</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"My boat is on the shore,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">And my bark is on the sea;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">But, before I go, Tom Moore,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Here's a double health to thee!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"Here's a sigh to those who love me,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">And a smile to those who hate;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">And whatever sky's above me,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Here's a heart for every fate.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"Though the ocean roar around me,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Yet it still shall bear me on;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Though a desert should surround me,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">It hath springs that may be won.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"Were't the last drop in the well,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">As I gasp'd upon the brink,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Ere my fainting spirit fell,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">'Tis to thee that I would drink.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"With that water, as this wine,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">The libation I would pour,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Should be&mdash;peace with thine and mine,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">And a health to thee, Tom Moore.<br /></span>
+</div></div><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page46" name="page46"></a>Pg 46</span></p>
+
+<p>"This should have been written fifteen moons ago&mdash;the first stanza
+was. I am just come out from an hour's swim in the Adriatic; and I
+write to you with a black-eyed Venetian girl before me, reading
+Boccacio.</p>
+
+<p>"Last week I had a row on the road (I came up to Venice from my
+casino, a few miles on the Paduan road, this blessed day, to bathe)
+with a fellow in a carriage, who was impudent to my horse. I gave
+him a swingeing box on the ear, which sent him to the police, who
+dismissed his complaint. Witnesses had seen the transaction. He
+first shouted, in an unseemly way, to frighten my palfry. I wheeled
+round, rode up to the window, and asked him what he meant. He
+grinned, and said some foolery, which produced him an immediate
+slap in the face, to his utter discomfiture. Much blasphemy ensued,
+and some menace, which I stopped by dismounting and opening the
+carriage door, and intimating an intention of mending the road with
+his immediate remains, if he did not hold his tongue. He held it.</p>
+
+<p>"Monk Lewis is here&mdash;'how pleasant!'<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> He is a very good fellow,
+and very much yours. So is Sam&mdash;so is every body&mdash;and amongst the
+number,</p>
+
+<p>"Yours ever,</p>
+
+<p>"B.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. What think you of Manfred?"</p></div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page47" name="page47"></a>Pg 47</span></p>
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 290. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"La Mira, near Venice, July 15. 1817.</p>
+
+<p>"I have finished (that is, written&mdash;the file comes afterwards)
+ninety and eight stanzas of the fourth Canto, which I mean to be
+the concluding one. It will probably be about the same length as
+the <i>third</i>, being already of the dimensions of the first or second
+Cantos. I look upon parts of it as very good, that is, if the three
+former are good, but this we shall see; and at any rate, good or
+not, it is rather a different style from the last&mdash;less
+metaphysical&mdash;which, at any rate, will be a variety. I sent you the
+shaft of the column as a specimen the other day, <i>i.e.</i> the first
+stanza. So you may be thinking of its arrival towards autumn, whose
+winds will not be the only ones to be raised, <i>if so be as how
+that</i> it is ready by that time.</p>
+
+<p>"I lent Lewis, who is at Venice, (in or on the Canalaccio, the
+Grand Canal,) your extracts from Lalla Rookh and Manuel<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a>, and,
+out of contradiction, it may be, he likes the last, and is not much
+taken with the first, of these performances. Of Manuel, I think,
+with the exception of a few capers, it is as heavy a nightmare as
+was ever bestrode by indigestion.</p>
+
+<p>"Of the extracts I can but judge as extracts, and I prefer the
+'Peri' to the 'Silver Veil.' He seems not so much at home in his
+versification of the 'Silver Veil,' and a little embarrassed with
+his horrors; but the conception of the character of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="page48" name="page48"></a>Pg 48</span> impostor
+is fine, and the plan of great scope for his genius,&mdash;and I doubt
+not that, as a whole, it will be very Arabesque and beautiful.</p>
+
+<p>"Your late epistle is not the most abundant in information, and has
+not yet been succeeded by any other; so that I know nothing of your
+own concerns, or of any concerns, and as I never hear from any body
+but yourself who does not tell me something as disagreeable as
+possible, I should not be sorry to hear from you: and as it is not
+very probable,&mdash;if I can, by any device or possible arrangement
+with regard to my personal affairs, so arrange it,&mdash;that I shall
+return soon, or reside ever in England, all that you tell me will
+be all I shall know or enquire after, as to our beloved realm of
+Grub Street, and the black brethren and blue sisterhood of that
+extensive suburb of Babylon. Have you had no new babe of literature
+sprung up to replace the dead, the distant, the tired, and the
+<i>re</i>tired? no prose, no verse, no <i>nothing</i>?"</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 291. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, July 20. 1817.</p>
+
+<p>"I write to give you notice that I have completed the <i>fourth</i> and
+<i>ultimate</i> Canto of Childe Harold. It consists of 126 stanzas, and
+is consequently the longest of the four. It is yet to be copied and
+polished; and the notes are to come, of which it will require more
+than the <i>third</i> Canto, as it necessarily treats more of works of
+art than of nature. It shall be sent towards autumn;&mdash;and now for
+our<span class="pagenum"><a id="page49" name="page49"></a>Pg 49</span> barter. What do you bid? eh? you shall have samples, an' it so
+please you: but I wish to know what I am to expect (as the saying
+is) in these hard times, when poetry does not let for half its
+value. If you are disposed to do what Mrs. Winifred Jenkins calls
+'the handsome thing,' I may perhaps throw you some odd matters to
+the lot,&mdash;translations, or slight originals; there is no saying
+what may be on the anvil between this and the booking season.
+Recollect that it is the <i>last</i> Canto, and completes the work;
+whether as good as the others, I cannot judge, in course&mdash;least of
+all as yet,&mdash;but it shall be as little worse as I can help. I may,
+perhaps, give some little gossip in the notes as to the present
+state of Italian literati and literature, being acquainted with
+some of their <i>capi</i>&mdash;men as well as books;&mdash;but this depends upon
+my humour at the time. So, now, pronounce: I say nothing.</p>
+
+<p>"When you have got the whole <i>four</i> Cantos, I think you might
+venture on an edition of the whole poem in quarto, with spare
+copies of the two last for the purchasers of the old edition of the
+first two. There is a hint for you, worthy of the Row; and now,
+perpend&mdash;pronounce.</p>
+
+<p>"I have not received a word from you of the fate of 'Manfred' or
+'Tasso,' which seems to me odd, whether they have failed or
+succeeded.</p>
+
+<p>"As this is a scrawl of business, and I have lately written at
+length and often on other subjects, I will only add that I am,"
+&amp;c.</p></div><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page50" name="page50"></a>Pg 50</span></p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 292. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"La Mira, near Venice, August 7, 1817</p>
+
+<p>"Your letter of the 18th, and, what will please you, as it did me,
+the parcel sent by the good-natured aid and abetment of Mr. Croker,
+are arrived.&mdash;Messrs. Lewis and Hobhouse are here: the former in
+the same house, the latter a few hundred yards distant.</p>
+
+<p>"You say nothing of Manfred, from which its failure may be
+inferred; but I think it odd you should not say so at once. I know
+nothing, and hear absolutely nothing, of any body or any thing in
+England; and there are no English papers, so that all you say will
+be news&mdash;of any person, or thing, or things. I am at present very
+anxious about Newstead, and sorry that Kinnaird is leaving England
+at this minute, though I do not tell him so, and would rather he
+should have <i>his</i> pleasure, although it may not in this instance
+tend to my profit.</p>
+
+<p>"If I understand rightly, you have paid into Morland's 1500
+<i>pounds</i>: as the agreement in the paper is two thousand <i>guineas</i>,
+there will remain therefore <i>six</i> hundred <i>pounds</i>, and not five
+hundred, the odd hundred being the extra to make up the specie. Six
+hundred and thirty pounds will bring it to the like for Manfred and
+Tasso, making a total of twelve hundred and thirty, I believe, for
+I am not a good calculator. I do not wish to press you, but I tell
+you fairly that it will be a convenience to me to<span class="pagenum"><a id="page51" name="page51"></a>Pg 51</span> have it paid as
+soon as it can be made convenient to yourself.</p>
+
+<p>"The new and last Canto is 130 stanzas in length; and may be made
+more or less. I have fixed no price, even in idea, and have no
+notion of what it may be good for. There are no metaphysics in it;
+at least, I think not. Mr. Hobhouse has promised me a copy of
+Tasso's Will, for notes; and I have some curious things to say
+about Ferrara, and Parisina's story, and perhaps a farthing
+candle's worth of light upon the present state of Italian
+literature. I shall hardly be ready by October; but that don't
+matter. I have all to copy and correct, and the notes to write.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know whether Scott will like it; but I have called him
+the '<i>Ariosto</i> of the North' in my <i>text</i>. <i>If he should not, say so
+in time.</i></p>
+
+<p>"An Italian translation of 'Glenarvon' came lately to be printed at
+Venice. The censor (Sr. Petrotini) refused to sanction the
+publication till he had seen me on the subject. I told him that I
+did not recognise the slightest relation between that book and
+myself; but that, whatever opinions might be upon that subject, <i>I</i>
+would never prevent or oppose the publication of <i>any</i> book, in
+<i>any</i> language, on my own private account; and desired him (against
+his inclination) to permit the poor translator to publish his
+labours. It is going forwards in consequence. You may say this,
+with my compliments, to the author.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours."</p></div><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page52" name="page52"></a>Pg 52</span></p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 293. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, August 12. 1817.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been very sorry to hear of the death of Madame de Sta&euml;l,
+not only because she had been very kind to me at Copet, but because
+now I can never requite her. In a general point of view, she will
+leave a great gap in society and literature.</p>
+
+<p>"With regard to death, I doubt that we have any right to pity the
+dead for their own sakes.</p>
+
+<p>"The copies of Manfred and Tasso are arrived, thanks to Mr.
+Croker's cover. You have destroyed the whole effect and moral of
+the poem by omitting the last line of Manfred's speaking; and why
+this was done, I know not. Why you persist in saying nothing of the
+thing itself, I am equally at a loss to conjecture. If it is for
+fear of telling me something disagreeable, you are wrong; because
+sooner or later I must know it, and I am not so new, nor so raw,
+nor so inexperienced, as not to be able to bear, not the mere
+paltry, petty disappointments of authorship, but things more
+serious,&mdash;at least I hope so, and that what you may think
+irritability is merely mechanical, and only acts like galvanism on
+a dead body, or the muscular motion which survives sensation.</p>
+
+<p>"If it is that you are out of humour, because I wrote to you a
+sharp letter, recollect that it was partly from a misconception of
+your letter, and partly because you did a thing you had no right to
+do without consulting me.</p>
+
+<p>"I have, however, heard good of Manfred from<span class="pagenum"><a id="page53" name="page53"></a>Pg 53</span> two other quarters,
+and from men who would not be scrupulous in saying what they
+thought, or what was said; and so 'good morrow to you, good Master
+Lieutenant.'</p>
+
+<p>"I wrote to you twice about the fourth Canto, which you will answer
+at your pleasure. Mr. Hobhouse and I have come up for a day to the
+city; Mr. Lewis is gone to England; and I am</p>
+
+<p>"Yours."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 294. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"La Mira, near Venice, August 21. 1817.</p>
+
+<p>"I take you at your word about Mr. Hanson, and will feel obliged if
+you will <i>go</i> to him, and request Mr. Davies also to visit him by
+my desire, and repeat that I trust that neither Mr. Kinnaird's
+absence nor mine will prevent his taking all proper steps to
+accelerate and promote the sale of Newstead and Rochdale, upon
+which the whole of my future personal comfort depends. It is
+impossible for me to express how much any delays upon these points
+would inconvenience me; and I do not know a greater obligation that
+can be conferred upon me than the pressing these things upon
+Hanson, and making him act according to my wishes. I wish you would
+<i>speak out</i>, at least to <i>me</i>, and tell me what you allude to by
+your cold way of mentioning him. All mysteries at such a distance
+are not merely tormenting but mischievous, and may be prejudicial
+to my interests; so, pray expound, that I may consult with Mr.
+Kinnaird when he arrives;<span class="pagenum"><a id="page54" name="page54"></a>Pg 54</span> and remember that I prefer the most
+disagreeable certainties to hints and innuendoes. The devil take
+every body: I never can get any person to be explicit about any
+thing or any body, and my whole life is passed in conjectures of
+what people mean: you all talk in the style of C * * L * *'s
+novels.</p>
+
+<p>"It is not Mr. St. John, but <i>Mr. St. Aubyn</i>, son of Sir John St.
+Aubyn. <i>Polidori</i> knows him, and introduced him to me. He is of
+Oxford, and has got my parcel. The Doctor will ferret him out, or
+ought. The parcel contains many letters, some of Madame de Sta&euml;l's,
+and other people's, besides MSS., &amp;c. By &mdash;&mdash;, if I find the
+gentleman, and he don't find the parcel, I will say something he
+won't like to hear.</p>
+
+<p>"You want a 'civil and delicate declension' for the medical
+tragedy? Take it&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"Dear Doctor, I have read your play,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Which is a good one in its way,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Purges the eyes and moves the bowels,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">And drenches handkerchiefs like towels<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">With tears, that, in a flux of grief,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Afford hysterical relief<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">To shatter'd nerves and quicken'd pulses,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Which your catastrophe convulses.<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">"I like your moral and machinery;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Your plot, too, has such scope for scenery!<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Your dialogue is apt and smart;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">The play's concoction full of art;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Your hero raves, your heroine cries,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">All stab, and every body dies.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">In short, your tragedy would be<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">The very thing to hear and see:<br /></span><span class="pagenum"><a id="page55" name="page55"></a>Pg 55</span>
+<span class="i4">And for a piece of publication,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">If I decline on this occasion,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">It is not that I am not sensible<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">To merits in themselves ostensible,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">But&mdash;and I grieve to speak it&mdash;plays<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Are drugs, mere drugs, sir&mdash;now-a-days.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">I had a heavy loss by 'Manuel,'&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Too lucky if it prove not annual,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">And S * *, with his 'Orestes,'<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">(Which, by the by, the author's best is,)<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Has lain so very long on hand<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">That I despair of all demand.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">I've advertised, but see my books,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Or only watch my shopman's looks;&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Still Ivan, Ina, and such lumber,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">My back-shop glut, my shelves encumber.<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">"There's Byron too, who once did better,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Has sent me, folded in a letter,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">A sort of&mdash;it's no more a drama<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Than Darnley, Ivan, or Kehama;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">So alter'd since last year his pen is,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">I think he's lost his wits at Venice.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">In short, sir, what with one and t'other,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">I dare not venture on another.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">I write in haste; excuse each blunder;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">The coaches through the street so thunder!<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">My room's so full&mdash;we've Gifford here<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Reading MS., with Hookham Frere,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Pronouncing on the nouns and particles<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Of some of our forthcoming Articles.<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">"The Quarterly&mdash;Ah, sir, if you<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Had but the genius to review!&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">A smart critique upon St. Helena,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Or if you only would but tell in a<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Short compass what&mdash;but, to resume:<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">As I was saying, sir, the room&mdash;<br /></span><span class="pagenum"><a id="page56" name="page56"></a>Pg 56</span>
+<span class="i4">The room's so full of wits and bards,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Crabbes, Campbells, Crokers, Freres, and Wards,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">And others, neither bards nor wits:&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">My humble tenement admits<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">All persons in the dress of gent.,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">From Mr. Hammond to Dog Dent.<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">"A party dines with me to-day,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">All clever men, who make their way;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">They're at this moment in discussion<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">On poor De Sta&euml;l's late dissolution.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Her book, they say, was in advance&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Pray Heaven, she tell the truth of France!<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">"Thus run our time and tongues away.&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">But, to return, sir, to your play:<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Sorry, sir, but I cannot deal,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Unless 'twere acted by O'Neill.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">My hands so full, my head so busy,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">I'm almost dead, and always dizzy;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">And so, with endless truth and hurry,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Dear Doctor, I am yours,<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"JOHN MURRAY.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"P.S. I've done the fourth and last Canto, which amounts to 133
+stanzas. I desire you to name a price; if you don't, <i>I</i> will; so I
+advise you in time.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"There will be a good many notes."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Among those minor misrepresentations of which it was Lord Byron's fate
+to be the victim, advantage was, at this time, taken of his professed
+distaste to the English, to accuse him of acts of inhospitality, and
+even rudeness, towards some of his fellow-countrymen. How far different
+was his treatment of all who ever visited him, many grateful
+testimonies<span class="pagenum"><a id="page57" name="page57"></a>Pg 57</span> might be collected to prove; but I shall here content
+myself with selecting a few extracts from an account given me by Mr.
+Henry Joy of a visit which, in company with another English gentleman,
+he paid to the noble poet this summer, at his villa on the banks of the
+Brenta. After mentioning the various civilities they had experienced
+from Lord Byron; and, among others, his having requested them to name
+their own day for dining with him,&mdash;"We availed ourselves," says Mr.
+Joy, "of this considerate courtesy by naming the day fixed for our
+return to Padua, when our route would lead us to his door; and we were
+welcomed with all the cordiality which was to be expected from so
+friendly a bidding. Such traits of kindness in such a man deserve to be
+recorded on account of the numerous slanders thrown upon him by some of
+the tribes of tourists, who resented, as a personal affront, his
+resolution to avoid their impertinent inroads upon his retirement. So
+far from any appearance of indiscriminate aversion to his countrymen,
+his enquiries about his friends in England (<i>quorum pars magna fuisti</i>)
+were most anxious and particular.</p>
+
+<p>"He expressed some opinions," continues my informant, "on matters of
+taste, which cannot fail to interest his biographer. He contended that
+Sculpture, as an art, was vastly superior to Painting;&mdash;a preference
+which is strikingly illustrated by the fact that, in the fourth Canto of
+Childe Harold, he gives the most elaborate and splendid account of
+several statues, and none of any pictures; although Italy is,
+emphatically, the land of painting,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page58" name="page58"></a>Pg 58</span> and her best statues are derived
+from Greece. By the way, he told us that there were more objects of
+interest in Rome alone than in all Greece from one extremity to the
+other. After regaling us with an excellent dinner, (in which, by the by,
+a very English joint of roast beef showed that he did not extend his
+antipathies to all John-Bullisms,) he took me in his carriage some miles
+of our route towards Padua, after apologising to my fellow-traveller for
+the separation, on the score of his anxiety to hear all he could of his
+friends in England; and I quitted him with a confirmed impression of the
+strong ardour and sincerity of his attachment to those by whom he did
+not fancy himself slighted or ill treated."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 295. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Sept. 4. 1817.</p>
+
+<p>"Your letter of the 15th has conveyed with its contents the
+impression of a seal, to which the 'Saracen's Head' is a seraph,
+and the 'Bull and Mouth' a delicate device. I knew that calumny had
+sufficiently <i>blackened</i> me of later days, but not that it had
+given the features as well as complexion of a negro. Poor Augusta
+is not less, but rather more, shocked than myself, and says 'people
+seem to have lost their recollection strangely' when they engraved
+such a 'blackamoor.' Pray don't seal (at least to me) with such a
+caricature of the human numskull altogether; and if you don't break
+the seal-cutter's head, at least crack his libel (or likeness, if
+it should be a likeness) of mine.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page59" name="page59"></a>Pg 59</span>"Mr. Kinnaird is not yet arrived, but expected. He has lost by the
+way all the tooth-powder, as a letter from Spa informs me.</p>
+
+<p>"By Mr. Rose I received safely, though tardily, magnesia and
+tooth-powder, and * * * *. Why do you send me such trash&mdash;worse
+than trash, the Sublime of Mediocrity? Thanks for Lalla, however,
+which is good; and thanks for the Edinburgh and Quarterly, both
+very amusing and well-written. Paris in 1815, &amp;c.&mdash;good. Modern
+Greece&mdash;good for nothing; written by some one who has never been
+there, and not being able to manage the Spenser stanza, has
+invented a thing of his own, consisting of two elegiac stanzas, an
+heroic line, and an Alexandrine, twisted on a string. Besides, why
+'<i>modern</i>?' You may say <i>modern Greeks</i>, but surely <i>Greece</i> itself
+is rather more ancient than ever it was. Now for business.</p>
+
+<p>"You offer 1500 guineas for the new Canto: I won't take it. I ask
+two thousand five hundred guineas for it, which you will either
+give or not, as you think proper. It concludes the poem, and
+consists of 144 stanzas. The notes are numerous, and chiefly
+written by Mr. Hobhouse, whose researches have been indefatigable;
+and who, I will venture to say, has more real knowledge of Rome and
+its environs than any Englishman who has been there since Gibbon.
+By the way, to prevent any mistakes, I think it necessary to state
+the fact that <i>he</i>, Mr. Hobhouse, has no interest whatever in the
+price or profit to be derived from the copyright of either poem or
+notes directly or indirectly; so that you<span class="pagenum"><a id="page60" name="page60"></a>Pg 60</span> are not to suppose that
+it is by, for, or through him, that I require more for this Canto
+than the preceding.&mdash;No: but if Mr. Eustace was to have had two
+thousand for a poem on Education; if Mr. Moore is to have three
+thousand for Lalla, &amp;c.; if Mr. Campbell is to have three thousand
+for his prose on poetry&mdash;I don't mean to disparage these gentlemen
+in their labours&mdash;but I ask the aforesaid price for mine. You will
+tell me that their productions are considerably <i>longer</i>: very
+true, and when they shorten them, I will lengthen mine, and ask
+less. You shall submit the MS. to Mr. Gifford, and any other two
+gentlemen to be named by you, (Mr. Frere, or Mr. Croker, or
+whomever you please, except such fellows as your * *s and * *s,)
+and if they pronounce this Canto to be inferior as a <i>whole</i> to the
+preceding, I will not appeal from their award, but burn the
+manuscript, and leave things as they are.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours very truly.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. In answer to a former letter, I sent you a short statement of
+what I thought the state of our present copyright account, viz. six
+hundred <i>pounds</i> still (or lately) due on Childe Harold, and six
+hundred <i>guineas</i>, Manfred and Tasso, making a total of twelve
+hundred and thirty pounds. If we agree about the new poem, I shall
+take the liberty to reserve the choice of the manner in which it
+should be published, viz. a quarto, certes."</p></div><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page61" name="page61"></a>Pg 61</span></p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 296. TO MR. HOPPNER.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"La Mira, Sept. 12. 1817.</p>
+
+<p>"I set out yesterday morning with the intention of paying my
+respects, and availing myself of your permission to walk over the
+premises.<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> On arriving at Padua, I found that the march of the
+Austrian troops had engrossed so many horses<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a>, that those I could
+procure were hardly able to crawl; and their weakness, together
+with the prospect of finding none at all at the post-house of
+Monselice, and consequently either not arriving that day at Este,
+or so late as to be unable to return home the same evening, induced
+me to turn aside in a second visit to Arqua, instead of proceeding
+onwards; and even thus I hardly got back in time.</p>
+
+<p>"Next week I shall be obliged to be in Venice to meet Lord Kinnaird
+and his brother, who are<span class="pagenum"><a id="page62" name="page62"></a>Pg 62</span> expected in a few days. And this
+interruption, together with that occasioned by the continued march
+of the Austrians for the next few days, will not allow me to fix
+any precise period for availing myself of your kindness, though I
+should wish to take the earliest opportunity. Perhaps, if absent,
+you will have the goodness to permit one of your servants to show
+me the grounds and house, or as much of either as may be
+convenient; at any rate, I shall take the first occasion possible
+to go over, and regret very much that I was yesterday prevented.</p>
+
+<p>"I have the honour to be your obliged," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 297. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"September 15. 1817.</p>
+
+<p>"I enclose a sheet for correction, if ever you get to another
+edition. You will observe that the blunder in printing makes it
+appear as if the Ch&acirc;teau was <i>over</i> St. Gingo, instead of being on
+the opposite shore of the Lake, over Clarens. So, separate the
+paragraphs, otherwise my <i>to</i>pography will seem as inaccurate as
+your <i>ty</i>pography on this occasion.</p>
+
+<p>"The other day I wrote to convey my proposition with regard to the
+fourth and concluding Canto. I have gone over and extended it to
+one hundred and fifty stanzas, which is almost as long as the two
+first were originally, and longer by itself than any of the smaller
+poems except 'The Corsair.' Mr. Hobhouse has made some very
+valuable and accurate notes of considerable length, and you may be
+sure that I will<span class="pagenum"><a id="page63" name="page63"></a>Pg 63</span> do for the text all that I can to finish with
+decency. I look upon Childe Harold as my best; and as I begun, I
+think of concluding with it. But I make no resolutions on that
+head, as I broke my former intention with regard to 'The Corsair.'
+However, I fear that I shall never do better; and yet, not being
+thirty years of age, for some moons to come, one ought to be
+progressive as far as intellect goes for many a good year. But I
+have had a devilish deal of tear and wear of mind and body in my
+time, besides having published too often and much already. God
+grant me some judgment to do what may be most fitting in that and
+every thing else, for I doubt my own exceedingly.</p>
+
+<p>"I have read 'Lalla Rookh,' but not with sufficient attention yet,
+for I ride about, and lounge, and ponder, and&mdash;two or three other
+things; so that my reading is very desultory, and not so attentive
+as it used to be. I am very glad to hear of its popularity, for
+Moore is a very noble fellow in all respects, and will enjoy it
+without any of the bad feelings which success&mdash;good or
+evil&mdash;sometimes engenders in the men of rhyme. Of the poem, itself,
+I will tell you my opinion when I have mastered it: I say of the
+<i>poem</i>, for I don't like the <i>prose</i> at all; and in the mean time,
+the 'Fire-worshippers' is the best, and the 'Veiled Prophet' the
+worst, of the volume.</p>
+
+<p>"With regard to poetry in general<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a>, I am con<span class="pagenum"><a id="page64" name="page64"></a>Pg 64</span>vinced, the more I
+think of it, that he and <i>all</i> of us&mdash;Scott, Southey, Wordsworth,
+Moore, Campbell, I,&mdash;are all in the wrong, one as much as another;
+that we are upon a wrong revolutionary poetical system, or systems,
+not worth a damn in itself, and from which none but Rogers and
+Crabbe are free; and that the present and next generations will
+finally be of this opinion. I am the more confirmed in this by
+having lately gone over some of our classics, particularly <i>Pope</i>,
+whom I tried in this way,&mdash;I took Moore's poems and my own and some
+others, and went over them side by side with Pope's, and I was
+really astonished (I ought not to have been so) and mortified at
+the ineffable distance in point of sense, learning, effect, and
+even <i>imagination</i>, passion, and <i>invention</i>, between the little
+Queen Anne's man, and us of the Lower Empire. Depend upon it, it is
+all Horace then, and Claudian now, among us; and if I had to begin
+again, I would mould myself accordingly. Crabbe's the man, but he
+has got a coarse and impracticable subject, and * * * is retired
+upon half-pay, and has done enough, unless he were to do as he did
+formerly."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 298. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"September 17. 1817.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Hobhouse purposes being in England in November; he will bring
+the fourth Canto with<span class="pagenum"><a id="page65" name="page65"></a>Pg 65</span> him, notes and all; the text contains one
+hundred and fifty stanzas, which is long for that measure.</p>
+
+<p>"With regard to the 'Ariosto of the North,' surely their themes,
+chivalry, war, and love, were as like as can be; and as to the
+compliment, if you knew what the Italians think of Ariosto, you
+would not hesitate about that. But as to their 'measures,' you
+forget that Ariosto's is an octave stanza, and Scott's any thing
+but a stanza. If you think Scott will dislike it, say so, and I
+will expunge. I do not call him the '<i>Scotch</i> Ariosto,' which would
+be sad <i>provincial</i> eulogy, but the 'Ariosto of the <i>North</i>,
+meaning of all <i>countries</i> that are <i>not</i> the <i>South</i>. * *</p>
+
+<p>"As I have recently troubled you rather frequently, I will
+conclude, repeating that I am</p>
+
+<p>"Yours ever," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 299. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"October 12. 1817.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Kinnaird and his brother, Lord Kinnaird, have been here, and
+are now gone again. All your missives came, except the
+tooth-powder, of which I request further supplies, at all
+convenient opportunities; as also of magnesia and soda-powders,
+both great luxuries here, and neither to be had good, or indeed
+hardly at all, of the natives. * * *</p>
+
+<p>"In * *'s Life, I perceive an attack upon the then Committee of
+D.L. Theatre for acting Bertram, and an attack upon Maturin's
+Bertram for being acted. Considering all things, this is not very
+grateful nor graceful on the part of the worthy autobiographer;<span class="pagenum"><a id="page66" name="page66"></a>Pg 66</span>
+and I would answer, if I had <i>not</i> obliged him. Putting my own
+pains to forward the views of * * out of the question, I know that
+there was every disposition, on the part of the Sub-Committee, to
+bring forward any production of his, were it feasible. The play he
+offered, though poetical, did not appear at all practicable, and
+Bertram did;&mdash;and hence this long tirade, which is the last chapter
+of his vagabond life.</p>
+
+<p>"As for Bertram, Maturin may defend his own begotten, if he likes
+it well enough; I leave the Irish clergyman and the new Orator
+Henley to battle it out between them, satisfied to have done the
+best I could for <i>both</i>. I may say this to <i>you</i>, who know it.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. * * may console himself with the fervour,&mdash;the almost
+religious fervour of his and W * *'s disciples, as he calls it. If
+he means that as any proof of their merits, I will find him as much
+'fervour' in behalf of Richard Brothers and Joanna Southcote as
+ever gathered over his pages or round his fire-side.</p>
+
+<p>"My answer to your proposition about the fourth Canto you will have
+received, and I await yours;&mdash;perhaps we may not agree. I have
+since written a poem (of 84 octave stanzas), humorous, in or after
+the excellent manner of Mr. Whistlecraft (whom I take to be Frere),
+on a Venetian anecdote which amused me:&mdash;but till I have your
+answer, I can say nothing more about it.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Hobhouse does not return to England in November, as he
+intended, but will winter here<span class="pagenum"><a id="page67" name="page67"></a>Pg 67</span> and as he is to convey the poem, or
+poems,&mdash;for there may perhaps be more than the two mentioned,
+(which, by the way, I shall not perhaps include in the same
+publication or agreement,) I shall not be able to publish so soon
+as expected; but I suppose there is no harm in the delay.</p>
+
+<p>"I have <i>signed</i> and sent your former <i>copyrights</i> by Mr. Kinnaird,
+but <i>not</i> the <i>receipt</i>, because the money is not yet paid. Mr.
+Kinnaird has a power of attorney to sign for me, and will, when
+necessary.</p>
+
+<p>"Many thanks for the Edinburgh Review, which is very kind about
+Manfred, and defends its originality, which I did not know that any
+body had attacked. I <i>never read</i>, and do not know that I ever saw,
+the 'Faustus of Marlow,' and had, and have, no dramatic works by me
+in English, except the recent things you sent me; but I heard Mr.
+Lewis translate verbally some scenes of <i>Goethe's Faust</i> (which
+were, some good, and some bad) last summer;&mdash;which is all I know of
+the history of that magical personage; and as to the germs of
+Manfred, they may be found in the Journal which I sent to Mrs.
+Leigh (part of which you saw) when I went over first the Dent de
+Jaman, and then the Wengen or Wengeberg Alp and Sheideck, and made
+the giro of the Jungfrau, Shreckhorn, &amp;c. &amp;c. shortly before I left
+Switzerland. I have the whole scene of Manfred before me as if it
+was but yesterday, and could point it out, spot by spot, torrent
+and all.</p>
+
+<p>"Of the Prometheus of &AElig;schylus I was passionately fond as a boy (it
+was one of the Greek plays<span class="pagenum"><a id="page68" name="page68"></a>Pg 68</span> we read thrice a year at
+Harrow);&mdash;indeed that and the 'Medea' were the only ones, except
+the 'Seven before Thebes,' which ever much pleased me. As to the
+'Faustus of Marlow,' I never read, never saw, nor heard of it&mdash;at
+least, thought of it, except that I think Mr. Gifford mentioned, in
+a note of his which you sent me, something about the catastrophe;
+but not as having any thing to do with mine, which may or may not
+resemble it, for any thing I know.</p>
+
+<p>"The Prometheus, if not exactly in my plan, has always been so much
+in my head, that I can easily conceive its influence over all or
+any thing that I have written;&mdash;but I deny Marlow and his progeny,
+and beg that you will do the same.</p>
+
+<p>"If you can send me the paper in question<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a>, which the Edinburgh
+Review mentions, <i>do</i>. The review in the magazine you say was
+written by Wilson? it had all the air of being a poet's, and was a
+very good one. The Edinburgh Review I take to be Jeffrey's own by
+its friendliness. I wonder they thought it worth while to do so, so
+soon after the former; but it was evidently with a good motive.</p>
+
+<p>"I saw Hoppner the other day, whose country-house at Este I have
+taken for two years. If you<span class="pagenum"><a id="page69" name="page69"></a>Pg 69</span> come out next summer, let me know in
+time. Love to Gifford.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours ever truly.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"Crabbe, Malcolm, Hamilton, and Chantrey,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Are all partakers of my pantry.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>These two lines are omitted in your letter to the doctor, after&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"All clever men who make their way."<br /></span>
+</div></div></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 300. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, October 23. 1817.</p>
+
+<p>"Your two letters are before me, and our bargain is so far
+concluded. How sorry I am to hear that Gifford is unwell! Pray tell
+me he is better: I hope it is nothing but <i>cold</i>. As you say his
+illness originates in cold, I trust it will get no further.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Whistlecraft has no greater admirer than myself: I have
+written a story in 89 stanzas, in imitation of him, called <i>Beppo</i>,
+(the short name for Giuseppe, that is, the <i>Joe</i> of the Italian
+Joseph,) which I shall throw you into the balance of the fourth
+Canto, to help you round to your money; but you perhaps had better
+publish it anonymously; but this we will see to by and by.</p>
+
+<p>"In the Notes to Canto fourth, Mr. Hobhouse has pointed out
+<i>several errors</i> of <i>Gibbon</i>. You may depend upon H.'s research and
+accuracy. You may print it in what shape you please.</p>
+
+<p>"With regard to a future large edition, you may print all, or any
+thing, except 'English Bards,' to the republication of which at
+<i>no</i> time will I consent.<span class="pagenum"><a id="page70" name="page70"></a>Pg 70</span> I would not reprint them on any
+consideration. I don't think them good for much, even in point of
+poetry; and, as to other things, you are to recollect that I gave
+up the publication on account of the <i>Hollands</i>, and I do not think
+that any time or circumstances can neutralise the suppression. Add
+to which, that, after being on terms with almost all the bards and
+critics of the day, it would be savage at any time, but worst of
+all <i>now</i>, to revive this foolish lampoon.</p>
+
+<p>"The review of Manfred came very safely, and I am much pleased with
+it. It is odd that they should say (that is somebody in a magazine
+whom the Edinburgh controverts) that it was taken from Marlow's
+Faust, which I never read nor saw. An American, who came the other
+day from Germany, told Mr. Hobhouse that Manfred was taken from
+Goethe's Faust. The devil may take both the Faustuses, German and
+English&mdash;I have taken neither.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you send to <i>Hanson</i>, and say that he has not written since
+9th September?&mdash;at least I have had no letter since, to my great
+surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you desire Messrs. Morland to send out whatever additional
+sums have or may be paid in credit immediately, and always to their
+Venice correspondents? It is two months ago that they sent me out
+an additional credit for <i>one thousand pounds</i>. I was very glad of
+it, but I don't know how the devil it came; for I can only make out
+500 of Hanson's payment, and I had thought the other 500 came from
+you; but it did not, it seems, as, by yours of<span class="pagenum"><a id="page71" name="page71"></a>Pg 71</span> the 7th instant,
+you have only just paid the 1230<i>l.</i> balance.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Kinnaird is on his way home with the assignments. I can fix no
+time for the arrival of Canto fourth, which depends on the journey
+of Mr. Hobhouse home; and I do not think that this will be
+immediate.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours in great haste and very truly,</p>
+
+<p>"B.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. Morlands have not yet written to my bankers apprising the
+payment of your balances: pray desire them to do so.</p>
+
+<p>"Ask them about the <i>previous</i> thousand&mdash;of which I know 500 came
+from Hanson's&mdash;and make out the other 500&mdash;that is, whence it
+came."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 301. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, November 15. 1817.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Kinnaird has probably returned to England by this time, and
+will have conveyed to you any tidings you may wish to have of us
+and ours. I have come back to Venice for the winter. Mr. Hobhouse
+will probably set off in December, but what day or week I know not.
+He is my opposite neighbour at present.</p>
+
+<p>"I wrote yesterday in some perplexity, and no very good humour, to
+Mr. Kinnaird, to inform me about Newstead and the Hansons, of which
+and whom I hear nothing since his departure from this place, except
+in a few unintelligible words from an unintelligible woman.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page72" name="page72"></a>Pg 72</span>"I am as sorry to hear of Dr. Polidori's accident as one can be
+for a person for whom one has a dislike, and something of contempt.
+When he gets well, tell me, and how he gets on in the sick line.
+Poor fellow! how came he to fix there?</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"I fear the Doctor's skill at Norwich<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Will hardly salt the Doctor's porridge.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Methought he was going to the Brazils to give the Portuguese physic
+(of which they are fond to desperation) with the Danish consul.</p>
+
+<p>"Your new Canto has expanded to one hundred and sixty-seven
+stanzas. It will be long, you see; and as for the notes by
+Hobhouse, I suspect they will be of the heroic size. You must keep
+Mr. * * in good humour, for he is devilish touchy yet about your
+Review and all which it inherits, including the editor, the
+Admiralty, and its bookseller. I used to think that <i>I</i> was a good
+deal of an author in <i>amour propre</i> and <i>noli me tangere</i>; but
+these prose fellows are worst, after all, about their little
+comforts.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you remember my mentioning, some months ago, the Marquis
+Moncada&mdash;a Spaniard of distinction and fourscore years, my summer
+neighbour at La Mira? Well, about six weeks ago, he fell in love
+with a Venetian girl of family, and no fortune or character; took
+her into his mansion; quarrelled with all his former friends for
+giving him advice (except me who gave him none), and installed her
+present concubine and future wife and mistress of himself and
+furniture. At the end of a month, in which she demeaned herself as
+ill as possible, he found out a<span class="pagenum"><a id="page73" name="page73"></a>Pg 73</span> correspondence between her and
+some former keeper, and after nearly strangling, turned her out of
+the house, to the great scandal of the keeping part of the town,
+and with a prodigious &eacute;clat, which has occupied all the canals and
+coffee-houses in Venice. He said she wanted to poison him; and she
+says&mdash;God knows what; but between them they have made a great deal
+of noise. I know a little of both the parties: Moncada seemed a
+very sensible old man, a character which he has not quite kept up
+on this occasion; and the woman is rather showy than pretty. For
+the honour of religion, she was bred in a convent, and for the
+credit of Great Britain, taught by an Englishwoman.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 302. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, December 3. 1817.</p>
+
+<p>"A Venetian lady, learned and somewhat stricken in years, having,
+in her intervals of love and devotion, taken upon her to translate
+the Letters and write the Life of Lady Mary Wortley Montague,&mdash;to
+which undertaking there are two obstacles, firstly, ignorance of
+English, and, secondly, a total dearth of information on the
+subject of her projected biography, has applied to me for facts or
+falsities upon this promising project. Lady Montague lived the last
+twenty or more years of her life in or near Venice, I believe; but
+here they know nothing, and remember nothing, for the story of
+to-day is succeeded by the scandal of to-morrow; and the wit, and
+beauty, and gallantry, which might render your<span class="pagenum"><a id="page74" name="page74"></a>Pg 74</span> countrywoman
+notorious in her own country, must have been <i>here</i> no great
+distinction&mdash;because the first is in no request, and the two latter
+are common to all women, or at least the last of them. If you can
+therefore tell me any thing, or get any thing told, of Lady Wortley
+Montague, I shall take it as a favour, and will transfer and
+translate it to the 'Dama' in question. And I pray you besides to
+send me, by some quick and safe voyager, the edition of her
+Letters, and the stupid Life, by <i>Dr. Dallaway</i>, published by her
+proud and foolish family.</p>
+
+<p>"The death of the Princess Charlotte has been a shock even here,
+and must have been an earthquake at home. The Courier's list of
+some three hundred heirs to the crown (including the house of
+Wirtemberg, with that * * *, P&mdash;&mdash;, of disreputable memory, whom I
+remember seeing at various balls during the visit of the
+Muscovites, &amp;c. in 1814) must be very consolatory to all true
+lieges, as well as foreigners, except Signor Travis, a rich Jew
+merchant of this city, who complains grievously of the length of
+British mourning, which has countermanded all the silks which he
+was on the point of transmitting, for a year to come. The death of
+this poor girl is melancholy in every respect, dying at twenty or
+so, in childbed&mdash;of a <i>boy</i> too, a present princess and future
+queen, and just as she began to be happy, and to enjoy herself, and
+the hopes which she inspired.</p>
+
+<p>"I think, as far as I can recollect, she is the first royal defunct
+in childbed upon record in <i>our</i> history. I feel sorry in every
+respect&mdash;for the loss of a female reign, and a woman hitherto
+harmless; and all the<span class="pagenum"><a id="page75" name="page75"></a>Pg 75</span> lost rejoicings, and addresses, and
+drunkenness, and disbursements, of John Bull on the occasion.</p>
+
+<p>"The Prince will marry again, after divorcing his wife, and Mr.
+Southey will write an elegy now, and an ode then; the Quarterly
+will have an article against the press, and the Edinburgh an
+article, <i>half</i> and <i>half</i>, about reform and right of divorce; the
+British will give you Dr. Chalmers's funeral sermon much commended,
+with a place in the stars for deceased royalty; and the Morning
+Post will have already yelled forth its 'syllables of dolour.'</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"Woe, woe, Nealliny!&mdash;the young Nealliny!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"It is some time since I have heard from you: are you in bad
+humour? I suppose so. I have been so myself, and it is your turn
+now, and by and by mine will come round again. Yours truly,</p>
+
+<p>"B.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. Countess Albrizzi, come back from Paris, has brought me a
+medal of himself, a present from Denon to me, and a likeness of Mr.
+Rogers (belonging to her), by Denon also."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 303. TO MR. HOPPNER.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, December 15. 1817.</p>
+
+<p>"I should have thanked you before, for your favour a few days ago,
+had I not been in the intention of paying my respects, personally,
+this evening, from which I am deterred by the recollection that you
+will probably be at the Count Goess's this evening, which has made
+me postpone my intrusion.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page76" name="page76"></a>Pg 76</span></p>
+
+<p>"I think your Elegy a remarkably good one, not only as a
+composition, but both the politics and poetry contain a far greater
+portion of truth and generosity than belongs to the times, or to
+the professors of these opposite pursuits, which usually agree only
+in one point, as extremes meet. I do not know whether you wished me
+to retain the copy, but I shall retain it till you tell me
+otherwise; and am very much obliged by the perusal.</p>
+
+<p>"My own sentiments on Venice, &amp;c., such as they are, I had already
+thrown into verse last summer, in the fourth Canto of Childe
+Harold, now in preparation for the press; and I think much more
+highly of them, for being in coincidence with yours.</p>
+
+<p>"Believe me yours," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 304. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, January 8. 1818.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"My dear Mr. Murray,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">You're in a damn'd hurry<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">To set up this ultimate Canto;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">But (if they don't rob us)<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">You'll see Mr. Hobhouse<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Will bring it safe in his portmanteau.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"For the Journal you hint of,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">As ready to print off,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">No doubt you do right to commend it;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">But as yet I have writ off<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">The devil a bit of<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Our 'Beppo;'&mdash;when copied, I'll send it.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page77" name="page77"></a>Pg 77</span>
+<span class="i4">"Then you've * * * Tour,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">No great things, so be sure,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">You could hardly begin with a less work;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">For the pompous rascallion,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Who don't speak Italian<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Nor French, must have scribbled by guess-work.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"You can make any loss up<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">With 'Spence' and his gossip,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">A work which must surely succeed;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Then Queen Mary's Epistle-craft,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">With the new 'Fytte' of 'Whistlecraft,'<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Must make people purchase and read.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"Then you've General Gordon,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Who girded his sword on,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">To serve with a Muscovite master,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">And help him to polish<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">A nation so owlish,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">They thought shaving their beards a disaster.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"For the man, '<i>poor and shrewd</i><a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a>,'<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">With whom you'd conclude<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">A compact without more delay,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Perhaps some such pen is<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Still extant in Venice;<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">But please, sir, to mention <i>your pay</i>."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 305. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, January 19. 1818.</p>
+
+<p>"I send you the Story<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> in three other separate covers. It won't
+do for your Journal, being full of political allusions. <i>Print
+alone, without name</i>; alter<span class="pagenum"><a id="page78" name="page78"></a>Pg 78</span> nothing; get a scholar to see that the
+<i>Italian phrases</i> are correctly published, (your printing, by the
+way, always makes me ill with its eternal blunders, which are
+incessant,) and God speed you. Hobhouse left Venice a fortnight
+ago, saving two days. I have heard nothing of or from him.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"He has the whole of the MSS.; so put up prayers in your back shop,
+or in the printer's 'Chapel.'"</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 306. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, January 27. 1818.</p>
+
+<p>"My father&mdash;that is, my Armenian father, Padre Pasquali&mdash;in the
+name of all the other fathers of our Convent, sends you the
+enclosed, greeting.</p>
+
+<p>"Inasmuch as it has pleased the translators of the long-lost and
+lately-found portions of the text of Eusebius to put forth the
+enclosed prospectus, of which I send six copies, you are hereby
+implored to obtain subscribers in the two Universities, and among
+the learned, and the unlearned who would unlearn their
+ignorance&mdash;This <i>they</i> (the Convent) request, <i>I</i> request, and <i>do
+you</i> request.</p>
+
+<p>"I sent you Beppo some weeks agone. You must publish it alone; it
+has politics and ferocity, and won't do for your isthmus of a
+Journal.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Hobhouse, if the Alps have not broken his neck, is, or ought
+to be, swimming with my commentaries and his own coat of mail in
+his teeth and right hand, in a cork jacket, between Calais and
+Dover.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page79" name="page79"></a>Pg 79</span></p>
+
+<p>"It is the height of the Carnival, and I am in the extreme and
+agonies of a new intrigue with I don't exactly know whom or what,
+except that she is insatiate of love, and won't take money, and has
+light hair and blue eyes, which are not common here, and that I met
+her at the Masque, and that when her mask is off, I am as wise as
+ever. I shall make what I can of the remainder of my youth."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 307. TO MR. MOORE.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, February 2. 1818.</p>
+
+<p>"Your letter of December 8th arrived but this day, by some delay,
+common but inexplicable. Your domestic calamity is very grievous,
+and I feel with you as much as I <i>dare</i> feel at all. Throughout
+life, your loss must be my loss, and your gain my gain; and, though
+my heart may ebb, there will always be a drop for you among the
+dregs.</p>
+
+<p>"I know how to feel with you, because (selfishness being always the
+substratum of our damnable clay) I am quite wrapt up in my own
+children. Besides my little legitimate, I have made unto myself an
+<i>il</i>legitimate since (to say nothing of one before<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a>), and I look
+forward to one of these as the pillar of my old age, supposing that
+I ever reach&mdash;which I hope I never shall&mdash;that desolating period. I
+have a great love for my little Ada, though perhaps she may torture
+me, like * * *.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page80" name="page80"></a>Pg 80</span></p>
+
+<p>"Your offered address will be as acceptable as you can wish. I
+don't much care what the wretches of the world think of me&mdash;all
+<i>that's</i> past. But I care a good deal what <i>you</i> think of me, and,
+so, say what you like. You <i>know</i> that I am not sullen; and, as to
+being <i>savage</i>, such things depend on circumstances. However, as to
+being in good humour in <i>your</i> society, there is no great merit in
+that, because it would be an effort, or an insanity, to be
+otherwise.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know what Murray may have been saying or quoting.<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> I
+called Crabbe and Sam the fathers of present Poesy; and said, that
+I thought&mdash;except them&mdash;<i>all</i> of '<i>us youth</i>' were on a wrong tack.
+But I never said that we did not sail well. Our fame will be hurt
+by <i>admiration</i> and <i>imitation</i>. When I say <i>our</i>, I mean <i>all</i>
+(Lakers included), except the postscript of the Augustans. The next
+generation (from the quantity and facility of imitation) will
+tumble and break their necks off our Pegasus, who<span class="pagenum"><a id="page81" name="page81"></a>Pg 81</span> runs away with
+us; but we keep the <i>saddle</i>, because we broke the rascal and can
+ride. But though easy to mount, he is the devil to guide; and the
+next fellows must go back to the riding-school and the man&egrave;ge, and
+learn to ride the 'great horse.'</p>
+
+<p>"Talking of horses, by the way, I have transported my own, four in
+number, to the Lido (<i>beach</i> in English), a strip of some ten miles
+along the Adriatic, a mile or two from the city; so that I not only
+get a row in my gondola, but a spanking gallop of some miles daily
+along a firm and solitary beach, from the fortress to Malamocco,
+the which contributes considerably to my health and spirits.</p>
+
+<p>"I have hardly had a wink of sleep this week past. We are in the
+agonies of the Carnival's last days, and I must be up all night
+again, as well as to-morrow. I have had some curious masking
+adventures this Carnival; but, as they are not yet over, I shall
+not say on. I will work the mine of my youth to the last veins of
+the ore, and then&mdash;good night. I have lived, and am content.</p>
+
+<p>"Hobhouse went away before the Carnival began, so that he had
+little or no fun. Besides, it requires some time to be
+thoroughgoing with the Venetians; but of all this anon, in some
+other letter.</p>
+
+<p>"I must dress for the evening. There is an opera and ridotto, and I
+know not what, besides balls; and so, ever and ever yours,</p>
+
+<p>"B.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. I send this without revision, so excuse errors. I delight in
+the fame and fortune of Lalla, and again congratulate you on your
+well-merited success."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' /><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page82" name="page82"></a>Pg 82</span></p>
+
+<p>Of his daily rides on the Lido, which he mentions in this letter, the
+following account, by a gentleman who lived a good deal with him at
+Venice, will be found not a little interesting:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Almost immediately after Mr. Hobhouse's departure, Lord Byron proposed
+to me to accompany him in his rides on the Lido. One of the long narrow
+islands which separate the Lagune, in the midst of which Venice stands,
+from the Adriatic, is more particularly distinguished by this name. At
+one extremity is a fortification, which, with the Castle of St. Andrea
+on an island on the opposite side, defends the nearest entrance to the
+city from the sea. In times of peace this fortification is almost
+dismantled, and Lord Byron had hired here of the Commandant an
+unoccupied stable, where he kept his horses. The distance from the city
+was not very considerable; it was much less than to the Terra Firma,
+and, as far as it went, the spot was not ineligible for riding.</p>
+
+<p>"Every day that the weather would permit, Lord Byron called for me in
+his gondola, and we found the horses waiting for us outside of the fort.
+We rode as far as we could along the sea-shore, and then on a kind of
+dyke, or embankment, which has been raised where the island was very
+narrow, as far as another small fort about half way between the
+principal one which I have already mentioned, and the town or village of
+Malamocco, which is near the other extremity of the island,&mdash;the
+distance between the two forts being about three miles.</p>
+
+<p>"On the land side of the embankment, not far<span class="pagenum"><a id="page83" name="page83"></a>Pg 83</span> from the smaller fort, was
+a boundary stone which probably marked some division of property,&mdash;all
+the side of the island nearest the Lagune being divided into gardens for
+the cultivation of vegetables for the Venetian markets. At the foot of
+this stone Lord Byron repeatedly told me that I should cause him to be
+interred, if he should die in Venice, or its neighbourhood, during my
+residence there; and he appeared to think, as he was not a Catholic,
+that, on the part of the government, there could be no obstacle to his
+interment in an unhallowed spot of ground by the sea-side. At all
+events, I was to overcome whatever difficulties might be raised on this
+account. I was, by no means, he repeatedly told me, to allow his body to
+be removed to England, nor permit any of his family to interfere with
+his funeral.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing could be more delightful than these rides on the Lido were to
+me. We were from half to three quarters of an hour crossing the water,
+during which his conversation was always most amusing and interesting.
+Sometimes he would bring with him any new book he had received, and read
+to me the passages which most struck him. Often he would repeat to me
+whole stanzas of the poems he was engaged in writing, as he had composed
+them on the preceding evening; and this was the more interesting to me,
+because I could frequently trace in them some idea which he had started
+in our conversation of the preceding day, or some remark, the effect of
+which he had been evidently trying upon me. Occasionally, too, he spoke
+of his own<span class="pagenum"><a id="page84" name="page84"></a>Pg 84</span> affairs, making me repeat all I had heard with regard to
+him, and desiring that I would not spare him, but let him know the worst
+that was said."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 308. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, Feb. 20. 1818.</p>
+
+<p>"I have to thank Mr. Croker for the arrival, and you for the
+contents, of the parcel which came last week, much quicker than any
+before, owing to Mr. Croker's kind attention and the official
+exterior of the bags; and all safe, except much friction amongst
+the magnesia, of which only two bottles came entire; but it is all
+very well, and I am exceedingly obliged to you.</p>
+
+<p>"The books I have read, or rather am reading. Pray, who may be the
+Sexagenarian, whose gossip is very amusing? Many of his sketches I
+recognise, particularly Gifford, Mackintosh, Drummond, Dutens, H.
+Walpole, Mrs. Inchbald, Opie, &amp;c., with the Scotts, Loughborough,
+and most of the divines and lawyers, besides a few shorter hints of
+authors, and a few lines about a certain '<i>noble author</i>,'
+characterised as malignant and sceptical, according to the good old
+story, 'as it was in the beginning, is now, but <i>not</i> always shall
+be:' do you know such a person, Master Murray? eh?&mdash;And pray, of
+the booksellers, which be <i>you</i>? the dry, the dirty, the honest,
+the opulent, the finical, the splendid, or the coxcomb bookseller?
+Stap my vitals, but the author grows scurrilous in his grand
+climacteric!</p>
+
+<p>"I remember to have seen Porson at Cambridge,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page85" name="page85"></a>Pg 85</span> in the hall of our
+college, and in private parties, but not frequently; and I never
+can recollect him except as drunk or brutal, and generally both: I
+mean in an evening, for in the hall he dined at the Dean's table,
+and I at the Vice-master's, so that I was not near him; and he then
+and there appeared sober in his demeanour, nor did I ever hear of
+excess or outrage on his part in public,&mdash;commons, college, or
+chapel; but I have seen him in a private party of undergraduates,
+many of them fresh men and strangers, take up a poker to one of
+them, and heard him use language as blackguard as his action. I
+have seen Sheridan drunk, too, with all the world; but his
+intoxication was that of Bacchus, and Porson's that of Silenus. Of
+all the disgusting brutes, sulky, abusive, and intolerable, Porson
+was the most bestial, as far as the few times that I saw him went,
+which were only at William Bankes's (the Nubian discoverer's)
+rooms. I saw him once go away in a rage, because nobody knew the
+name of the 'Cobbler of Messina,' insulting their ignorance with
+the most vulgar terms of reprobation. He was tolerated in this
+state amongst the young men for his talents, as the Turks think a
+madman inspired, and bear with him. He used to recite, or rather
+vomit, pages of all languages, and could hiccup Greek like a Helot;
+and certainly Sparta never shocked her children with a grosser
+exhibition than this man's intoxication.</p>
+
+<p>"I perceive, in the book you sent me, a long account of him, which
+is very savage. I cannot judge, as I never saw him sober, except in
+<i>hall</i> or combin<span class="pagenum"><a id="page86" name="page86"></a>Pg 86</span>ation-room; and then I was never near enough to
+hear, and hardly to see him. Of his drunken deportment, I can be
+sure, because I saw it.</p>
+
+<p>"With the Reviews I have been much entertained. It requires to be
+as far from England as I am to relish a periodical paper properly:
+it is like soda-water in an Italian summer. But what cruel work you
+make with Lady * * * *! You should recollect that she is a woman;
+though, to be sure, they are now and then very provoking; still, as
+authoresses, they can do no great harm; and I think it a pity so
+much good invective should have been laid out upon her, when there
+is such a fine field of us Jacobin gentlemen for you to work upon.</p>
+
+<p>"I heard from Moore lately, and was sorry to be made aware of his
+domestic loss. Thus it is&mdash;'medio de fonte leporum'&mdash;in the acm&eacute; of
+his fame and his happiness comes a drawback as usual.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Hoppner, whom I saw this morning, has been made the father of
+a very fine boy<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a>.&mdash;Mother<span class="pagenum"><a id="page87" name="page87"></a>Pg 87</span> and child doing very well indeed. By
+this time Hobhouse should be with you, and also certain packets,
+letters, &amp;c. of mine, sent since his departure.&mdash;I am not at all
+well in health within this last eight days. My remembrances to
+Gifford and all friends.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"B.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. In the course of a month or two, Hanson will have probably to
+send off a clerk with conveyances to sign (Newstead being sold in
+November last for ninety-four thousand five hundred pounds), in
+which case I supplicate supplies of articles as usual, for which,
+desire Mr. Kinnaird to settle from funds in their bank, and deduct
+from my account with him.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. To-morrow night I am going to see 'Otello,' an opera from our
+'Othello,' and one of Rossini's best, it is said. It will be
+curious to see in Venice the Venetian story itself represented,
+besides to discover what they will make of Shakspeare in music."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 309. TO MR. HOPPNER.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, February 28. 1818.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Sir,</p>
+
+<p>"Our friend, il Conte M., threw me into a cold sweat last night, by
+telling me of a menaced version of Manfred (in Venetian, I hope, to
+complete the thing) by some Italian, who had sent it to you for<span class="pagenum"><a id="page88" name="page88"></a>Pg 88</span>
+correction, which is the reason why I take the liberty of troubling
+you on the subject. If you have any means of communication with the
+man, would you permit me to convey to him the offer of any price he
+may obtain or think to obtain for his project, provided he will
+throw his translation into the fire<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a>, and promise not to
+undertake any other of that or any other of <i>my</i> things: I will
+send his money immediately on this condition.</p>
+
+<p>"As I did not write <i>to</i> the Italians, nor <i>for</i> the Italians, nor
+<i>of</i> the Italians, (except in a poem not yet published, where I
+have said all the good I know or do not know of them, and none of
+the harm,) I confess I wish that they would let me alone, and not<span class="pagenum"><a id="page89" name="page89"></a>Pg 89</span>
+drag me into their arena as one of the gladiators, in a silly
+contest which I neither understand nor have ever interfered with,
+having kept clear of all their literary parties, both here and at
+Milan, and elsewhere.&mdash;I came into Italy to feel the climate and be
+quiet, if possible. Mossi's translation I would have prevented, if
+I had known it, or could have done so; and I trust that I shall yet
+be in time to stop this new gentleman, of whom I heard yesterday
+for the first time. He will only hurt himself, and do no good to
+his party, for in <i>party</i> the whole thing originates. Our modes of
+thinking and writing are so unutterably different, that I can
+conceive no greater absurdity than attempting to make any approach
+between the English and Italian poetry of the present day. I like
+the people very much, and their literature very much, but I am not
+the least ambitious of being the subject of their discussions
+literary and personal (which appear to be pretty much the same
+thing, as is the case in most countries); and if you can aid me in
+impeding this publication, you will add to much kindness already
+received from you by yours Ever and truly,</p>
+
+<p>"BYRON.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. How is <i>the</i> son, and mamma? Well, I dare say."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 310. TO MR. ROGERS.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, March 3. 1828.</p>
+
+<p>"I have not, as you say, 'taken to wife the Adriatic.' I heard of
+Moore's loss from himself in a letter which was delayed upon the
+road three<span class="pagenum"><a id="page90" name="page90"></a>Pg 90</span> months. I was sincerely sorry for it, but in such cases
+what are words?</p>
+
+<p>"The villa you speak of is one at Este, which Mr. Hoppner
+(Consul-general here) has transferred to me. I have taken it for
+two years as a place of Villeggiatura. The situation is very
+beautiful, indeed, among the Euganean hills, and the house very
+fair. The vines are luxuriant to a great degree, and all the fruits
+of the earth abundant. It is close to the old castle of the Estes,
+or Guelphs, and within a few miles of Arqua, which I have visited
+twice, and hope to visit often.</p>
+
+<p>"Last summer (except an excursion to Rome) I passed upon the
+Brenta. In Venice I winter, transporting my horses to the Lido,
+bordering the Adriatic (where the fort is), so that I get a gallop
+of some miles daily along the strip of beach which reaches to
+Malamocco, when in health; but within these few weeks I have been
+unwell. At present I am getting better. The Carnival was short, but
+a good one. I don't go out much, except during the time of masques;
+but there are one or two conversazioni, where I go regularly, just
+to keep up the system; as I had letters to their givers; and they
+are particular on such points; and now and then, though very
+rarely, to the Governor's.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a very good place for women. I like the dialect and their
+manner very much. There is a <i>na&iuml;vet&eacute;</i> about them which is very
+winning, and the romance of the place is a mighty adjunct; the <i>bel
+sangue</i> is not, however, now amongst the <i>dame</i> or higher orders;
+but all under <i>i fazzioli</i>, or kerchiefs<span class="pagenum"><a id="page91" name="page91"></a>Pg 91</span> (a white kind of veil
+which the lower orders wear upon their heads);&mdash;the <i>vesta
+zendale</i>, or old national female costume, is no more. The city,
+however, is decaying daily, and does not gain in population.
+However, I prefer it to any other in Italy; and here have I pitched
+my staff, and here do I purpose to reside for the remainder of my
+life, unless events, connected with business not to be transacted
+out of England, compel me to return for that purpose; otherwise I
+have few regrets, and no desires to visit it again for its own
+sake. I shall probably be obliged to do so, to sign papers for my
+affairs, and a proxy for the Whigs, and to see Mr. Waite, for I
+can't find a good dentist here, and every two or three years one
+ought to consult one. About seeing my children I must take my
+chance. One I shall have sent here; and I shall be very happy to
+see the legitimate one, when God pleases, which he perhaps will
+some day or other. As for my mathematical * * *, I am as well
+without her.</p>
+
+<p>"Your account of your visit to Fonthill is very striking: could you
+beg of <i>him</i> for <i>me</i> a copy in MS. of the remaining <i>Tales</i>?<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> I
+think I deserve them, as a strenuous and public admirer of the
+first one. I will return it when read, and make no ill use of the
+copy, if granted. Murray would send me out any thing safely. If
+ever I return to England, I should<span class="pagenum"><a id="page92" name="page92"></a>Pg 92</span> like very much to see the
+author, with his permission. In the mean time, you could not oblige
+me more than by obtaining me the perusal I request, in French or
+English,&mdash;all's one for that, though I prefer Italian to either. I
+have a French copy of Vathek which I bought at Lausanne. I can read
+French with great pleasure and facility, though I neither speak nor
+write it. Now Italian I <i>can</i> speak with some fluency, and write
+sufficiently for my purposes, but I don't like their <i>modern</i> prose
+at all; it is very heavy, and so different from Machiavelli.</p>
+
+<p>"They say Francis is Junius;&mdash;I think it looks like it. I remember
+meeting him at Earl Grey's at dinner. Has not he lately married a
+young woman; and was not he Madame Talleyrand's <i>cavaliere
+servente</i> in India years ago?</p>
+
+<p>"I read my death in the papers, which was not true. I see they are
+marrying the remaining singleness of the royal family. They have
+brought out Fazio with great and deserved success at Covent Garden:
+that's a good sign. I tried, during the directory, to have it done
+at Drury Lane, but was overruled. If you think of coming into this
+country, you will let me know perhaps beforehand. I suppose Moore
+won't move. Rose is here. I saw him the other night at Madame
+Albrizzi's; he talks of returning in May. My love to the Hollands.</p>
+
+<p>"Ever, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. They have been crucifying Othello into an opera (<i>Otello</i>, by
+Rossini): the music good, but lugubrious; but as for the words, all
+the real scenes with Iago cut out, and the greatest nonsense
+instead;<span class="pagenum"><a id="page93" name="page93"></a>Pg 93</span> the handkerchief turned into a <i>billet-doux</i>, and the
+first singer would not <i>black</i> his face, for some exquisite reasons
+assigned in the preface. Singing, dresses, and music, very good."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 311. TO MR. MOORE.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, March 16. 1818.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Tom,</p>
+
+<p>"Since my last, which I hope that you have received, I have had a
+letter from our friend Samuel. He talks of Italy this summer&mdash;won't
+you come with him? I don't know whether you would like our Italian
+way of life or not.</p>
+
+<p>"They are an odd people. The other day I was telling a girl, 'You
+must not come to-morrow, because Margueritta is coming at such a
+time,'&mdash;(they are both about five feet ten inches high, with great
+black eyes and fine figures&mdash;fit to breed gladiators from&mdash;and I
+had some difficulty to prevent a battle upon a rencontre once
+before,)&mdash;'unless you promise to be friends, and'&mdash;the answer was
+an interruption, by a declaration of war against the other, which
+she said would be a 'Guerra di Candia.' Is it not odd, that the
+lower order of Venetians should still allude proverbially to that
+famous contest, so glorious and so fatal to the Republic?</p>
+
+<p>"They have singular expressions, like all the Italians. For
+example, 'Viscere'&mdash;as we would say, 'My love,' or 'My heart,' as
+an expression of tenderness. Also, 'I would go for you into the
+midst of a hundred <i>knives</i>.'&mdash;'<i>Mazza ben</i>,' excessive<span class="pagenum"><a id="page94" name="page94"></a>Pg 94</span>
+attachment,&mdash;literally, 'I wish you well even to killing.' Then
+they say (instead of our way, 'Do you think I would do you so much
+harm?') 'Do you think I would <i>assassinate</i> you in such a
+manner?'&mdash;'Tempo <i>perfido</i>,' bad weather; 'Strade <i>perfide</i>,' bad
+roads,&mdash;with a thousand other allusions and metaphors, taken from
+the state of society and habits in the middle ages.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not so sure about <i>mazza</i>, whether it don't mean <i>massa</i>,
+<i>i.e.</i> a great deal, a <i>mass</i>, instead of the interpretation I have
+given it. But of the other phrases I am sure.</p>
+
+<p>"Three o' th' clock&mdash;I must 'to bed, to bed, to bed,' as mother S *
+* (that tragical friend of the mathematical * * *) says.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you ever seen&mdash;I forget what or whom&mdash;no matter. They tell me
+Lady Melbourne is very unwell. I shall be so sorry. She was my
+greatest <i>friend</i>, of the feminine gender:&mdash;when I say 'friend,' I
+mean <i>not</i> mistress, for that's the antipode. Tell me all about you
+and every body&mdash;how Sam is&mdash;how you like your neighbours, the
+Marquis and Marchesa, &amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"Ever," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 312. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, March 25. 1818.</p>
+
+<p>"I have your letter, with the account of 'Beppo,' for which I sent
+you four new stanzas a fortnight ago, in case you print, or
+reprint.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page95" name="page95"></a>Pg 95</span></p>
+
+<p>"Croker's is a good guess; but the style is not English, it is
+Italian;&mdash;Berni is the original of <i>all</i>. Whistlecraft was <i>my</i>
+immediate <i>model</i>! Rose's 'Animali' I never saw till a few days
+ago,&mdash;they are excellent. But (as I said above) Berni is the father
+of that kind of writing, which, I think, suits our language, too,
+very well;&mdash;we shall see by the experiment. If it does, I shall
+send you a volume in a year or two, for I know the Italian way of
+life well, and in time may know it yet better; and as for the verse
+and the passions, I have them still in tolerable vigour.</p>
+
+<p>"If you think that it will do you and the work, or works, any good,
+you may put my name to it; <i>but first consult the knowing ones</i>. It
+will, at any rate, show them that I can write cheerfully, and repel
+the charge of monotony and mannerism.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 313. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, April 11. 1818.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you send me by letter, packet, or parcel, half a dozen of the
+coloured prints from Holmes's miniature (the latter done shortly
+before I left your country, and the prints about a year ago); I
+shall be obliged to you, as some people here have asked me for the
+like. It is a picture of my upright self done for Scrope B. Davies,
+Esq.<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a></p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page96" name="page96"></a>Pg 96</span></p>
+
+<p>"Why have you not sent me an answer, and list of subscribers to the
+translation of the Armenian <i>Eusebius</i>? of which I sent you printed
+copies of the prospectus (in French) two moons ago. Have you had
+the letter?&mdash;I shall send you another:&mdash;you must not neglect my
+Armenians. Tooth-powder, magnesia, tincture of myrrh,
+tooth-brushes, diachylon plaster, Peruvian bark, are my personal
+demands.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"Strahan, Tonson, Lintot of the times,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Patron and publisher of rhymes,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">For thee the bard up Pindus climbs,<br /></span>
+<span class="i12">My Murray.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"To thee, with hope and terror dumb,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">The unfledged MS. authors come;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Thou printest all&mdash;and sellest some&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i12">My Murray.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"Upon thy table's baize so green<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">The last new Quarterly is seen,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">But where is thy new Magazine,<br /></span>
+<span class="i12">My Murray?<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"Along thy sprucest bookshelves shine<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">The works thou deemest most divine&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">The 'Art of Cookery,' and mine,<br /></span>
+<span class="i12">My Murray.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page97" name="page97"></a>Pg 97</span>
+<span class="i4">"Tours, Travels, Essays, too, I wist,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">And Sermons to thy mill bring grist!<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">And then thou hast the 'Navy List,'<br /></span>
+<span class="i12">My Murray.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"And Heaven forbid I should conclude<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Without 'the Board of Longitude,'<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Although this narrow paper would,<br /></span>
+<span class="i12">My Murray!"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 314. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, April 12. 1818.</p>
+
+<p>"This letter will be delivered by Signor Gioe. Bata. Missiaglia,
+proprietor of the Apollo library, and the principal publisher and
+bookseller now in Venice. He sets out for London with a view to
+business and correspondence with the English booksellers: and it is
+in the hope that it may be for your mutual advantage that I furnish
+him with this letter of introduction to you. If you can be of use
+to him, either by recommendation to others, or by any personal
+attention on your own part, you will oblige him and gratify me. You
+may also perhaps both be able to derive advantage, or establish
+some mode of literary communication, pleasing to the public, and
+beneficial to one another.</p>
+
+<p>"At any rate, be civil to him for my sake, as well as for the
+honour and glory of publishers and authors now and to come for
+evermore.</p>
+
+<p>"With him I also consign a great number of MS. letters written in
+English, French, and Italian, by various English established in
+Italy during the last<span class="pagenum"><a id="page98" name="page98"></a>Pg 98</span> century:&mdash;the names of the writers, Lord
+Hervey, Lady M.W. Montague, (hers are but few&mdash;some billets-doux in
+French to Algarotti, and one letter in English, Italian, and all
+sorts of jargon, to the same,) Gray, the poet (one letter), Mason
+(two or three), Garrick, Lord Chatham, David Hume, and many of
+lesser note,&mdash;all addressed to Count Algarotti. Out of these, I
+think, with discretion, an amusing miscellaneous volume of letters
+might be extracted, provided some good editor were disposed to
+undertake the selection, and preface, and a few notes, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"The proprietor of these is a friend of mine, <i>Dr. Aglietti</i>,&mdash;a
+great name in Italy,&mdash;and if you are disposed to publish, it will
+be for <i>his benefit</i>, and it is to and for him that you will name a
+price, if you take upon you the work. <i>I</i> would <i>edite</i> it myself,
+but am too far off, and too lazy to undertake it; but I wish that
+it could be done. The letters of Lord Hervey, in Mr. Rose's<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a>
+opinion and mine, are good;<span class="pagenum"><a id="page99" name="page99"></a>Pg 99</span> and the <i>short</i> French love letters
+<i>certainly</i> are Lady M.W. Montague's&mdash;the <i>French</i> not good, but
+the sentiments beautiful. Gray's letter good; and Mason's
+tolerable. The whole correspondence must be <i>well weeded</i>; but this
+being done, a small and pretty popular volume might be made of
+it.&mdash;There are many ministers' letters&mdash;Gray, the ambassador at
+Naples, Horace Mann, and others of the same kind of animal.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought of a preface, defending Lord Hervey against Pope's
+attack, but Pope&mdash;<i>quoad</i> Pope, the poet&mdash;against all the world, in
+the unjustifiable attempts begun by Warton and carried on at this
+day by the new school of critics and scribblers, who think
+themselves poets because they do <i>not</i> write like Pope. I have no
+patience with such cursed humbug and bad taste; your whole
+generation are not worth a Canto of the Rape of the Lock, or the
+Essay on Man, or the Dunciad, or 'any thing that is his.'&mdash;But it
+is three in the matin, and I must go to bed. Yours alway," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 315. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, April 17. 1818.</p>
+
+<p>"A few days ago, I wrote to you a letter, requesting you to desire
+Hanson to desire his messenger to<span class="pagenum"><a id="page100" name="page100"></a>Pg 100</span> come on from Geneva to Venice,
+because I won't go from Venice to Geneva; and if this is not done,
+the messenger may be damned, with him who mis-sent him. Pray
+reiterate my request.</p>
+
+<p>"With the proofs returned, I sent two additional stanzas for Canto
+fourth: did they arrive?</p>
+
+<p>"Your Monthly reviewer has made a mistake: <i>Cavaliere</i>, alone, is
+well enough; but '<i>Cavalier' servente</i>' has always the <i>e</i> mute in
+conversation, and omitted in writing; so that it is not for the
+sake of metre; and pray let Griffiths know this, with my
+compliments. I humbly conjecture that I know as much of Italian
+society and language as any of his people; but, to make assurance
+doubly sure, I asked, at the Countess Benzona's last night, the
+question of more than one person in <i>the office</i>, and of these
+'cavalieri serventi' (in the plural, recollect) I found that they
+all accorded in pronouncing for 'cavalier' servente' in the
+<i>singular</i> number. I wish Mr. * * * * (or whoever Griffiths'
+scribbler may be) would not talk of what he don't understand. Such
+fellows are not fit to be intrusted with Italian, even in a
+quotation.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you receive two additional stanzas, to be inserted towards the
+close of Canto fourth? Respond, that (if not) they may be sent.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell Mr. * * and Mr. Hanson that they may as well expect Geneva to
+come to me, as that I should go to Geneva. The messenger may go on
+or return, as he pleases; I won't stir: and I look upon it as a
+piece of singular absurdity in those who know me imagining that I
+should;&mdash;not to say <i>malice</i>, in<span class="pagenum"><a id="page101" name="page101"></a>Pg 101</span> attempting unnecessary torture.
+If, on the occasion, my interests should suffer, it is their
+neglect that is to blame; and they may all be d&mdash;&mdash;d together.</p>
+
+<p>"It is ten o'clock and time to dress.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 316. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"April 23. 1818.</p>
+
+<p>"The time is past in which I could feel for the dead,&mdash;or I should
+feel for the death of Lady Melbourne, the best, and kindest, and
+ablest female I ever knew, old or young. But 'I have supped full of
+horrors,' and events of this kind have only a kind of numbness
+worse than pain,&mdash;like a violent blow on the elbow or the head.
+There is one link less between England and myself.</p>
+
+<p>"Now to business. I presented you with Beppo, as part of the
+contract for Canto fourth,&mdash;considering the price you are to pay
+for the same, and intending to eke you out in case of public
+caprice or my own poetical failure. If you choose to suppress it
+entirely, at Mr. * * * *'s suggestion, you may do as you please.
+But recollect it is not to be published in a <i>garbled</i> or
+<i>mutilated</i> state. I reserve to my friends and myself the right of
+correcting the press;&mdash;if the publication continue, it is to
+continue in its present form.</p>
+
+<p>"As Mr. * * says that he did not write this letter, &amp;c. I am ready
+to believe him; but for the firmness of my former persuasion, I
+refer to Mr. * * * *, who can inform you how sincerely I erred on
+this point.<span class="pagenum"><a id="page102" name="page102"></a>Pg 102</span> He has also the note&mdash;or, at least, had it, for I gave
+it to him with my verbal comments thereupon. As to 'Beppo,' I will
+not alter or suppress a syllable for any man's pleasure but my own.</p>
+
+<p>"You may tell them this; and add, that nothing but force or
+necessity shall stir me one step towards places to which they would
+wring me.</p>
+
+<p>"If your literary matters prosper let me know. If 'Beppo' pleases,
+you shall have more in a year or two in the same mood. And so 'Good
+morrow to you, good Master Lieutenant.' Yours," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 317. TO MR. MOORE.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Palazzo Mocenigo, Canal Grande,</p>
+
+<p>"Venice, June 1. 1818.</p>
+
+<p>"Your letter is almost the only news, as yet, of Canto fourth, and
+it has by no means settled its fate,&mdash;at least, does not tell me
+how the 'Poeshie' has been received by the public. But I suspect,
+no great things,&mdash;firstly, from Murray's 'horrid stillness;'
+secondly, from what you say about the stanzas running into each
+other<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a>, which I take <i>not</i> to be <i>yours</i>, but a notion you have
+been dinned with among the Blues. The fact is, that the terza rima
+of the Italians, which always <i>runs</i> on and in, may have led me
+into experiments, and carelessness into conceit&mdash;or conceit into
+carelessness&mdash;in either of which events failure will be probable,
+and my fair woman,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page103" name="page103"></a>Pg 103</span> 'superne,' end in a fish; so that Childe Harold
+will be like the mermaid, my family crest, with the fourth Canto
+for a tail thereunto. I won't quarrel with the public, however, for
+the 'Bulgars' are generally right; and if I miss now, I may hit
+another time:&mdash;and so, the 'gods give us joy.'</p>
+
+<p>"You like Beppo, that's right. I have not had the Fudges yet, but
+live in hopes. I need not say that your successes are mine. By the
+way, Lydia White is here, and has just borrowed my copy of 'Lalla
+Rookh.'</p>
+
+<p>"Hunt's letter is probably the exact piece of vulgar coxcombry you
+might expect from his situation. He is a good man, with some
+poetical elements in his chaos; but spoilt by the Christ-Church
+Hospital and a Sunday newspaper,&mdash;to say nothing of the Surrey
+gaol, which conceited him into a martyr. But he is a good man. When
+I saw 'Rimini' in MS., I told him that I deemed it good poetry at
+bottom, disfigured only by a strange style. His answer was, that
+his style was a system, or <i>upon system</i>, or some such cant; and,
+when a man talks of system, his case is hopeless: so I said no more
+to him, and very little to any one else.</p>
+
+<p>"He believes his trash of vulgar phrases tortured into compound
+barbarisms to be <i>old</i> English; and we may say of it as Aimwell
+says of Captain Gibbet's regiment, when the Captain calls it an
+'old corps,'&mdash;'the <i>oldest</i> in Europe, if I may judge by your
+uniform.' He sent out his 'Foliage' by Percy Shelley * * *, and, of
+all the ineffable Centaurs that were ever begotten by Self-love
+upon a Night-mare, I think<span class="pagenum"><a id="page104" name="page104"></a>Pg 104</span> this monstrous Sagittary the most
+prodigious. <i>He</i> (Leigh H.) is an honest charlatan, who has
+persuaded himself into a belief of his own impostures, and talks
+Punch in pure simplicity of heart, taking himself (as poor
+Fitzgerald said of <i>himself</i> in the Morning Post) for <i>Vates</i> in
+both senses, or nonsenses, of the word. Did you look at the
+translations of his own which he prefers to Pope and Cowper, and
+says so?&mdash;Did you read his skimble-skamble about * * being at the
+head of his own <i>profession</i>, in the <i>eyes</i> of <i>those</i> who followed
+it? I thought that poetry was an <i>art</i>, or an <i>attribute</i>, and not
+a <i>profession</i>;&mdash;but be it one, is that * * * * * * at the head of
+<i>your</i> profession in <i>your</i> eyes? I'll be curst if he is of <i>mine</i>,
+or ever shall be. He is the only one of us (but of us he is not)
+whose coronation I would oppose. Let them take Scott, Campbell,
+Crabbe, or you, or me, or any of the living, and throne him;&mdash;but
+not this new Jacob Behmen, this * * * * * * whose pride might have
+kept him true, even had his principles turned as perverted as his
+<i>soi-disant</i> poetry.</p>
+
+<p>"But Leigh Hunt is a good man, and a good father&mdash;see his Odes to
+all the Masters Hunt;&mdash;a good husband&mdash;see his Sonnet to Mrs.
+Hunt;&mdash;a good friend&mdash;see his Epistles to different people;&mdash;and a
+great coxcomb and a very vulgar person in every thing about him.
+But that's not his fault, but of circumstances.<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a></p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page105" name="page105"></a>Pg 105</span></p>
+
+<p>"I do not know any good model for a life of Sheridan but that of
+<i>Savage</i>. Recollect, however, that the life of such a man may be
+made far more amusing than if he had been a Wilberforce;&mdash;and this
+without offending the living, or insulting the dead. The Whigs
+abuse him; however, he never left them, and such blunderers deserve
+neither credit nor compassion. As for his creditors,&mdash;remember,
+Sheridan <i>never had</i> a shilling, and was thrown, with great powers
+and passions, into the thick of the world, and placed upon the
+pinnacle of success, with no other external means to support him in
+his elevation. Did Fox * * * <i>pay his</i> debts?&mdash;or did Sheridan take
+a subscription? Was the * *'s drunkenness more excusable than his?
+Were his intrigues more notorious than those of all his
+contemporaries? and is his memory to be blasted, and theirs
+respected? Don't let yourself be led away by clamour, but compare
+him with the coalitioner Fox, and the pensioner Burke, as a man of
+principle, and with ten hundred thousand in personal views, and
+with none in talent, for he beat them all <i>out</i> and <i>out</i>. Without
+means, without connection, without character, (which might be false
+at first, and make him mad afterwards from desperation,) he beat
+them all, in all he ever attempted. But alas, poor human nature!
+Good night&mdash;or rather, morning. It is four, and the dawn gleams
+over the Grand Canal,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page106" name="page106"></a>Pg 106</span> and unshadows the Rialto. I must to bed; up
+all night&mdash;but, as George Philpot says, 'it's life, though, damme,
+it's life!' Ever yours, B.</p>
+
+<p>"Excuse errors&mdash;no time for revision. The post goes out at noon,
+and I sha'n't be up then. I will write again soon about your <i>plan</i>
+for a publication."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>During the greater part of the period which this last series of letters
+comprises, he had continued to occupy the same lodgings in an extremely
+narrow street called the Spezieria, at the house of the linen-draper, to
+whose lady he devoted so much of his thoughts. That he was, for the
+time, attached to this person,&mdash;as far as a passion so transient can
+deserve the name of attachment,&mdash;is evident from his whole conduct. The
+language of his letters shows sufficiently how much the novelty of this
+foreign tie had caught his fancy; and to the Venetians, among whom such
+arrangements are mere matters of course, the assiduity with which he
+attended his Signora to the theatre, and the ridottos, was a subject of
+much amusement. It was with difficulty, indeed, that he could be
+prevailed upon to absent himself from her so long as to admit of that
+hasty visit to the Immortal City, out of which one of his own noblest
+titles to immortality sprung; and having, in the space of a few weeks,
+drunk in more inspiration from all he saw than, in a less excited state,
+possibly, he might have imbibed in years, he again hurried back, without
+extending his journey to Naples,&mdash;having written to the fair Marianna to
+meet him at some distance from Venice.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page107" name="page107"></a>Pg 107</span></p>
+
+<p>Besides some seasonable acts of liberality to the husband, who had, it
+seems, failed in trade, he also presented to the lady herself a handsome
+set of diamonds; and there is an anecdote related in reference to this
+gift, which shows the exceeding easiness and forbearance of his
+disposition towards those who had acquired any hold on his heart. A
+casket, which was for sale, being one day offered to him, he was not a
+little surprised on discovering them to be the same jewels which he had,
+not long before, presented to his fair favourite, and which had, by some
+unromantic means, found their way back into the market. Without
+enquiring, however, any further into the circumstances, he generously
+repurchased the casket and presented it to the lady once more,
+good-humouredly taxing her with the very little estimation in which, as
+it appeared, she held his presents.</p>
+
+<p>To whatever extent this unsentimental incident may have had a share in
+dispelling the romance of his passion, it is certain that, before the
+expiration of the first twelvemonth, he began to find his lodgings in
+the Spezieria inconvenient, and accordingly entered into treaty with
+Count Gritti for his Palace on the Grand Canal,&mdash;engaging to give for
+it, what is considered, I believe, a large rent in Venice, 200 louis a
+year. On finding, however, that, in the counterpart of the lease brought
+for his signature, a new clause had been introduced, prohibiting him not
+only from underletting the house, in case he should leave Venice, but
+from even allowing any of his own friends to occupy it during his
+occasional absence,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page108" name="page108"></a>Pg 108</span> he declined closing on such terms; and resenting so
+material a departure from the original engagement, declared in society,
+that he would have no objection to give the same rent, though
+acknowledged to be exorbitant, for any other palace in Venice, however
+inferior, in all respects, to Count Gritti's. After such an
+announcement, he was not likely to remain long unhoused; and the
+Countess Mocenigo having offered him one of her three Palazzi, on the
+Grand Canal, he removed to this house in the summer of the present year,
+and continued to occupy it during the remainder of his stay in Venice.</p>
+
+<p>Highly censurable, in point of morality and decorum, as was his course
+of life while under the roof of Madame * *, it was (with pain I am
+forced to confess) venial in comparison with the strange, headlong
+career of licence to which, when weaned from that connection, he so
+unrestrainedly and, it may be added, defyingly abandoned himself. Of the
+state of his mind on leaving England I have already endeavoured to
+convey some idea, and, among the feelings that went to make up that
+self-centred spirit of resistance which he then opposed to his fate, was
+an indignant scorn of his own countrymen for the wrongs he thought they
+had done him. For a time, the kindly sentiments which he still harboured
+towards Lady Byron, and a sort of vague hope, perhaps, that all would
+yet come right again, kept his mind in a mood somewhat more softened and
+docile, as well as sufficiently under the influence of English opinion
+to prevent his breaking<span class="pagenum"><a id="page109" name="page109"></a>Pg 109</span> out into such open rebellion against it, as he
+unluckily did afterwards.</p>
+
+<p>By the failure of the attempted mediation with Lady Byron, his last link
+with home was severed; while, notwithstanding the quiet and unobtrusive
+life which he had led at Geneva, there was as yet, he found, no
+cessation of the slanderous warfare against his character;&mdash;the same
+busy and misrepresenting spirit which had tracked his every step at home
+having, with no less malicious watchfulness, dogged him into exile. To
+this persuasion, for which he had but too much grounds, was added all
+that an imagination like his could lend to truth,&mdash;all that he was left
+to interpret, in his own way, of the absent and the silent,&mdash;till, at
+length, arming himself against fancied enemies and wrongs, and, with the
+condition (as it seemed to him) of an outlaw, assuming also the
+desperation, he resolved, as his countrymen would not do justice to the
+better parts of his nature, to have, at least, the perverse satisfaction
+of braving and shocking them with the worst. It is to this feeling, I am
+convinced, far more than to any depraved taste for such a course of
+life, that the extravagances to which he now, for a short time, gave
+loose, are to be attributed. The exciting effect, indeed, of this mode
+of existence while it lasted, both upon his spirits and his genius,&mdash;so
+like what, as he himself tells us, was always produced in him by a state
+of contest and defiance,&mdash;showed how much of this latter feeling must
+have been mixed with his excesses. The altered character too, of his
+letters in this respect cannot fail,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page110" name="page110"></a>Pg 110</span> I think, to be remarked by the
+reader,&mdash;there being, with an evident increase of intellectual vigour, a
+tone of violence and bravado breaking out in them continually, which
+marks the high pitch of re-action to which he had now wound up his
+temper.</p>
+
+<p>In fact, so far from the powers of his intellect being at all weakened
+or dissipated by these irregularities, he was, perhaps, at no time of
+his life, so actively in the full possession of all its energies; and
+his friend Shelley, who went to Venice, at this period, to see him<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a>,
+used to say, that all he observed of<span class="pagenum"><a id="page111" name="page111"></a>Pg 111</span> the workings of Byron's mind,
+during his visit, gave him a far higher idea of its powers than he had
+ever before entertained. It was, indeed, then that Shelley sketched out,
+and chiefly wrote, his poem of "Julian and Maddalo," in the latter of
+which personages he has so picturesquely shadowed forth his noble
+friend<a name="FNanchor_24_24" id="FNanchor_24_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a>; and the allusions to "the Swan of Albion," in his "Lines
+written among the Euganean Hills," were also, I understand, the result
+of the same access of admiration and enthusiasm.</p>
+
+<p>In speaking of the Venetian women, in one of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="page112" name="page112"></a>Pg 112</span> preceding letters,
+Lord Byron, it will be recollected, remarks, that the beauty for which
+they were once so celebrated is no longer now to be found among the
+"Dame," or higher orders, but all under the "fazzioli," or kerchiefs, of
+the lower. It was, unluckily, among these latter specimens of the "bel
+sangue" of Venice that he now, by a suddenness of descent in the scale
+of refinement, for which nothing but the present wayward state of his
+mind can account, chose to select the companions of his disengaged
+hours;&mdash;and an additional proof that, in this short, daring career of
+libertinism, he was but desperately seeking relief for a wronged and
+mortified spirit, and</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"What to us seem'd guilt might be but woe,"&mdash;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>is that, more than once, of an evening, when his house has been in the
+possession of such visitants, he has been known to hurry away in his
+gondola, and pass the greater part of the night upon the water, as if
+hating to return to his home. It is, indeed, certain, that to this least
+defensible portion of his whole life he always looked back, during the
+short remainder of it, with painful self-reproach; and among the causes
+of the detestation which he afterwards felt for Venice, this
+recollection of the excesses to which he had there abandoned himself was
+not the least prominent.</p>
+
+<p>The most distinguished and, at last, the reigning favourite of all this
+unworthy Harem was a woman named Margarita Cogni, who has been already
+men<span class="pagenum"><a id="page113" name="page113"></a>Pg 113</span>tioned in one of these letters, and who, from the trade of her
+husband, was known by the title of the Fornarina. A portrait of this
+handsome virago, drawn by Harlowe when at Venice, having fallen into the
+hands of one of Lord Byron's friends after the death of that artist, the
+noble poet, on being applied to for some particulars of his heroine,
+wrote a long letter on the subject, from which the following are
+extracts:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Since you desire the story of Margarita Cogni, you shall be told
+it, though it may be lengthy.</p>
+
+<p>"Her face is the fine Venetian cast of the old time; her figure,
+though perhaps too tall, is not less fine&mdash;and taken altogether in
+the national dress.</p>
+
+<p>"In the summer of 1817, * * * * and myself were sauntering on
+horseback along the Brenta one evening, when, amongst a group of
+peasants, we remarked two girls as the prettiest we had seen for
+some time. About this period, there had been great distress in the
+country, and I had a little relieved some of the people. Generosity
+makes a great figure at very little cost in Venetian livres, and
+mine had probably been exaggerated as an Englishman's. Whether they
+remarked us looking at them or no, I know not; but one of them
+called out to me in Venetian, 'Why do not you, who relieve others,
+think of us also?' I turned round and answered her&mdash;'Cara, tu sei
+troppo bella e giovane per aver' bisogna del' soccorso mio.' She
+answered, 'If you saw my hut and my food, you would not say so.'
+All this passed half jestingly, and I saw no more of her for some
+days.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page114" name="page114"></a>Pg 114</span></p>
+
+<p>"A few evenings after, we met with these two girls again, and they
+addressed us more seriously, assuring us of the truth of their
+statement. They were cousins; Margarita married, the other single.
+As I doubted still of the circumstances, I took the business in a
+different light, and made an appointment with them for the next
+evening. In short, in a few evenings we arranged our affairs, and
+for a long space of time she was the only one who preserved over me
+an ascendency which was often disputed, and never impaired.</p>
+
+<p>"The reasons of this were, firstly, her person;&mdash;very dark, tall,
+the Venetian face, very fine black eyes. She was two-and-twenty
+years old, * * * She was, besides, a thorough Venetian in her
+dialect, in her thoughts, in her countenance, in every thing, with
+all their <i>na&iuml;vet&eacute;</i> and pantaloon humour. Besides, she could
+neither read nor write, and could not plague me with
+letters,&mdash;except twice that she paid sixpence to a public scribe,
+under the piazza, to make a letter for her, upon some occasion when
+I was ill and could not see her. In other respects, she was
+somewhat fierce and 'prepotente,' that is, over-bearing, and used
+to walk in whenever it suited her, with no very great regard to
+time, place, nor persons; and if she found any women in her way,
+she knocked them down.</p>
+
+<p>"When I first knew her, I was in 'relazione' (liaison) with la
+Signora * *, who was silly enough one evening at Dolo, accompanied
+by some of her female friends, to threaten her; for the gossips of
+the villeggiatura had already found out, by the<span class="pagenum"><a id="page115" name="page115"></a>Pg 115</span> neighing of my
+horse one evening, that I used to 'ride late in the night' to meet
+the Fornarina. Margarita threw back her veil (fazziolo), and
+replied in very explicit Venetian, '<i>You</i> are <i>not</i> his <i>wife</i>: <i>I</i>
+am <i>not</i> his <i>wife</i>: you are his Donna, and <i>I</i> am his <i>Donna</i>:
+your husband is a <i>becco</i>, and mine is another. For the rest, what
+<i>right</i> have you to reproach me? If he prefers me to you, is it my
+fault? If you wish to secure him, tie him to your
+petticoat-string.&mdash;But do not think to speak to me without a reply,
+because you happen to be richer than I am.' Having delivered this
+pretty piece of eloquence (which I translate as it was related to
+me by a bystander), she went on her way, leaving a numerous
+audience with Madame * *, to ponder at her leisure on the dialogue
+between them.</p>
+
+<p>"When I came to Venice for the winter, she followed; and as she
+found herself out to be a favourite, she came to me pretty often.
+But she had inordinate self-love, and was not tolerant of other
+women. At the 'Cavalchina,' the masked ball on the last night of
+the carnival, where all the world goes, she snatched off the mask
+of Madame Contarini, a lady noble by birth, and decent in conduct,
+for no other reason, but because she happened to be leaning on my
+arm. You may suppose what a cursed noise this made; but this is
+only one of her pranks.</p>
+
+<p>"At last she quarrelled with her husband, and one evening ran away
+to my house. I told her this would not do: she said she would lie
+in the street, but not go back to him; that he beat her, (the
+gentle tigress!) spent her money, and scandalously neglected her.<span class="pagenum"><a id="page116" name="page116"></a>Pg 116</span>
+As it was midnight I let her stay, and next day there was no moving
+her at all. Her husband came, roaring and crying, and entreating
+her to come back:&mdash;<i>not</i> she! He then applied to the police, and
+they applied to me: I told them and her husband to <i>take</i> her; I
+did not want her; she had come, and I could not fling her out of
+the window; but they might conduct her through that or the door if
+they chose it. She went before the commissary, but was obliged to
+return with that 'becco ettico,' as she called the poor man, who
+had a phthisic. In a few days she ran away again. After a precious
+piece of work, she fixed herself in my house, really and truly
+without my consent; but, owing to my indolence, and not being able
+to keep my countenance, for if I began in a rage, she always
+finished by making me laugh with some Venetian pantaloonery or
+another; and the gipsy knew this well enough, as well as her other
+powers of persuasion, and exerted them with the usual tact and
+success of all she-things; high and low, they are all alike for
+that.</p>
+
+<p>"Madame Benzoni also took her under her protection, and then her
+head turned. She was always in extremes, either crying or laughing,
+and so fierce when angered, that she was the terror of men, women,
+and children&mdash;for she had the strength of an Amazon, with the
+temper of Medea. She was a fine animal, but quite untameable. <i>I</i>
+was the only person that could at all keep her in any order, and
+when she saw me really angry (which they tell me is a savage
+sight), she subsided. But she had a thousand fooleries. In her
+fazziolo, the dress of<span class="pagenum"><a id="page117" name="page117"></a>Pg 117</span> the lower orders, she looked beautiful;
+but, alas! she longed for a hat and feathers; and all I could say
+or do (and I said much) could not prevent this travestie. I put the
+first into the fire; but I got tired of burning them, before she
+did of buying them, so that she made herself a figure&mdash;for they did
+not at all become her.</p>
+
+<p>"Then she would have her gowns with a <i>tail</i>&mdash;like a lady,
+forsooth; nothing would serve her but 'l'abita colla <i>coua</i>,' or
+<i>cua</i>, (that is the Venetian for 'la cola,' the tail or train,) and
+as her cursed pronunciation of the word made me laugh, there was an
+end of all controversy, and she dragged this diabolical tail after
+her every where.</p>
+
+<p>"In the mean time, she beat the women and stopped my letters. I
+found her one day pondering over one. She used to try to find out
+by their shape whether they were feminine or no; and she used to
+lament her ignorance, and actually studied her alphabet, on purpose
+(as she declared) to open all letters addressed to me and read
+their contents.</p>
+
+<p>"I must not omit to do justice to her housekeeping qualities. After
+she came into my house as 'donna di governo,' the expenses were
+reduced to less than half, and every body did their duty
+better&mdash;the apartments were kept in order, and every thing and
+every body else, except herself.</p>
+
+<p>"That she had a sufficient regard for me in her wild way, I had
+many reasons to believe. I will mention one. In the autumn, one
+day, going to the Lido with my gondoliers, we were overtaken by a
+heavy squall, and the gondola put in peril&mdash;hats<span class="pagenum"><a id="page118" name="page118"></a>Pg 118</span> blown away, boat
+filling, oar lost, tumbling sea, thunder, rain in torrents, night
+coming, and wind unceasing. On our return, after a tight struggle,
+I found her on the open steps of the Mocenigo palace, on the Grand
+Canal, with her great black eyes flashing through her tears, and
+the long dark hair, which was streaming, drenched with rain, over
+her brows and breast. She was perfectly exposed to the storm; and
+the wind blowing her hair and dress about her thin tall figure, and
+the lightning flashing round her, and the waves rolling at her
+feet, made her look like Medea alighted from her chariot, or the
+Sibyl of the tempest that was rolling around her, the only living
+thing within hail at that moment except ourselves. On seeing me
+safe, she did not wait to greet me, as might have been expected,
+but calling out to me&mdash;'Ah! can' della Madonna, xe esto il tempo
+per andar' al' Lido?' (Ah! dog of the Virgin, is this a time to go
+to Lido?) ran into the house, and solaced herself with scolding the
+boatmen for not foreseeing the 'temporale.' I am told by the
+servants that she had only been prevented from coming in a boat to
+look after me, by the refusal of all the gondoliers of the canal to
+put out into the harbour in such a moment; and that then she sat
+down on the steps in all the thickest of the squall, and would
+neither be removed nor comforted. Her joy at seeing me again was
+moderately mixed with ferocity, and gave me the idea of a tigress
+over her recovered cubs.</p>
+
+<p>"But her reign drew near a close. She became quite ungovernable
+some months after, and a con<span class="pagenum"><a id="page119" name="page119"></a>Pg 119</span>currence of complaints, some true, and
+many false&mdash;'a favourite has no friends'&mdash;determined me to part
+with her. I told her quietly that she must return home, (she had
+acquired a sufficient provision for herself and mother, &amp;c. in my
+service,) and she refused to quit the house. I was firm, and she
+went threatening knives and revenge. I told her that I had seen
+knives drawn before her time, and that if she chose to begin, there
+was a knife, and fork also, at her service on the table, and that
+intimidation would not do. The next day, while I was at dinner, she
+walked in, (having broken open a glass door that led from the hall
+below to the staircase, by way of prologue,) and advancing straight
+up to the table, snatched the knife from my hand, cutting me
+slightly in the thumb in the operation. Whether she meant to use
+this against herself or me, I know not&mdash;probably against
+neither&mdash;but Fletcher seized her by the arms, and disarmed her. I
+then called my boatmen, and desired them to get the gondola ready,
+and conduct her to her own house again, seeing carefully that she
+did herself no mischief by the way. She seemed quite quiet, and
+walked down stairs. I resumed my dinner.</p>
+
+<p>"We heard a great noise, and went out, and met them on the
+staircase, carrying her up stairs. She had thrown herself into the
+canal. That she intended to destroy herself, I do not believe; but
+when we consider the fear women and men who can't swim have of deep
+or even of shallow water, (and the Venetians in particular, though
+they live on the waves,) and that it was also night, and dark, and
+very cold,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page120" name="page120"></a>Pg 120</span> it shows that she had a devilish spirit of some sort
+within her. They had got her out without much difficulty or damage,
+excepting the salt water she had swallowed, and the wetting she had
+undergone.</p>
+
+<p>"I foresaw her intention to refix herself, and sent for a surgeon,
+enquiring how many hours it would require to restore her from her
+agitation; and he named the time. I then said, 'I give you that
+time, and more if you require it; but at the expiration of this
+prescribed period, if <i>she</i> does not leave the house, <i>I</i> will.'</p>
+
+<p>"All my people were consternated. They had always been frightened
+at her, and were now paralysed: they wanted me to apply to the
+police, to guard myself, &amp;c. &amp;c. like a pack of snivelling servile
+boobies as they were. I did nothing of the kind, thinking that I
+might as well end that way as another; besides, I had been used to
+savage women, and knew their ways.</p>
+
+<p>"I had her sent home quietly after her recovery, and never saw her
+since, except twice at the opera, at a distance amongst the
+audience. She made many attempts to return, but no more violent
+ones. And this is the story of Margarita Cogni, as far as it
+relates to me.</p>
+
+<p>"I forgot to mention that she was very devout, and would cross
+herself if she heard the prayer time strike.</p>
+
+<p>"She was quick in reply; as, for instance&mdash;One day when she had
+made me very angry with beating somebody or other, I called her a
+<i>cow</i> (<i>cow</i>, in Italian, is a sad affront). I called her 'Vacca.'
+She turned<span class="pagenum"><a id="page121" name="page121"></a>Pg 121</span> round, courtesied, and answered, 'Vacca <i>tua</i>,
+'celenza' (<i>i.e.</i> eccelenza). '<i>Your</i> cow, please your Excellency.'
+In short, she was, as I said before, a very fine animal, of
+considerable beauty and energy, with many good and several amusing
+qualities, but wild as a witch and fierce as a demon. She used to
+boast publicly of her ascendency over me, contrasting it with that
+of other women, and assigning for it sundry reasons. True it was,
+that they all tried to get her away, and no one succeeded till her
+own absurdity helped them.</p>
+
+<p>"I omitted to tell you her answer, when I reproached her for
+snatching Madame Contarini's mask at the Cavalchina. I represented
+to her that she was a lady of high birth, 'una Dama,' &amp;c. She
+answered, 'Se ella &egrave; dama <i>mi</i> (<i>io</i>) son Veneziana;'&mdash;'If she is a
+lady, I am a Venetian.' This would have been fine a hundred years
+ago, the pride of the nation rising up against the pride of
+aristocracy: but, alas! Venice, and her people, and her nobles, are
+alike returning fast to the ocean; and where there is no
+independence, there can be no real self-respect. I believe that I
+mistook or mis-stated one of her phrases in my letter; it should
+have been&mdash;'Can' della Madonna cosa vus' tu? esto non &eacute; tempo per
+andar' a Lido?'"</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>It was at this time, as we shall see by the letters I am about to
+produce, and as the features, indeed, of the progeny itself would but
+too plainly indicate, that he conceived, and wrote some part of, his
+poem of 'Don Juan;'&mdash;and never did pages more<span class="pagenum"><a id="page122" name="page122"></a>Pg 122</span> faithfully and, in many
+respects, lamentably, reflect every variety of feeling, and whim, and
+passion that, like the wrack of autumn, swept across the author's mind
+in writing them. Nothing less, indeed, than that singular combination of
+attributes, which existed and were in full activity in his mind at this
+moment, could have suggested, or been capable of, the execution of such
+a work. The cool shrewdness of age, with the vivacity and glowing
+temperament of youth,&mdash;the wit of a Voltaire, with the sensibility of a
+Rousseau,&mdash;the minute, practical knowledge of the man of society, with
+the abstract and self-contemplative spirit of the poet,&mdash;a
+susceptibility of all that is grandest and most affecting in human
+virtue, with a deep, withering experience of all that is most fatal to
+it,&mdash;the two extremes, in short, of man's mixed and inconsistent nature,
+now rankly smelling of earth, now breathing of heaven,&mdash;such was the
+strange assemblage of contrary elements, all meeting together in the
+same mind, and all brought to bear, in turn, upon the same task, from
+which alone could have sprung this extraordinary poem,&mdash;the most
+powerful and, in many respects, painful display of the versatility of
+genius that has ever been left for succeeding ages to wonder at and
+deplore.</p>
+
+<p>I shall now proceed with his correspondence,&mdash;having thought some of the
+preceding observations necessary, not only to explain to the reader much
+of what he will find in these letters, but to account to him for much
+that has been necessarily omitted.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page123" name="page123"></a>Pg 123</span></p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 318. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, June 18. 1818.</p>
+
+<p>"Business and the utter and inexplicable silence of all my
+correspondents renders me impatient and troublesome. I wrote to Mr.
+Hanson for a balance which is (or ought to be) in his hands;&mdash;no
+answer. I expected the messenger with the Newstead papers two
+months ago, and instead of him, I received a requisition to proceed
+to Geneva, which (from * *, who knows my wishes and opinions about
+approaching England) could only be irony or insult.</p>
+
+<p>"I must, therefore, trouble <i>you</i> to pay into my bankers'
+<i>immediately</i> whatever sum or sums you can make it convenient to do
+on our agreement; otherwise, I shall be put to the <i>severest</i> and
+most immediate inconvenience; and this at a time when, by every
+rational prospect and calculation, I ought to be in the receipt of
+considerable sums. Pray do not neglect this; you have no idea to
+what inconvenience you will otherwise put me. * * had some absurd
+notion about the disposal of this money in annuity (or God knows
+what), which I merely listened to when he was here to avoid
+squabbles and sermons; but I have occasion for the principal, and
+had never any serious idea of appropriating it otherwise than to
+answer my personal expenses. Hobhouse's wish is, if possible, to
+force me back to England<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a>: he will not succeed; and if he did, I
+would not stay. I hate the country, and like this; and all foolish
+op<span class="pagenum"><a id="page124" name="page124"></a>Pg 124</span>position, of course, merely adds to the feeling. <i>Your</i> silence
+makes me doubt the success of Canto fourth. If it has failed, I
+will make such deduction as you think proper and fair from the
+original agreement; but I could wish whatever is to be paid were
+remitted to me, without delay, through the usual channel, by course
+of post.</p>
+
+<p>"When I tell you that I have not heard a word from England since
+very early in May, I have made the eulogium of my friends, or the
+persons who call themselves so, since I have written so often and
+in the greatest anxiety. Thank God, the longer I am absent, the
+less cause I see for regretting the country or its living contents.
+I am yours," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 319. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, July 10. 1818.</p>
+
+<p>"I have received your letter and the credit from Morlands, &amp;c. for
+whom I have also drawn upon you at sixty days' sight for the
+remainder, according to your proposition.</p>
+
+<p>"I am still waiting in Venice, in expectancy of the arrival of
+Hanson's clerk. What can detain him, I do not know; but I trust
+that Mr. Hobhouse, and Mr. Kinnaird, when their political fit is
+abated, will take the trouble to enquire and expedite him, as I
+have nearly a hundred thousand pounds depending upon the completion
+of the sale and the signature of the papers.</p>
+
+<p>"The draft on you is drawn up by Siri and Will<span class="pagenum"><a id="page125" name="page125"></a>Pg 125</span>halm. I hope that
+the form is correct. I signed it two or three days ago, desiring
+them to forward it to Messrs. Morland and Ransom.</p>
+
+<p>"Your projected editions for November had better be postponed, as I
+have some things in project, or preparation, that may be of use to
+you, though not very important in themselves. I have completed an
+Ode on Venice, and have two Stories, one serious and one ludicrous
+(&agrave; la Beppo), not yet finished, and in no hurry to be so.</p>
+
+<p>"You talk of the letter to Hobhouse being much admired, and speak
+of prose. I think of writing (for your full edition) some Memoirs
+of my life, to prefix to them, upon the same model (though far
+enough, I fear, from reaching it) of Gifford, Hume, &amp;c.; and this
+without any intention of making disclosures or remarks upon living
+people, which would be unpleasant to them: but I think it might be
+done, and well done. However, this is to be considered. I have
+<i>materials</i> in plenty, but the greater part of them could not be
+used by <i>me</i>, nor for these hundred years to come. However, there
+is enough without these, and merely as a literary man, to make a
+preface for such an edition as you meditate. But this is by the
+way: I have not made up my mind.</p>
+
+<p>"I enclose you a <i>note</i> on the subject of '<i>Parisina</i>,' which
+Hobhouse can dress for you. It is an extract of particulars from a
+history of Ferrara.</p>
+
+<p>"I trust you have been attentive to Missiaglia, for the English
+have the character of neglecting the Italians, at present, which I
+hope you will redeem.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours in haste, B."</p></div><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page126" name="page126"></a>Pg 126</span></p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 320. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, July 17. 1818.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose that Aglietti will take whatever you offer, but till his
+return from Vienna I can make him no proposal; nor, indeed, have
+you authorised me to do so. The three French notes <i>are</i> by Lady
+Mary; also another half-English-French-Italian. They are very
+pretty and passionate; it is a pity that a piece of one of them is
+lost. Algarotti seems to have treated her ill; but she was much his
+senior, and all women are used ill&mdash;or say so, whether they are or
+not.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be glad of your books and powders. I am still in waiting
+for Hanson's clerk, but luckily not at Geneva. All my good friends
+wrote to me to hasten <i>there</i> to meet him, but not one had the good
+sense or the good nature, to write afterwards to tell me that it
+would be time and a journey thrown away, as he could not set off
+for some months after the period appointed. If I <i>had</i> taken the
+journey on the general suggestion, I never would have spoken again
+to one of you as long as I existed. I have written to request Mr.
+Kinnaird, when the foam of his politics is wiped away, to extract a
+positive answer from that * * * *, and not to keep me in a state of
+suspense upon the subject. I hope that Kinnaird, who has my power
+of attorney, keeps a look-out upon the gentleman, which is the more
+necessary, as I have a great dislike to the idea of coming over to
+look after him myself.</p>
+
+<p>"I have several things begun, verse and prose,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page127" name="page127"></a>Pg 127</span> but none in much
+forwardness. I have written some six or seven sheets of a Life,
+which I mean to continue, and send you when finished. It may
+perhaps serve for your projected editions. If you would tell me
+exactly (for I know nothing, and have no correspondents except on
+business) the state of the reception of our late publications, and
+the feeling upon them, without consulting any delicacies (I am too
+seasoned to require them), I should know how and in what manner to
+proceed. I should not like to give them too much, which may
+probably have been the case already; but, as I tell you, I know
+nothing.</p>
+
+<p>"I once wrote from the fulness of my mind and the love of fame,
+(not as an <i>end</i>, but as a <i>means</i>, to obtain that influence over
+men's minds which is power in itself and in its consequences,) and
+now from habit and from avarice; so that the effect may probably be
+as different as the inspiration. I have the same facility, and
+indeed necessity, of composition, to avoid idleness (though
+idleness in a hot country is a pleasure), but a much greater
+indifference to what is to become of it, after it has served my
+immediate purpose. However, I should on no account like to&mdash;but I
+won't go on, like the Archbishop of Granada, as I am very sure that
+you dread the fate of Gil Blas, and with good reason. Yours, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. I have written some very savage letters to Mr. Hobhouse,
+Kinnaird, to you, and to Hanson, because the silence of so long a
+time made me tear off my remaining rags of patience. I have seen
+one<span class="pagenum"><a id="page128" name="page128"></a>Pg 128</span> or two late English publications which are no great things,
+except Rob Roy. I shall be glad of Whistlecraft."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 321. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, August 26. 1818.</p>
+
+<p>"You may go on with your edition, without calculating on the
+Memoir, which I shall not publish at present. It is nearly
+finished, but will be too long; and there are so many things,
+which, out of regard to the living, cannot be mentioned, that I
+have written with too much detail of that which interested me
+least; so that my autobiographical Essay would resemble the tragedy
+of Hamlet at the country theatre, recited 'with the part of Hamlet
+left out by particular desire.' I shall keep it among my papers; it
+will be a kind of guide-post in case of death, and prevent some of
+the lies which would otherwise be told, and destroy some which have
+been told already.</p>
+
+<p>"The tales also are in an unfinished state, and I can fix no time
+for their completion: they are also not in the best manner. You
+must not, therefore, calculate upon any thing in time for this
+edition. The Memoir is already above forty-four sheets of very
+large, long paper, and will be about fifty or sixty; but I wish to
+go on leisurely; and when finished, although it might do a good
+deal for you at the time, I am not sure that it would serve any
+good purpose in the end either, as it is full of many passions and
+prejudices, of which it has been impos<span class="pagenum"><a id="page129" name="page129"></a>Pg 129</span>sible for me to keep
+clear:&mdash;I have not the patience.</p>
+
+<p>"Enclosed is a list of books which Dr. Aglietti would be glad to
+receive by way of price for his MS. letters, if you are disposed to
+purchase at the rate of fifty pounds sterling. These he will be
+glad to have as part, and the rest <i>I</i> will give him in money, and
+you may carry it to the account of books, &amp;c. which is in balance
+against me, deducting it accordingly. So that the letters are
+yours, if you like them, at this rate; and he and I are going to
+hunt for more Lady Montague letters, which he thinks of finding. I
+write in haste. Thanks for the article, and believe me</p>
+
+<p>"Yours," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>To the charge brought against Lord Byron by some English travellers of
+being, in general, repulsive and inhospitable to his own countrymen, I
+have already made allusion; and shall now add to the testimony then
+cited in disproof of such a charge some particulars, communicated to me
+by Captain Basil Hall, which exhibit the courtesy and kindliness of the
+noble poet's disposition in their true, natural light.</p>
+
+<p>"On the last day of August, 1818 (says this distinguished writer and
+traveller), I was taken ill with an ague at Venice, and having heard
+enough of the low state of the medical art in that country, I was not a
+little anxious as to the advice I should take. I was not acquainted with
+any person in Venice to whom I could refer, and had only one letter of
+in<span class="pagenum"><a id="page130" name="page130"></a>Pg 130</span>troduction, which was to Lord Byron; but as there were many stories
+floating about of his Lordship's unwillingness to be pestered with
+tourists, I had felt unwilling, before this moment, to intrude myself in
+that shape. Now, however, that I was seriously unwell, I felt sure that
+this offensive character would merge in that of a countryman in
+distress, and I sent the letter by one of my travelling companions to
+Lord Byron's lodgings, with a note, excusing the liberty I was taking,
+explaining that I was in want of medical assistance, and saying I should
+not send to any one till I heard the name of the person who, in his
+Lordship's opinion, was the best practitioner in Venice.</p>
+
+<p>"Unfortunately for me, Lord Byron was still in bed, though it was near
+noon, and still more unfortunately, the bearer of my message scrupled to
+awake him, without first coming back to consult me. By this time I was
+in all the agonies of a cold ague fit, and, therefore, not at all in a
+condition to be consulted upon any thing&mdash;so I replied pettishly, 'Oh,
+by no means disturb Lord Byron on my account&mdash;ring for the landlord, and
+send for any one he recommends.' This absurd injunction being forthwith
+and literally attended to, in the course of an hour I was under the
+discipline of mine host's friend, whose skill and success it is no part
+of my present purpose to descant upon:&mdash;it is sufficient to mention that
+I was irrevocably in his hands long before the following most kind note
+was brought to me, in great haste, by Lord Byron's servant.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"'Venice, August 31. 1818.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page131" name="page131"></a>Pg 131</span></p>
+
+<p>"'Dear Sir,</p>
+
+<p>"'Dr. Aglietti is the best physician, not only in Venice, but in
+Italy: his residence is on the Grand Canal, and easily found; I
+forget the number, but am probably the only person in Venice who
+don't know it. There is no comparison between him and any of the
+other medical people here. I regret very much to hear of your
+indisposition, and shall do myself the honour of waiting upon you
+the moment I am up. I write this in bed, and have only just
+received the letter and note. I beg you to believe that nothing but
+the extreme lateness of my hours could have prevented me from
+replying immediately, or coming in person. I have not been called a
+minute.&mdash;I have the honour to be, very truly,</p>
+
+<p>"'Your most obedient servant,</p>
+
+<p>"'BYRON.'</p></div>
+
+<p>"His Lordship soon followed this note, and I heard his voice in the next
+room; but although he waited more than an hour, I could not see him,
+being under the inexorable hands of the doctor. In the course of the
+same evening he again called, but I was asleep. When I awoke I found his
+Lordship's valet sitting by my bedside. 'He had his master's orders,' he
+said, 'to remain with me while I was unwell, and was instructed to say,
+that whatever his Lordship had, or could procure, was at my service, and
+that he would come to me and sit with me, or do whatever I liked, if I
+would only let him know in what way he could be useful.'</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page132" name="page132"></a>Pg 132</span></p>
+
+<p>"Accordingly, on the next day, I sent for some book, which was brought,
+with a list of his library. I forget what it was which prevented my
+seeing Lord Byron on this day, though he called more than once; and on
+the next, I was too ill with fever to talk to any one.</p>
+
+<p>"The moment I could get out, I took a gondola and went to pay my
+respects, and to thank his Lordship for his attentions. It was then
+nearly three o'clock, but he was not yet up; and when I went again on
+the following day at five, I had the mortification to learn that he had
+gone, at the same hour, to call upon me, so that we had crossed each
+other on the canal; and, to my deep and lasting regret, I was obliged to
+leave Venice without seeing him."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 322. TO MR. MOORE.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, September 19. 1818.</p>
+
+<p>"An English newspaper here would be a prodigy, and an opposition
+one a monster; and except some ex tracts <i>from</i> extracts in the
+vile, garbled Paris gazettes, nothing of the kind reaches the
+Veneto-Lombard public, who are, perhaps, the most oppressed in
+Europe. My correspondences with England are mostly on business, and
+chiefly with my * * *, who has no very exalted notion, or extensive
+conception, of an author's attributes; for he once took up an
+Edinburgh Review, and, looking at it a minute, said to me, 'So, I
+see you have got into the magazine,'&mdash;which is the only sentence I
+ever heard him utter upon literary matters, or the men thereof.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page133" name="page133"></a>Pg 133</span></p>
+
+<p>"My first news of your Irish Apotheosis has, consequently, been
+from yourself. But, as it will not be forgotten in a hurry, either
+by your friends or your enemies, I hope to have it more in detail
+from some of the former, and, in the mean time, I wish you joy with
+all my heart. Such a moment must have been a good deal better than
+Westminster-abbey,&mdash;besides being an assurance of <i>that</i> one day
+(many years hence, I trust,) into the bargain.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry to perceive, however, by the close of your letter, that
+even <i>you</i> have not escaped the 'surgit amari,' &amp;c. and that your
+damned deputy has been gathering such 'dew from the still <i>vext</i>
+Bermoothes'&mdash;or rather <i>vexatious</i>. Pray, give me some items of the
+affair, as you say it is a serious one; and, if it grows more so,
+you should make a trip over here for a few months, to see how
+things turn out. I suppose you are a violent admirer of England by
+your staying so long in it. For my own part, I have passed, between
+the age of one-and-twenty and thirty, half the intervenient years
+out of it without regretting any thing, except that I ever returned
+to it at all, and the gloomy prospect before me of business and
+parentage obliging me, one day, to return to it again,&mdash;at least,
+for the transaction of affairs, the signing of papers, and
+inspecting of children.</p>
+
+<p>"I have here my natural daughter, by name Allegra,&mdash;a pretty little
+girl enough, and reckoned like papa.<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> Her mamma is English,&mdash;but
+it is a<span class="pagenum"><a id="page134" name="page134"></a>Pg 134</span> long story, and&mdash;there's an end. She is about twenty
+months old.</p>
+
+<p>"I have finished the first Canto (a long one, of about 180 octaves)
+of a poem in the style and manner of 'Beppo', encouraged by the
+good success of the same. It is called 'Don Juan', and is meant to
+be a little quietly facetious upon every thing. But I doubt whether
+it is not&mdash;at least, as far as it has yet gone&mdash;too free for these
+very modest days. However, I shall try the experiment, anonymously,
+and if it don't take, it will be discontinued. It is dedicated to S
+* * in good, simple, savage verse, upon the * * * *'s politics, and
+the way he got them. But the bore of copying it out is intolerable;
+and if<span class="pagenum"><a id="page135" name="page135"></a>Pg 135</span> I had an amanuensis he would be of no use, as my writing is
+so difficult to decipher.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"My poem's Epic, and is meant to be<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Divided in twelve books, each book containing<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">With love and war, a heavy gale at sea&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">A list of ships, and captains, and kings reigning&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">New characters, &amp;c. &amp;c.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The above are two stanzas, which I send you as a brick of my Babel,
+and by which you can judge of the texture of the structure.</p>
+
+<p>"In writing the Life of Sheridan, never mind the angry lies of the
+humbug Whigs. Recollect that he was an Irishman and a clever
+fellow, and that we have had some very pleasant days with him.
+Don't forget that he was at school at Harrow, where, in my time, we
+used to show his name&mdash;R.B. Sheridan, 1765,&mdash;as an honour to the
+walls. Remember * *. Depend upon it that there were worse folks
+going, of that gang, than ever Sheridan was.</p>
+
+<p>"What did Parr mean by 'haughtiness and coldness?' I listened to
+him with admiring ignorance, and respectful silence. What more
+could a talker for fame have?&mdash;they don't like to be answered. It
+was at Payne Knight's I met him, where he gave me more Greek than I
+could carry away. But I certainly meant to (and <i>did</i>) treat him
+with the most respectful deference.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish you a good night, with a Venetian benediction, 'Benedetto
+te, e la terra che ti fara!'&mdash;'May you be blessed, and the <i>earth</i>
+which you will<span class="pagenum"><a id="page136" name="page136"></a>Pg 136</span> <i>make</i>!'&mdash;is it not pretty? You would think it
+still prettier if you had heard it, as I did two hours ago, from
+the lips of a Venetian girl, with large black eyes, a face like
+Faustina's, and the figure of a Juno&mdash;tall and energetic as a
+Pythoness, with eyes flashing, and her dark hair streaming in the
+moonlight&mdash;one of those women who may be made any thing. I am sure
+if I put a poniard into the hand of this one, she would plunge it
+where I told her,&mdash;and into <i>me</i>, if I offended her. I like this
+kind of animal, and am sure that I should have preferred Medea to
+any woman that ever breathed. You may, perhaps, wonder that I don't
+in that case. I could have forgiven the dagger or the bowl, any
+thing, but the deliberate desolation piled upon me, when I stood
+alone upon my hearth, with my household gods shivered around me<a name="FNanchor_27_27" id="FNanchor_27_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a>
+* * Do you suppose I have forgotten or forgiven it? It has
+comparatively swallowed up in me every other feeling, and I am only
+a spectator upon earth, till a tenfold opportunity offers. It may
+come yet. There are others more to be blamed than * * * *, and it
+is on these that my eyes are fixed unceasingly."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 323. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, September 24. 1818.</p>
+
+<p>"In the one hundredth and thirty-second stanza of Canto fourth, the
+stanza runs in the manuscript&mdash;</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page137" name="page137"></a>Pg 137</span></p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"And thou, who never yet of human wrong<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Left the unbalanced scale, great Nemesis!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>and <i>not 'lost,'</i> which is nonsense, as what losing a scale means,
+I know not; but <i>leaving</i> an unbalanced scale, or a scale
+unbalanced, is intelligible.<a name="FNanchor_28_28" id="FNanchor_28_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a> Correct this, I pray,&mdash;not for the
+public, or the poetry, but I do not choose to have blunders made in
+addressing any of the deities so seriously as this is addressed.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. In the translation from the Spanish, alter</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"In increasing squadrons flew,<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>to&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">To a mighty squadron grew.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"What does 'thy waters <i>wasted</i> them' mean (in the Canto)? <i>That is
+not me.</i><a name="FNanchor_29_29" id="FNanchor_29_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a> Consult the MS. <i>always</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"I have written the first Canto (180 octave stanzas) of a poem in
+the style of Beppo, and have Mazeppa to finish besides.</p>
+
+<p>"In referring to the mistake in stanza 132. I take the opportunity
+to desire that in future, in all parts of my writings referring to
+religion, you will be more careful, and not forget that it is
+possible that in addressing the Deity a blunder may become a
+blasphemy; and I do not choose to suffer such infamous perversions
+of my words or of my intentions.</p>
+
+<p>"I saw the Canto by accident."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' /><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page138" name="page138"></a>Pg 138</span></p>
+
+<p><b>LETTER 324. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, January 20. 1819.</p>
+
+<p>"The opinions which I have asked of Mr. H. and others were with
+regard to the poetical merit, and not as to what they may think due
+to the <i>cant</i> of the day, which still reads the Bath Guide,
+Little's Poems, Prior, and Chaucer, to say nothing of Fielding and
+Smollet. If published, publish entire, with the above-mentioned
+exceptions; or you may publish anonymously, or <i>not at all</i>. In the
+latter event, print 50 on my account, for private distribution.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"I have written to Messrs. K. and H. to desire that they will not
+erase more than I have stated.</p>
+
+<p>"The second Canto of Don Juan is finished in 206 stanzas."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 325. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, January 25. 1819.</p>
+
+<p>"You will do me the favour to print privately (for private
+distribution) fifty copies of 'Don Juan.' The list of the men to
+whom I wish it to be presented, I will send hereafter. The other
+two poems had best be added to the collective edition: I do not
+approve of <i>their</i> being published separately. Print Don Juan
+<i>entire</i>, omitting, of course, the lines on Castlereagh, as I am
+not on the spot to meet him. I have a second Canto ready, which
+will be sent by and by. By this post, I have written to Mr.
+Hobhouse, addressed to your care.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours, &amp;c.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page139" name="page139"></a>Pg 139</span></p>
+
+<p>"P.S. I have acquiesced in the request and representation; and
+having done so, it is idle to detail my arguments in favour of my
+own self-love and 'Poeshie;' but I <i>protest</i>. If the poem has
+poetry, it would stand; if not, fall; the rest is 'leather and
+prunello,' and has never yet affected any human production 'pro or
+con.' Dulness is the only annihilator in such cases. As to the cant
+of the day, I despise it, as I have ever done all its other finical
+fashions, which become you as paint became the ancient Britons. If
+you admit this prudery, you must omit half Ariosto, La Fontaine,
+Shakspeare, Beaumont, Fletcher, Massinger, Ford, all the Charles
+Second writers; in short, <i>something</i> of most who have written
+before Pope and are worth reading, and much of Pope himself. <i>Read
+him</i>&mdash;most of you <i>don't</i>&mdash;but <i>do</i>&mdash;and I will forgive you; though
+the inevitable consequence would be that you would burn all I have
+ever written, and all your other wretched Claudians of the day
+(except Scott and Crabbe) into the bargain. I wrong Claudian, who
+<i>was</i> a <i>poet</i>, by naming him with such fellows; but he was the
+'ultimus Romanorum,' the tail of the comet, and these persons are
+the tail of an old gown cut into a waistcoat for Jackey; but being
+both <i>tails</i>, I have compared the one with the other, though very
+unlike, like all similes. I write in a passion and a sirocco, and I
+was up till six this morning at the Carnival: but I <i>protest</i>, as I
+did in my former letter."</p></div><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page140" name="page140"></a>Pg 140</span></p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 326. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, February 1. 1819.</p>
+
+<p>"After one of the concluding stanzas of the first Canto of 'Don
+Juan,' which ends with (I forget the number)&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"To have ...<br /></span>
+<span class="i8">... when the original is dust,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">A book, a d&mdash;&mdash;d bad picture, and worse bust,<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>insert the following stanza:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"What are the hopes of man, &amp;c.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"I have written to you several letters, some with additions, and
+some upon the subject of the poem itself, which my cursed
+puritanical committee have protested against publishing. But we
+will circumvent them on that point. I have not yet begun to copy
+out the second Canto, which is finished, from natural laziness, and
+the discouragement of the milk and water they have thrown upon the
+first. I say all this to them as to you, that is, for <i>you</i> to say
+to <i>them</i>, for I will have nothing underhand. If they had told me
+the poetry was bad, I would have acquiesced; but they say the
+contrary, and then talk to me about morality&mdash;the first time I ever
+heard the word from any body who was not a rascal that used it for
+a purpose. I maintain that it is the most moral of poems; but if
+people won't discover the moral, that is their fault, not mine. I
+have already written to beg that in any case you will print <i>fifty</i>
+for private distribution. I will send you the list of persons to
+whom it is to be sent afterwards.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page141" name="page141"></a>Pg 141</span></p>
+
+<p>"Within this last fortnight I have been rather indisposed with a
+rebellion of stomach, which would retain nothing, (liver, I
+suppose,) and an inability, or fantasy, not to be able to eat of
+any thing with relish but a kind of Adriatic fish called 'scampi,'
+which happens to be the most indigestible of marine viands.
+However, within these last two days, I am better, and very truly
+yours."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 327. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, April 6. 1819.</p>
+
+<p>"The second Canto of Don Juan was sent, on Saturday last, by post,
+in four packets, two of four, and two of three sheets each,
+containing in all two hundred and seventeen stanzas, octave
+measure. But I will permit no curtailments, except those mentioned
+about Castlereagh and * * * *. You sha'n't make <i>canticles</i> of my
+cantos. The poem will please, if it is lively; if it is stupid, it
+will fail: but I will have none of your damned cutting and
+slashing. If you please, you may publish <i>anonymously</i>; it will
+perhaps be better; but I will battle my way against them all, like
+a porcupine.</p>
+
+<p>"So you and Mr. Foscolo, &amp;c. want me to undertake what you call a
+'great work?' an Epic Poem, I suppose, or some such pyramid. I'll
+try no such thing; I hate tasks. And then 'seven or eight years!'
+God send us all well this day three months, let alone years. If
+one's years can't be better employed than in sweating poesy, a man
+had better be a ditcher. And works, too!&mdash;is Childe Harold<span class="pagenum"><a id="page142" name="page142"></a>Pg 142</span>
+nothing? You have so many 'divine poems,' is it nothing to have
+written a <i>human</i> one? without any of your worn-out machinery. Why,
+man, I could have spun the thoughts of the four Cantos of that poem
+into twenty, had I wanted to book-make, and its passion into as
+many modern tragedies. Since you want <i>length</i>, you shall have
+enough of <i>Juan</i>, for I'll make fifty Cantos.</p>
+
+<p>"And Foscolo, too! Why does <i>he</i> not do something more than the
+Letters of Ortis, and a tragedy, and pamphlets? He has good fifteen
+years more at his command than I have: what has he done all that
+time?&mdash;proved his genius, doubtless, but not fixed its fame, nor
+done his utmost.</p>
+
+<p>"Besides, I mean to write my best work in <i>Italian</i>, and it will
+take me nine years more thoroughly to master the language; and then
+if my fancy exist, and I exist too, I will try what I <i>can</i> do
+<i>really</i>. As to the estimation of the English which you talk of,
+let them calculate what it is worth, before they insult me with
+their insolent condescension.</p>
+
+<p>"I have not written for their pleasure. If they are pleased, it is
+that they chose to be so; I have never flattered their opinions,
+nor their pride; nor will I. Neither will I make 'Ladies' books 'al
+dilettar le femine e la plebe.' I have written from the fulness of
+my mind, from passion, from impulse, from many motives, but not for
+their 'sweet voices.'</p>
+
+<p>"I know the precise worth of popular applause, for few scribblers
+have had more of it; and if I chose to swerve into their paths, I
+could retain it,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page143" name="page143"></a>Pg 143</span> or resume it. But I neither love ye, nor fear ye;
+and though I buy with ye and sell with ye, I will neither eat with
+ye, drink with ye, nor pray with ye. They made me, without any
+search, a species of popular idol; they, without reason or
+judgment, beyond the caprice of their good pleasure, threw down the
+image from its pedestal; it was not broken with the fall, and they
+would, it seems, again replace it,&mdash;but they shall not.</p>
+
+<p>"You ask about my health: about the beginning of the year I was in
+a state of great exhaustion, attended by such debility of stomach
+that nothing remained upon it; and I was obliged to reform my 'way
+of life,' which was conducting me from the 'yellow leaf' to the
+ground, with all deliberate speed. I am better in health and
+morals, and very much yours, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. I have read Hodgson's 'Friends.' He is right in defending
+Pope against the bastard pelicans of the poetical winter day, who
+add insult to their parricide, by sucking the blood of the parent
+of English <i>real</i> poetry,&mdash;poetry without fault,&mdash;and then spurning
+the bosom which fed them."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>It was about the time when the foregoing letter was written, and when,
+as we perceive, like the first return of reason after intoxication, a
+full consciousness of some of the evils of his late libertine course of
+life had broken upon him, that an attachment differing altogether, both
+in duration and devotion, from any of those that, since the dream of his
+boyhood, had inspired him, gained an influence<span class="pagenum"><a id="page144" name="page144"></a>Pg 144</span> over his mind which
+lasted through his few remaining years; and, undeniably wrong and
+immoral (even allowing for the Italian estimate of such frailties) as
+was the nature of the connection to which this attachment led, we can
+hardly perhaps,&mdash;taking into account the far worse wrong from which it
+rescued and preserved him,&mdash;consider it otherwise than as an event
+fortunate both for his reputation and happiness.</p>
+
+<p>The fair object of this last, and (with one signal exception) only
+<i>real</i> love of his whole life, was a young Romagnese lady, the daughter
+of Count Gamba, of Ravenna, and married, but a short time before Lord
+Byron first met with her, to an old and wealthy widower, of the same
+city, Count Guiccioli. Her husband had in early life been the friend of
+Alfieri, and had distinguished himself by his zeal in promoting the
+establishment of a National Theatre, in which the talents of Alfieri and
+his own wealth were to be combined. Notwithstanding his age, and a
+character, as it appears, by no means reputable, his great opulence
+rendered him an object of ambition among the mothers of Ravenna, who,
+according to the too frequent maternal practice, were seen vying with
+each other in attracting so rich a purchaser for their daughters, and
+the young Teresa Gamba, not yet sixteen, and just emancipated from a
+convent, was the selected victim.</p>
+
+<p>The first time Lord Byron had ever seen this lady was in the autumn of
+1818, when she made her appearance, three days after her marriage, at
+the house of the Countess Albrizzi, in all the gaiety of bridal array,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page145" name="page145"></a>Pg 145</span>
+and the first delight of exchanging a convent for the world. At this
+time, however, no acquaintance ensued between them;&mdash;it was not till the
+spring of the present year that, at an evening party of Madame
+Benzoni's, they were introduced to each other. The love that sprung out
+of this meeting was instantaneous and mutual, though with the usual
+disproportion of sacrifice between the parties; such an event being, to
+the man, but one of the many scenes of life, while, with woman, it
+generally constitutes the whole drama. The young Italian found herself
+suddenly inspired with a passion of which, till that moment, her mind
+could not have formed the least idea;&mdash;she had thought of love but as an
+amusement, and now became its slave. If at the outset, too, less slow to
+be won than an Englishwoman, no sooner did she begin to understand the
+full despotism of the passion than her heart shrunk from it as something
+terrible, and she would have escaped, but that the chain was already
+around her.</p>
+
+<p>No words, however, can describe so simply and feelingly as her own, the
+strong impression which their first meeting left upon her mind:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I became acquainted (says Madame Guiccioli) with Lord Byron in the
+April of 1819:&mdash;he was introduced to me at Venice, by the Countess
+Benzoni, at one of that lady's parties. This introduction, which had so
+much influence over the lives of us both, took place contrary to our
+wishes, and had been permitted by us only from courtesy. For myself,
+more fatigued than usual that evening on<span class="pagenum"><a id="page146" name="page146"></a>Pg 146</span> account of the late hours they
+keep at Venice, I went with great repugnance to this party, and purely
+in obedience to Count Guiccioli. Lord Byron, too, who was averse to
+forming new acquaintances,&mdash;alleging that he had entirely renounced all
+attachments, and was unwilling any more to expose himself to their
+consequences,&mdash;on being requested by the countess Benzoni to allow
+himself to be presented to me, refused, and, at last, only assented from
+a desire to oblige her.</p>
+
+<p>"His noble and exquisitely beautiful countenance, the tone of his voice,
+his manners, the thousand enchantments that surrounded him, rendered him
+so different and so superior a being to any whom I had hitherto seen,
+that it was impossible he should not have left the most profound
+impression upon me. From that evening, during the whole of my subsequent
+stay at Venice, we met every day."<a name="FNanchor_30_30" id="FNanchor_30_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a></p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page147" name="page147"></a>Pg 147</span></p>
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 328. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, May 15. 1819.</p>
+
+<p>"I have got your extract, and the 'Vampire.' I need not say it is
+<i>not mine</i>. There is a rule to go by: you are my publisher (till we
+quarrel), and what is not published by you is not written by me.</p>
+
+<p>"Next week I set out for Romagna&mdash;at least, in all probability. You
+had better go on with the publications, without waiting to hear
+farther, for I have other things in my head. 'Mazeppa' and the
+'Ode' separate?&mdash;what think you? <i>Juan anonymous, without the
+Dedication;</i> for I won't be shabby, and attack Southey under cloud
+of night.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>In another letter on the subject of the Vampire, I find the following
+interesting particulars:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"<b>TO MR. &mdash;&mdash;.</b></p>
+
+<p>"The story of Shelley's agitation is true.<a name="FNanchor_31_31" id="FNanchor_31_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a> I can't tell what
+seized him, for he don't want courage.<span class="pagenum"><a id="page148" name="page148"></a>Pg 148</span> He was once with me in a
+gale of wind, in a small boat, right under the rocks between
+Meillerie and St. Gingo. We were five in the boat&mdash;a servant, two
+boatmen, and ourselves. The sail was mismanaged, and the boat was
+filling fast. He can't swim. I stripped off my coat, made him strip
+off his, and take hold of an oar, telling him that I thought (being
+myself an expert swimmer) I could save him, if he would not
+struggle when I took hold of him&mdash;unless we got smashed against the
+rocks, which were high and sharp, with an awkward surf on them at
+that minute. We were then about a hundred yards from shore, and the
+boat in peril. He answered me with the greatest coolness, 'that he
+had no notion of being saved, and that I would have enough to do to
+save myself, and begged not to trouble me.' Luckily, the boat
+righted, and, bailing, we got round a point into St. Gingo, where
+the inhabitants came down and embraced the boatmen on their escape,
+the wind having been high enough to tear up some huge trees from
+the Alps above us, as we saw next day.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page149" name="page149"></a>Pg 149</span></p>
+
+<p>"And yet the same Shelley, who was as cool as it was possible to be
+in such circumstances, (of which I am no judge myself, as the
+chance of swimming naturally gives self-possession when near
+shore,) certainly had the fit of phantasy which Polidori describes,
+though <i>not exactly</i> as he describes it.</p>
+
+<p>"The story of the agreement to write the ghost-books is true; but
+the ladies are <i>not</i> sisters. Mary Godwin (now Mrs. Shelley) wrote
+Frankenstein, which you have reviewed, thinking it Shelley's.
+Methinks it is a wonderful book for a girl of nineteen,&mdash;not
+nineteen, indeed, at that time. I enclose you the beginning of
+mine, by which you will see how far it resembles Mr. Colburn's
+publication. If you choose to publish it, you may, <i>stating why</i>,
+and with such explanatory proem as you please. I never went on with
+it, as you will perceive by the date. I began it in an old
+account-book of Miss Milbanke's, which I kept because it contains
+the word 'Household,' written by her twice on the inside blank page
+of the covers, being the only two scraps I have in the world in her
+writing, except her name to the Deed of Separation. Her letters I
+sent back except those of the quarrelling correspondence, and
+those, being documents, are placed in the hands of a third person,
+with copies of several of my own; so that I have no kind of
+memorial whatever of her, but these two words,&mdash;and her actions. I
+have torn the leaves containing the part of the Tale out of the
+book, and enclose them with this sheet.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean? First you seem hurt by my letter, and then, in
+your next, you talk of its<span class="pagenum"><a id="page150" name="page150"></a>Pg 150</span> 'power,' and so forth. 'This is a
+d&mdash;&mdash;d blind story, Jack; but never mind, go on.' You may be sure I
+said nothing <i>on purpose</i> to plague you; but if you will put me 'in
+a frenzy, I will never call you <i>Jack</i> again.' I remember nothing
+of the epistle at present.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean by Polidori's <i>Diary</i>? Why, I defy him to say any
+thing about me, but he is welcome. I have nothing to reproach me
+with on his score, and I am much mistaken if that is not his <i>own</i>
+opinion. But why publish the names of the two girls? and in such a
+manner?&mdash;what a blundering piece of exculpation! <i>He</i> asked Pictet,
+&amp;c. to dinner, and of course was left to entertain them. I went
+into society <i>solely</i> to present <i>him</i> (as I told him), that he
+might return into good company if he chose; it was the best thing
+for his youth and circumstances: for myself, I had done with
+society, and, having presented him, withdrew to my own 'way of
+life.' It is true that I returned without entering Lady Dalrymple
+Hamilton's, because I saw it full. It is true that Mrs. Hervey (she
+writes novels) fainted at my entrance into Coppet, and then came
+back again. On her fainting, the Duchess de Broglie exclaimed,
+'This is <i>too much</i>&mdash;at <i>sixty-five</i> years of age!'&mdash;I never gave
+'the English' an opportunity of avoiding me; but I trust that, if
+ever I do, they will seize it. With regard to Mazeppa and the Ode,
+you may join or separate them, as you please, from the two Cantos.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't suppose I want to put you out of humour. I have a great
+respect for your good and gentlemanly<span class="pagenum"><a id="page151" name="page151"></a>Pg 151</span> qualities, and return your
+personal friendship towards me; and although I think you a little
+spoilt by 'villanous company,'&mdash;wits, persons of honour about town,
+authors, and fashionables, together with your 'I am just going to
+call at Carlton House, are you walking that way?'&mdash;I say,
+notwithstanding 'pictures, taste, Shakspeare, and the musical
+glasses,' you deserve and possess the esteem of those whose esteem
+is worth having, and of none more (however useless it may be) than
+yours very truly, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. Make my respects to Mr. Gifford. I am perfectly aware that
+'Don Juan' must set us all by the ears, but that is my concern, and
+my beginning. There will be the 'Edinburgh,' and all, too, against
+it, so that, like 'Rob Roy,' I shall have my hands full."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 329. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, May 25. 1819.</p>
+
+<p>"I have received no proofs by the last post, and shall probably
+have quitted Venice before the arrival of the next. There wanted a
+few stanzas to the termination of Canto first in the last proof;
+the next will, I presume, contain them, and the whole or a portion
+of Canto second; but it will be idle to wait for further answers
+from me, as I have directed that my letters wait for my return
+(perhaps in a month, and probably so); therefore do not wait for
+further advice from me. You may as well talk to the wind, and
+better&mdash;for <i>it</i> will at least convey your accents a little further
+than they would other<span class="pagenum"><a id="page152" name="page152"></a>Pg 152</span>wise have gone; whereas <i>I</i> shall neither
+echo nor acquiesce in your 'exquisite reasons.' You may omit the
+<i>note</i> of reference to Hobhouse's travels, in Canto second, and you
+will put as motto to the whole&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">'Difficile est proprie communia dicere.'&mdash;HORACE.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"A few days ago I sent you all I know of Polidori's Vampire. He may
+do, say, or write, what he pleases, but I wish he would not
+attribute to me his own compositions. If he has any thing of mine
+in his possession, the MS. will put it beyond controversy; but I
+scarcely think that any one who knows me would believe the thing in
+the Magazine to be mine, even if they saw it in my own
+hieroglyphics.</p>
+
+<p>"I write to you in the agonies of a <i>sirocco</i>, which annihilates
+me; and I have been fool enough to do four things since dinner,
+which are as well omitted in very hot weather: 1stly, * * * *;
+2dly, to play at billiards from 10 to 12, under the influence of
+lighted lamps, that doubled the heat; 3dly, to go afterwards into a
+red-hot conversazione of the Countess Benzoni's; and, 4thly, to
+begin this letter at three in the morning: but being begun, it must
+be finished.</p>
+
+<p>"Ever very truly and affectionately yours,</p>
+
+<p>"B.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. I petition for tooth-brushes, powder, magnesia, Macassar oil
+(or Russia), <i>the</i> sashes, and Sir Nl. Wraxall's Memoirs of his own
+Times. I want, besides, a bull-dog, a terrier, and two Newfoundland
+dogs; and I want (is it Buck's?) a life of <i>Richard 3d</i>,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page153" name="page153"></a>Pg 153</span>
+advertised by Longman <i>long, long, long</i> ago; I asked for it at
+least three years since. See Longman's advertisements."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>About the middle of April, Madame Guiccioli had been obliged to quit
+Venice with her husband. Having several houses on the road from Venice
+to Ravenna, it was his habit to stop at these mansions, one after the
+other, in his journeys between the two cities; and from all these places
+the enamoured young Countess now wrote to Lord Byron, expressing, in the
+most passionate and pathetic terms, her despair at leaving him. So
+utterly, indeed, did this feeling overpower her, that three times, in
+the course of her first day's journey, she was seized with fainting
+fits. In one of her letters, which I saw when at Venice, dated, if I
+recollect right, from "C&agrave; Zen, Cavanelle di Po," she tells him that the
+solitude of this place, which she had before found irksome, was, now
+that one sole idea occupied her mind, become dear and welcome to her,
+and promises that, as soon as she arrives at Ravenna, "she will,
+according to his wish, avoid all general society, and devote herself to
+reading, music, domestic occupations, riding on horseback,&mdash;every thing,
+in short, that she knew he would most like." What a change for a young
+and simple girl, who, but a few weeks before, had thought only of
+society and the world, but who now saw no other happiness but in the
+hope of making herself worthy, by seclusion and self-instruction, of the
+illustrious object of her devotion!</p>
+
+<p>On leaving this place, she was attacked with a<span class="pagenum"><a id="page154" name="page154"></a>Pg 154</span> dangerous illness on the
+road, and arrived half dead at Ravenna; nor was it found possible to
+revive or comfort her till an assurance was received from Lord Byron,
+expressed with all the fervour of real passion, that, in the course of
+the ensuing month, he would pay her a visit. Symptoms of consumption,
+brought on by her state of mind, had already shown themselves; and, in
+addition to the pain which this separation had caused her, she was also
+suffering much grief from the loss of her mother, who, at this time,
+died in giving birth to her fourteenth child. Towards the latter end of
+May she wrote to acquaint Lord Byron that, having prepared all her
+relatives and friends to expect him, he might now, she thought, venture
+to make his appearance at Ravenna. Though, on the lady's account,
+hesitating as to the prudence of such a step, he, in obedience to her
+wishes, on the 2d of June, set out from La Mira (at which place he had
+again taken a villa for the summer), and proceeded towards Romagna.</p>
+
+<p>From Padua he addressed a letter to Mr. Hoppner, chiefly occupied with
+matters of household concern which that gentleman had undertaken to
+manage for him at Venice, but, on the immediate object of his journey,
+expressing himself in a tone so light and jesting, as it would be
+difficult for those not versed in his character to conceive that he
+could ever bring himself, while under the influence of a passion so
+sincere, to assume. But such is ever the wantonness of the mocking
+spirit, from which nothing,&mdash;not even love,&mdash;remains sacred; and which,
+at last, for want of other food, turns upon himself. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="page155" name="page155"></a>Pg 155</span> same horror,
+too, of hypocrisy that led Lord Byron to exaggerate his own errors, led
+him also to disguise, under a seemingly heartless ridicule, all those
+natural and kindly qualities by which they were redeemed.</p>
+
+<p>This letter from Padua concludes thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"A journey in an Italian June is a conscription; and if I was not
+the most constant of men, I should now be swimming from the Lido,
+instead of smoking in the dust of Padua. Should there be letters
+from England, let them wait my return. And do look at my house and
+(not lands, but) waters, and scold;&mdash;and deal out the monies to
+Edgecombe<a name="FNanchor_32_32" id="FNanchor_32_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> with an air of reluctance and a shake of the
+head&mdash;and put queer questions to him&mdash;and turn up your nose when he
+answers.</p>
+
+<p>"Make my respect to the Consules&mdash;and to the Chevalier&mdash;and to
+Scotin&mdash;and to all the counts and countesses of our acquaintance.</p>
+
+<p>"And believe me ever</p>
+
+<p>"Your disconsolate and affectionate," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>As a contrast to the strange levity of this letter, as well as in
+justice to the real earnestness of the passion, however censurable in
+all other respects, that now engrossed him, I shall here transcribe some
+stanzas which he wrote in the course of this journey to Romagna, and
+which, though already published, are not comprised in the regular
+collection of his works.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page156" name="page156"></a>Pg 156</span></p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"River<a name="FNanchor_33_33" id="FNanchor_33_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a>, that rollest by the ancient walls,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Where dwells the lady of my love, when she<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Walks by thy brink, and there perchance recalls<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">A faint and fleeting memory of me;<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"What if thy deep and ample stream should be<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">A mirror of my heart, where she may read<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">The thousand thoughts I now betray to thee,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Wild as thy wave, and headlong as thy speed!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"What do I say&mdash;a mirror of my heart?<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Are not thy waters sweeping, dark, and strong?<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Such as my feelings were and are, thou art;<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">And such as thou art were my passions long.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"Time may have somewhat tamed them,&mdash;not for ever;<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Thou overflow'st thy banks, and not for aye<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Thy bosom overboils, congenial river!<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Thy floods subside, and mine have sunk away,<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"But left long wrecks behind, and now again,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Borne in our old unchanged career, we move;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Thou tendest wildly onwards to the main,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">And I&mdash;to loving <i>one</i> I should not love.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"The current I behold will sweep beneath<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Her native walls and murmur at her feet;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Her eyes will look on thee, when she shall breathe<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">The twilight air, unharm'd by summer's heat.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"She will look on thee,&mdash;I have look'd on thee,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Full of that thought; and, from that moment, ne'er<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Thy waters could I dream of, name, or see,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Without the inseparable sigh for her!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza"><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page157" name="page157"></a>Pg 157</span></p>
+<span class="i4">"Her bright eyes will be imaged in thy stream,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i7">Yes! they will meet the wave I gaze on now:<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Mine cannot witness, even in a dream,<br /></span>
+<span class="i7">That happy wave repass me in its flow!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"The wave that bears my tears returns no more:<br /></span>
+<span class="i7">Will she return by whom that wave shall sweep?&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Both tread thy banks, both wander on thy shore,<br /></span>
+<span class="i7">I by thy source, she by the dark-blue deep.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"But that which keepeth us apart is not<br /></span>
+<span class="i7">Distance, nor depth of wave, nor space of earth.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">But the distraction of a various lot,<br /></span>
+<span class="i7">As various as the climates of our birth.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"A stranger loves the lady of the land,<br /></span>
+<span class="i7">Born far beyond the mountains, but his blood<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Is all meridian, as if never fann'd<br /></span>
+<span class="i7">By the black wind that chills the polar flood.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"My blood is all meridian; were it not,<br /></span>
+<span class="i7">I had not left my clime, nor should I be,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">In spite of tortures, ne'er to be forgot,<br /></span>
+<span class="i7">A slave again of love,&mdash;at least of thee.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"'Tis vain to struggle&mdash;let me perish young&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i7">Live as I lived, and love as I have loved;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">To dust if I return, from dust I sprung,<br /></span>
+<span class="i7">And then, at least, my heart can ne'er be moved."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>On arriving at Bologna and receiving no further intelligence from the
+Contessa, he began to be of opinion, as we shall perceive in the annexed
+interesting letters, that he should act most prudently, for all parties,
+by returning to Venice.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page158" name="page158"></a>Pg 158</span></p>
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 330. TO MR. HOPPNER.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Bologna, June 6. 1819.</p>
+
+<p>"I am at length joined to Bologna, where I am settled like a
+sausage, and shall be broiled like one, if this weather continues.
+Will you thank Mengaldo on my part for the Ferrara acquaintance,
+which was a very agreeable one. I stayed two days at Ferrara, and
+was much pleased with the Count Mosti, and the little the shortness
+of the time permitted me to see of his family. I went to his
+conversazione, which is very far superior to any thing of the kind
+at Venice&mdash;the women almost all young&mdash;several pretty&mdash;and the men
+courteous and cleanly. The lady of the mansion, who is young,
+lately married, and with child, appeared very pretty by candlelight
+(I did not see her by day), pleasing in her manners, and very
+lady-like, or thorough-bred, as we call it in England,&mdash;a kind of
+thing which reminds one of a racer, an antelope, or an Italian
+greyhound. She seems very fond of her husband, who is amiable and
+accomplished; he has been in England two or three times, and is
+young. The sister, a Countess somebody&mdash;I forget what&mdash;(they are
+both Maffei by birth, and Veronese of course)&mdash;is a lady of more
+display; she sings and plays divinely; but I thought she was a
+d&mdash;&mdash;d long time about it. Her likeness to Madame Flahaut (Miss
+Mercer that was) is something quite extraordinary.</p>
+
+<p>"I had but a bird's eye view of these people, and shall not
+probably see them again; but I am very much obliged to Mengaldo for
+letting me see them<span class="pagenum"><a id="page159" name="page159"></a>Pg 159</span> at all. Whenever I meet with any thing
+agreeable in this world, it surprises me so much, and pleases me so
+much (when my passions are not interested one way or the other),
+that I go on wondering for a week to come. I feel, too, in great
+admiration of the Cardinal Legate's red stockings.</p>
+
+<p>"I found, too, such a pretty epitaph in the Certosa cemetery, or
+rather two: one was</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">'Martini Luigi<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Implora pace;'<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>the other,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">'Lucrezia Picini<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Implora eterna quiete.'<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>That was all; but it appears to me that these two and three words
+comprise and compress all that can be said on the subject,&mdash;and
+then, in Italian, they are absolute music. They contain doubt,
+hope, and humility; nothing can be more pathetic than the 'implora'
+and the modesty of the request;&mdash;they have had enough of life&mdash;they
+want nothing but rest&mdash;they implore it, and 'eterna quiete.' It is
+like a Greek inscription in some good old heathen 'City of the
+Dead.' Pray, if I am shovelled into the Lido churchyard in your
+time, let me have the 'implora pace,' and nothing else, for my
+epitaph. I never met with any, ancient or modern, that pleased me a
+tenth part so much.</p>
+
+<p>"In about a day or two after you receive this letter, I will thank
+you to desire Edgecombe to prepare for my return. I shall go back
+to Venice before I village on the Brenta. I shall stay but a<span class="pagenum"><a id="page160" name="page160"></a>Pg 160</span> few
+days in Bologna. I am just going out to see sights, but shall not
+present my introductory letters for a day or two, till I have run
+over again the place and pictures; nor perhaps at all, if I find
+that I have books and sights enough to do without the inhabitants.
+After that, I shall return to Venice, where you may expect me about
+the eleventh, or perhaps sooner. Pray make my thanks acceptable to
+Mengaldo: my respects to the Consuless, and to Mr. Scott. I hope my
+daughter is well.</p>
+
+<p>"Ever yours, and truly.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. I went over the Ariosto MS. &amp;c. &amp;c. again at Ferrara, with
+the castle, and cell, and house, &amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"One of the Ferrarese asked me if I knew 'Lord Byron,' an
+acquaintance of his, <i>now</i> at Naples. I told him '<i>No!</i>' which was
+true both ways; for I knew not the impostor, and in the other, no
+one knows himself. He stared when told that I was 'the real Simon
+Pure.' Another asked me if I had <i>not translated</i> 'Tasso.' You see
+what <i>fame</i> is! how <i>accurate!</i> how <i>boundless!</i> I don't know how
+others feel, but I am always the lighter and the better looked on
+when I have got rid of mine; it sits on me like armour on the Lord
+Mayor's champion; and I got rid of all the husk of literature, and
+the attendant babble, by answering, that I had not translated
+Tasso, but a namesake had; and by the blessing of Heaven, I looked
+so little like a poet, that every body believed me."</p></div><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page161" name="page161"></a>Pg 161</span></p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 331. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Bologna, June 7. 1819.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell Mr. Hobhouse that I wrote to him a few days ago from Ferrara.
+It will therefore be idle in him or you to wait for any further
+answers or returns of proofs from Venice, as I have directed that
+no English letters be sent after me. The publication can be
+proceeded in without, and I am already sick of your remarks, to
+which I think not the least attention ought to be paid.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell Mr. Hobhouse that, since I wrote to him, I had availed myself
+of my Ferrara letters, and found the society much younger and
+better there than at Venice. I am very much pleased with the little
+the shortness of my stay permitted me to see of the Gonfaloniere
+Count Mosti, and his family and friends in general.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been picture-gazing this morning at the famous Domenichino
+and Guido, both of which are superlative. I afterwards went to the
+beautiful cemetery of Bologna, beyond the walls, and found, besides
+the superb burial-ground, an original of a Custode, who reminded
+one of the grave-digger in Hamlet. He has a collection of
+capuchins' skulls, labelled on the forehead, and taking down one of
+them, said, 'This was Brother Desiderio Berro, who died at
+forty&mdash;one of my best friends. I begged his head of his brethren
+after his decease, and they gave it me. I put it in lime, and then
+boiled it. Here it is, teeth and all, in excellent preservation. He
+was the merriest, cleverest fellow I ever knew. Wherever<span class="pagenum"><a id="page162" name="page162"></a>Pg 162</span> he went,
+he brought joy; and whenever any one was melancholy, the sight of
+him was enough to make him cheerful again. He walked so actively,
+you might have taken him for a dancer&mdash;he joked&mdash;he laughed&mdash;oh! he
+was such a Frate as I never saw before, nor ever shall again!'</p>
+
+<p>"He told me that he had himself planted all the cypresses in the
+cemetery; that he had the greatest attachment to them and to his
+dead people; that since 1801 they had buried fifty-three thousand
+persons. In showing some older monuments, there was that of a Roman
+girl of twenty, with a bust by Bernini. She was a princess
+Bartorini, dead two centuries ago: he said that, on opening her
+grave, they had found her hair complete, and 'as yellow as gold.'
+Some of the epitaphs at Ferrara pleased me more than the more
+splendid monuments at Bologna; for instance:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"Martini Luigi<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Implora pace;<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"Lucrezia Picini<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Implora eterna quiete.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Can any thing be more full of pathos? Those few words say all that
+can be said or sought: the dead had had enough of life; all they
+wanted was rest, and this they <i>implore</i>! There is all the
+helplessness, and humble hope, and deathlike prayer, that can arise
+from the grave&mdash;'implora pace.'<a name="FNanchor_34_34" id="FNanchor_34_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_34_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a> I hope,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page163" name="page163"></a>Pg 163</span> whoever may survive
+me, and shall see me put in the foreigners' burying-ground at the
+Lido, within the fortress by the Adriatic, will see those two
+words, and no more, put over me. I trust they won't think of
+'pickling, and bringing me home to Clod or Blunderbuss Hall.' I am
+sure my bones would not rest in an English grave, or my clay mix
+with the earth of that country. I believe the thought would drive
+me mad on my deathbed, could I suppose that any of my friends would
+be base enough to convey my carcass back to your soil. I would not
+even feed your worms, if I could help it.</p>
+
+<p>"So, as Shakspeare says of Mowbray, the banished Duke of Norfolk,
+who died at Venice (see Richard II.) that he, after fighting</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"'Against black Pagans, Turks, and Saracens,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">And toiled with works of war, retired himself<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">To Italy, and there, at <i>Venice</i>, gave<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">His body to that <i>pleasant</i> country's earth,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">And his pure soul unto his captain, Christ,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Under whose colours he had fought so long.'<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"Before I left Venice, I had returned to you your late, and Mr.
+Hobhouse's sheets of Juan. Don't wait for further answers from me,
+but address yours to<span class="pagenum"><a id="page164" name="page164"></a>Pg 164</span> Venice, as usual. I know nothing of my own
+movements; I may return there in a few days, or not for some time.
+All this depends on circumstances. I left Mr. Hoppner very well. My
+daughter Allegra was well too, and is growing pretty; her hair is
+growing darker, and her eyes are blue. Her temper and her ways, Mr.
+Hoppner says, are like mine, as well as her features: she will
+make, in that case, a manageable young lady.</p>
+
+<p>"I have never heard any thing of Ada, the little Electra of
+Mycenae. But there will come a day of reckoning, even if I should
+not live to see it.<a name="FNanchor_35_35" id="FNanchor_35_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_35_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a> What a long letter I have scribbled! Yours,
+&amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. Here, as in Greece, they strew flowers on the tombs. I saw a
+quantity of rose-leaves, and entire roses, scattered over the
+graves at Ferrara. It has the most pleasing effect you can
+imagine."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>While he was thus lingering irresolute at Bo<span class="pagenum"><a id="page165" name="page165"></a>Pg 165</span>logna, the Countess
+Guiccioli had been attacked with an intermittent fever, the violence of
+which, combining with the absence of a confidential person to whom she
+had been in the habit of intrusting her letters, prevented her from
+communicating with him. At length, anxious to spare him the
+disappointment of finding her so ill on his arrival, she had begun a
+letter, requesting that he would remain at Bologna till the visit to
+which she looked forward should bring her there also; and was in the act
+of writing, when a friend came in to announce the arrival of an English
+lord in Ravenna. She could not doubt for an instant that it was her
+noble friend; and he had, in fact, notwithstanding his declaration to
+Mr. Hoppner that it was his intention to return to Venice immediately,
+wholly altered this resolution before the letter announcing it was
+despatched,&mdash;the following words being written on the outside cover:&mdash;"I
+am just setting off for Ravenna, June 8. 1819.&mdash;I changed my mind this
+morning, and decided to go on."</p>
+
+<p>The reader, however, shall have Madame Guiccioli's own account of these
+events, which, fortunately for the interest of my narration, I am
+enabled to communicate.</p>
+
+<p>"On my departure from Venice, he had promised to come and see me at
+Ravenna. Dante's tomb, the classical pine wood<a name="FNanchor_36_36" id="FNanchor_36_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_36_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a>, the relics of
+antiquity which<span class="pagenum"><a id="page166" name="page166"></a>Pg 166</span> are to be found in that place, afforded a sufficient
+pretext for me to invite him to come, and for him to accept my
+invitation. He came, in fact, in the month of June, arriving at Ravenna
+on the day of the festival of the Corpus Domini; while I, attacked by a
+consumptive complaint, which had its origin from the moment of my
+quitting Venice, appeared on the point of death. The arrival of a
+distinguished foreigner at Ravenna, a town so remote from the routes
+ordinarily followed by travellers, was an event which gave rise to a
+good deal of conversation. His motives for such a visit became the
+subject of discussion, and these he himself afterwards involuntarily
+divulged; for having made some enquiries with a view to paying me a
+visit, and being told that it was unlikely that he would ever see me
+again, as I was at the point of death, he replied, if such were the
+case, he hoped that he should die also; which circumstance, being
+repeated, revealed the object of his journey. Count Guiccioli, having
+been acquainted with Lord Byron at Venice, went to visit him now, and in
+the hope that his presence might amuse, and be of some use to me in the
+state in which I then found myself, invited him to call upon me. He came
+the day following. It is impossible to describe the anxiety he
+showed,&mdash;the delicate attentions that he paid me. For a long time he had
+perpetually medical books in his hands; and<span class="pagenum"><a id="page167" name="page167"></a>Pg 167</span> not trusting my physicians,
+he obtained permission from Count Guiccioli to send for a very clever
+physician, a friend of his, in whom he placed great confidence. The
+attentions of Professor Aglietti (for so this celebrated Italian was
+called), together with tranquillity, and the inexpressible happiness
+which I experienced in Lord Byron's society, had so good an effect on my
+health, that only two months afterwards I was able to accompany my
+husband in a tour he was obliged to make to visit his various
+estates."<a name="FNanchor_37_37" id="FNanchor_37_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_37_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a></p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' /><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page168" name="page168"></a>Pg 168</span></p>
+
+<p><b>LETTER 332. TO MR. HOPPNER.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, June 20. 1819.</p>
+
+<p>"I wrote to you from Padua, and from Bologna, and since from
+Ravenna. I find my situation very agreeable, but want my horses
+very much, there being good riding in the environs. I can fix no
+time for my return to Venice&mdash;it may be soon or late&mdash;or not at
+all&mdash;it all depends on the Donna, whom I found very seriously in
+<i>bed</i> with a cough and spitting of blood, &amp;c. all of which has
+subsided. I found all the people here firmly persuaded that she
+would never recover;&mdash;they were mistaken, however.</p>
+
+<p>"My letters were useful as far as I employed them; and I like both
+the place and people, though I don't trouble the latter more than I
+can help <i>She</i> manages very well&mdash;but if I come away with a
+stiletto in my gizzard some fine afternoon, I shall not be
+astonished. I can't make <i>him</i> out at all&mdash;he visits me frequently,
+and takes me out (like Whittington, the Lord Mayor) in a coach and
+<i>six</i> horses. The fact appears to be, that he is completely
+<i>governed</i><span class="pagenum"><a id="page169" name="page169"></a>Pg 169</span> by her&mdash;for that matter, so am I.<a name="FNanchor_38_38" id="FNanchor_38_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_38_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a> The people here
+don't know what to make of us, as he had the character of jealousy
+with all his wives&mdash;this is the third. He is the richest of the
+Ravennese, by their own account, but is not popular among them. Now
+do, pray, send off Augustine, and carriage and cattle, to Bologna,
+without fail or delay, or I shall lose my remaining shred of
+senses. Don't forget this. My coming, going, and every thing,
+depend upon HER entirely, just as Mrs. Hoppner (to whom I remit my
+reverences) said in the true spirit of female prophecy.</p>
+
+<p>"You are but a shabby fellow not to have written before. And I am
+truly yours," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 333. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, June 29. 1819.</p>
+
+<p>"The letters have been forwarded from Venice, but I trust that you
+will not have waited for further alterations&mdash;I will make none.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page170" name="page170"></a>Pg 170</span></p>
+
+<p>"I have no time to return you the proofs&mdash;publish without them. I
+am glad you think the poesy good; and as to 'thinking of the
+effect,' think <i>you</i> of the sale, and leave me to pluck the
+porcupines who may point their quills at you.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been here (at Ravenna) these four weeks, having left Venice
+a month ago;&mdash;I came to see my 'Amica,' the Countess Guiccioli, who
+has been, and still continues, very unwell. * * She is only in her
+seventeenth, but not of a strong constitution. She has a perpetual
+cough and an intermittent fever, but bears up most <i>gallantly</i> in
+every sense of the word. Her husband (this is his third wife) is
+the richest noble of Ravenna, and almost of Romagna; he is also
+<i>not</i> the youngest, being upwards of three-score, but in good
+preservation. All this will appear strange to you, who do not
+understand the meridian morality, nor our way of life in such
+respects, and I cannot at present expound the difference;&mdash;but you
+would find it much the same in these parts. At Faenza there is Lord
+* * * * with an opera girl; and at the inn in the same town is a
+Neapolitan Prince, who serves the wife of the Gonfaloniere of that
+city. I am on duty here&mdash;so you see 'Cos&igrave; fan tut<i>ti</i> e tut<i>te</i>.'</p>
+
+<p>"I have my horses here, <i>saddle</i> as well as carriage, and ride or
+drive every day in the forest, the <i>Pineta</i>, the scene of
+Boccaccio's novel, and Dryden's fable of Honoria, &amp;c. &amp;c.; and I
+see my Dama every day; but I feel seriously uneasy about her
+health, which seems very precarious. In losing her, I should lose a
+being who has run great risks on my account, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="page171" name="page171"></a>Pg 171</span> whom I have every
+reason to love&mdash;but I must not think this possible. I do not know
+what I <i>should</i> do if she died, but I ought to blow my brains
+out&mdash;and I hope that I should. Her husband is a very polite
+personage, but I wish he would not carry me out in his coach and
+six, like Whittington and his cat.</p>
+
+<p>"You ask me if I mean to continue D.J. &amp;c. How should I know? What
+encouragement do you give me, all of you, with your nonsensical
+prudery? publish the two Cantos, and then you will see. I desired
+Mr. Kinnaird to speak to you on a little matter of business; either
+he has not spoken, or you have not answered. You are a pretty pair,
+but I will be even with you both. I perceive that Mr. Hobhouse has
+been challenged by Major Cartwright&mdash;Is the Major 'so cunning of
+fence?'&mdash;why did not they fight?&mdash;they ought.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 334. TO MR. HOPPNER.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, July 2. 1819.</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks for your letter and for Madame's. I will answer it
+directly. Will you recollect whether I did not consign to you one
+or two receipts of Madame Mocenigo's for house-rent&mdash;(I am not sure
+of this, but think I did&mdash;if not, they will be in my drawers)&mdash;and
+will you desire Mr. Dorville<a name="FNanchor_39_39" id="FNanchor_39_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_39_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a> to have the goodness to see if
+Edgecombe has <i>receipts</i> to all payments <i>hitherto</i> made by him on
+my account,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page172" name="page172"></a>Pg 172</span> and that there are <i>no debts</i> at Venice? On your
+answer, I shall send order of further remittance to carry on my
+household expenses, as my present return to Venice is very
+problematical; and it may happen&mdash;but I can say nothing
+positive&mdash;every thing with me being indecisive and undecided,
+except the disgust which Venice excites when fairly compared with
+any other city in this part of Italy. When I say <i>Venice</i>, I mean
+the <i>Venetians</i>&mdash;the city itself is superb as its history&mdash;but the
+people are what I never thought them till they taught me to think
+so.</p>
+
+<p>"The best way will be to leave Allegra with Antonio's spouse till I
+can decide something about her and myself&mdash;but I thought that you
+would have had an answer from Mrs. V&mdash;&mdash;r.<a name="FNanchor_40_40" id="FNanchor_40_40"></a><a href="#Footnote_40_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a> You have had bore
+enough with me and mine already.</p>
+
+<p>"I greatly fear that the Guiccioli is going into a consumption, to
+which her constitution tends. Thus it is with every thing and every
+body for whom I feel any thing like a real attachment;&mdash;'War,
+death, or<span class="pagenum"><a id="page173" name="page173"></a>Pg 173</span> discord, doth lay siege to them.' I never even could
+keep alive a dog that I liked or that liked me. Her symptoms are
+obstinate cough of the lungs, and occasional fever, &amp;c. &amp;c. and
+there are latent causes of an eruption in the skin, which she
+foolishly repelled into the system two years ago: but I have made
+them send her case to Aglietti; and have begged him to come&mdash;if
+only for a day or two&mdash;to consult upon her state.</p>
+
+<p>"If it would not bore Mr. Dorville, I wish he would keep an eye on
+E&mdash;&mdash; and on my other ragamuffins. I might have more to say, but I
+am absorbed about La Gui. and her illness. I cannot tell you the
+effect it has upon me.</p>
+
+<p>"The horses came, &amp;c. &amp;c. and I have been galloping through the
+pine forest daily.</p>
+
+<p>"Believe me, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. My benediction on Mrs. Hoppner, a pleasant journey among the
+Bernese tyrants, and safe return. You ought to bring back a
+Platonic Bernese for my reformation. If any thing happens to my
+present Amica, I have done with the passion for ever&mdash;it is my
+<i>last</i> love. As to libertinism, I have sickened myself of that, as
+was natural in the way I went on, and I have at least derived that
+advantage from vice, to <i>love</i> in the better sense of the word.
+<i>This</i> will be my last adventure&mdash;I can hope no more to inspire
+attachment, and I trust never again to feel it."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>The impression which, I think, cannot but be entertained, from some
+passages of these letters, of<span class="pagenum"><a id="page174" name="page174"></a>Pg 174</span> the real fervour and sincerity of his
+attachment to Madame Guiccioli<a name="FNanchor_41_41" id="FNanchor_41_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_41_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a>, would be still further confirmed by
+the perusal of his letters to that lady herself, both from Venice and
+during his present stay at Ravenna&mdash;all bearing, throughout, the true
+marks both of affection and passion. Such effusions, however, are but
+little suited to the general eye. It is the tendency of all strong
+feeling, from dwelling constantly on the same idea, to be monotonous;
+and those often-repeated vows and verbal endearments, which make the
+charm of true love-letters to the parties concerned in them, must for
+ever render even the best of them cloying to others. Those of Lord Byron
+to Madame Guiccioli, which are for the most part in Italian, and written
+with a degree of ease and cor<span class="pagenum"><a id="page175" name="page175"></a>Pg 175</span>rectness attained rarely by foreigners,
+refer chiefly to the difficulties thrown in the way of their
+meetings,&mdash;not so much by the husband himself, who appears to have liked
+and courted Lord Byron's society, as by the watchfulness of other
+relatives, and the apprehension felt by themselves lest their intimacy
+should give uneasiness to the father of the lady, Count Gamba, a
+gentleman to whose good nature and amiableness of character all who know
+him bear testimony.</p>
+
+<p>In the near approaching departure of the young Countess for Bologna,
+Lord Byron foresaw a risk of their being again separated; and under the
+impatience of this prospect, though through the whole of his preceding
+letters the fear of committing her by any imprudence seems to have been
+his ruling thought, he now, with that wilfulness of the moment which has
+so often sealed the destiny of years, proposed that she should, at once,
+abandon her husband and fly with him:&mdash;"c'&egrave; uno solo rimedio efficace,"
+he says,&mdash;"cio&egrave; d' andar vi&agrave; insieme." To an Italian wife, almost every
+thing but this is permissible. The same system which so indulgently
+allows her a friend, as one of the regular appendages of her matrimonial
+establishment, takes care also to guard against all unseemly
+consequences of this privilege; and in return for such convenient
+facilities of wrong exacts rigidly an observance of all the appearances
+of right. Accordingly, the open step of deserting the husband for the
+lover instead of being considered, as in England, but a sign and sequel
+of transgression, takes rank, in Italian morality, as the main
+transgres<span class="pagenum"><a id="page176" name="page176"></a>Pg 176</span>sion itself; and being an offence, too, rendered wholly
+unnecessary by the latitude otherwise enjoyed, becomes, from its rare
+occurrence, no less monstrous than odious.</p>
+
+<p>The proposition, therefore, of her noble friend seemed to the young
+Contessa little less than sacrilege, and the agitation of her mind,
+between the horrors of such a step, and her eager readiness to give up
+all and every thing for him she adored, was depicted most strongly in
+her answer to the proposal. In a subsequent letter, too, the romantic
+girl even proposed, as a means of escaping the ignominy of an elopement,
+that she should, like another Juliet, "pass for dead,"&mdash;assuring him
+that there were many easy ways of effecting such a deception.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 335. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, August 1. 1819.</p>
+
+<p>[Address your Answer to Venice, however.]</p>
+
+<p>"Don't be alarmed. You will see me defend myself gaily&mdash;that is, if
+I happen to be in spirits; and by spirits, I don't mean your
+meaning of the word, but the spirit of a bull-dog when pinched, or
+a bull when pinned; it is then that they make best sport; and as my
+sensations under an attack are probably a happy compound of the
+united energies of these amiable animals, you may perhaps see what
+Marrall calls 'rare sport,' and some good tossing and goring, in
+the course of the controversy. But I must be in the right cue
+first, and I doubt I am almost too far off to be in a sufficient
+fury for the<span class="pagenum"><a id="page177" name="page177"></a>Pg 177</span> purpose. And then I have effeminated and enervated
+myself with love and the summer in these last two months.</p>
+
+<p>"I wrote to Mr. Hobhouse, the other day, and foretold that Juan
+would either fall entirely or succeed completely; there will be no
+medium. Appearances are not favourable; but as you write the day
+after publication, it can hardly be decided what opinion will
+predominate. You seem in a fright, and doubtless with cause. Come
+what may I never will flatter the million's canting in any shape.
+Circumstances may or may not have placed me at times in a situation
+to lead the public opinion, but the public opinion never led, nor
+ever shall lead, me. I will not sit on a degraded throne; so pray
+put Messrs. * * or * *, or Tom Moore, or * * * upon it; they will
+all of them be transported with their coronation.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. The Countess Guiccioli is much better than she was. I sent
+you, before leaving Venice, the real original sketch which gave
+rise to the 'Vampire,' &amp;c.&mdash;Did you get it?"</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>This letter was, of course (like most of those he addressed to England
+at this time), intended to be shown; and having been, among others,
+permitted to see it, I took occasion, in my very next communication to
+Lord Byron, to twit him a little with the passage in it relating to
+myself,&mdash;the only one, as far as I can learn, that ever fell from my
+noble friend's pen during our intimacy, in which he has spoken of me
+otherwise than in terms of kindness<span class="pagenum"><a id="page178" name="page178"></a>Pg 178</span> and the most undeserved praise.
+Transcribing his own words, as well as I could recollect them, at the
+top of my letter, I added, underneath, "Is <i>this</i> the way you speak of
+your friends?" Not long after, too, when visiting him at Venice, I
+remember making the same harmless little sneer a subject of raillery
+with him; but he declared boldly that he had no recollection of having
+ever written such words, and that, if they existed, "he must have been
+half asleep when he wrote them."</p>
+
+<p>I have mentioned the circumstance merely for the purpose of remarking,
+that with a sensibility vulnerable at so many points as his was, and
+acted upon by an imagination so long practised in self-tormenting, it is
+only wonderful that, thinking constantly, as his letters prove him to
+have been, of distant friends, and receiving from few or none equal
+proofs of thoughtfulness in return, he should not more frequently have
+broken out into such sallies against the absent and "unreplying." For
+myself, I can only say that, from the moment I began to unravel his
+character, the most slighting and even acrimonious expressions that I
+could have heard he had, in a fit of spleen, uttered against me, would
+have no more altered my opinion of his disposition, nor disturbed my
+affection for him, than the momentary clouding over of a bright sky
+could leave an impression on the mind of gloom, after its shadow had
+passed away.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page179" name="page179"></a>Pg 179</span></p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 336. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, August 9. 1819.</p>
+
+<p>"Talking of blunders reminds me of Ireland&mdash;Ireland of Moore. What
+is this I see in Galignani
+about 'Bermuda&mdash;agent&mdash;deputy&mdash;appeal&mdash;attachment,' &amp;c.? What is the
+matter? Is it any thing in which his friends can be of use to him?
+Pray inform me.</p>
+
+<p>"Of Don Juan I hear nothing further from you; * * *, but the papers
+don't seem so fierce as the letter you sent me seemed to
+anticipate, by their extracts at least in Galignani's Messenger. I
+never saw such a set of fellows as you are! And then the pains
+taken to exculpate the modest publisher&mdash;he remonstrated, forsooth!
+I will write a preface that <i>shall</i> exculpate <i>you</i> and * * *, &amp;c.
+completely, on that point; but, at the same time, I will cut you
+up, like gourds. You have no more soul than the Count de Caylus,
+(who assured his friends, on his death-bed, that he had none, and
+that <i>he</i> must know better than they whether he had one or no,) and
+no more blood than a water-melon! And I see there hath been
+asterisks, and what Perry used to called 'd<i>o</i>mned cutting and
+slashing'&mdash;but, never mind.</p>
+
+<p>"I write in haste. To-morrow I set off for Bologna. I write to you
+with thunder, lightning, &amp;c. and all the winds of heaven whistling
+through my hair, and the racket of preparation to boot. 'My
+mistress dear, who hath fed my heart upon smiles and wine' for the
+last two months, set off with her husband for Bologna this morning,
+and it<span class="pagenum"><a id="page180" name="page180"></a>Pg 180</span> seems that I follow him at three to-morrow morning. I
+cannot tell how our romance will end, but it hath gone on hitherto
+most erotically. Such perils and escapes! Juan's are as child's
+play in comparison. The fools think that all my <i>poeshie</i> is always
+allusive to my <i>own</i> adventures: I have had at one time or another
+better and more extraordinary and perilous and pleasant than these,
+every day of the week, if I might tell them; but that must never
+be.</p>
+
+<p>"I hope Mrs. M. has accouched.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours ever."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 337. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Bologna, August 12. 1819.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know how far I may be able to reply to your letter, for I
+am not very well to-day. Last night I went to the representation of
+Alfieri's Mirra, the two last acts of which threw me into
+convulsions. I do not mean by that word a lady's hysterics, but the
+agony of reluctant tears, and the choking shudder, which I do not
+often undergo for fiction. This is but the second time for any
+thing under reality: the first was on seeing Kean's Sir Giles
+Overreach. The worst was, that the 'Dama' in whose box I was, went
+off in the same way, I really believe more from fright than any
+other sympathy&mdash;at least with the players: but she has been ill,
+and I have been ill, and we are all languid and pathetic this
+morning, with great expenditure of sal volatile.<a name="FNanchor_42_42" id="FNanchor_42_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_42_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a> But, to return
+to your letter of the 23d of July.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page181" name="page181"></a>Pg 181</span></p>
+
+<p>"You are right, Gifford is right, Crabbe is right, Hobhouse is
+right&mdash;you are all right, and I am all wrong; but do, pray, let me
+have that pleasure. Cut me up root and branch; quarter me in the
+Quarterly; send round my 'disjecti membra poet&aelig;,' like those of
+the Levite's concubine; make me, if you will, a spectacle to men
+and angels; but don't ask me to alter, for I won't:&mdash;I am obstinate
+and lazy&mdash;and there's the truth.</p>
+
+<p>"But, nevertheless, I will answer your friend P * *, who objects to
+the quick succession of fun and gravity, as if in that case the
+gravity did not (in intention, at least) heighten the fun. His
+metaphor is, that 'we are never scorched and drenched at the<span class="pagenum"><a id="page182" name="page182"></a>Pg 182</span> same
+time.' Blessings on his experience! Ask him these questions about
+'scorching and drenching.' Did he never play at cricket, or walk a
+mile in hot weather? Did he never spill a dish of tea over himself
+in handing the cup to his charmer, to the great shame of his
+nankeen breeches? Did he never swim in the sea at noonday with the
+sun in his eyes and on his head, which all the foam of ocean could
+not cool? Did he never draw his foot out of too hot water,
+d&mdash;&mdash;ning his eyes and his valet's? Did he never tumble into a
+river or lake, fishing, and sit in his wet clothes in the boat, or
+on the bank, afterwards 'scorched and drenched,' like a true
+sportsman? 'Oh for breath to utter!'&mdash;but make him my compliments;
+he is a clever fellow for all that&mdash;a very clever fellow.</p>
+
+<p>"You ask me for the plan of Donny Johnny: I <i>have</i> no plan; I <i>had</i>
+no plan; but I had or have materials; though if, like Tony Lumpkin,
+'I am to be snubbed so when I am in spirits,' the poem will be
+naught, and the poet turn serious again. If it don't take, I will
+leave it off where it is, with all due respect to the public; but
+if continued, it must be in my own way. You might as well make
+Hamlet (or Diggory) 'act mad' in a strait waistcoat as trammel my
+buffoonery, if I am to be a buffoon; their gestures and my thoughts
+would only be pitiably absurd and ludicrously constrained. Why,
+man, the soul of such writing is its licence; at least the
+<i>liberty</i> of that <i>licence</i>, if one likes&mdash;<i>not</i> that one should
+abuse it. It is like Trial by Jury and Peerage and the Habeas
+Corpus&mdash;a very fine thing,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page183" name="page183"></a>Pg 183</span> but chiefly in the <i>reversion;</i> because
+no one wishes to be tried for the mere pleasure of proving his
+possession of the privilege.</p>
+
+<p>"But a truce with these reflections. You are too earnest and eager
+about a work never intended to be serious. Do you suppose that I
+could have any intention but to giggle and make giggle?&mdash;a playful
+satire, with as little poetry as could be helped, was what I meant.
+And as to the indecency, do, pray, read in Boswell what <i>Johnson</i>,
+the sullen moralist, says of <i>Prior</i> and Paulo Purgante.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you get a favour done for me? <i>You</i> can, by your government
+friends, Croker, Canning, or my old schoolfellow Peel, and I can't.
+Here it is. Will you ask them to appoint (<i>without salary or
+emolument</i>) a noble Italian (whom I will name afterwards) consul or
+vice-consul for Ravenna? He is a man of very large
+property,&mdash;noble, too; but he wishes to have a British protection,
+in case of changes. Ravenna is near the sea. He wants no
+<i>emolument</i> whatever. That his office might be useful, I know; as I
+lately sent off from Ravenna to Trieste a poor devil of an English
+sailor, who had remained there sick, sorry, and pennyless (having
+been set ashore in 1814), from the want of any accredited agent
+able or willing to help him homewards. Will you get this done? If
+you do, I will then send his name and condition, subject, of
+course, to rejection, if <i>not</i> approved when known.</p>
+
+<p>"I know that in the Levant you make consuls and vice-consuls,
+perpetually, of foreigners. This man is a patrician, and has twelve
+thousand a year.<span class="pagenum"><a id="page184" name="page184"></a>Pg 184</span> His motive is a British protection in case of new
+invasions. Don't you think Croker would do it for us? To be sure,
+my <i>interest</i> is rare!! but, perhaps, a brother wit in the Tory
+line might do a good turn at the request of so harmless and long
+absent a Whig, particularly as there is no <i>salary</i> or <i>burden</i> of
+any sort to be annexed to the office.</p>
+
+<p>"I can assure you, I should look upon it as a great obligation;
+but, alas! that very circumstance may, very probably, operate to
+the contrary&mdash;indeed, it ought; but I have, at least, been an
+honest and an open enemy. Amongst your many splendid government
+connections, could not you, think you, get our Bibulus made a
+Consul? or make me one, that I may make him my Vice. You may be
+assured that, in case of accidents in Italy, he would be no feeble
+adjunct&mdash;as you would think, if you knew his patrimony.</p>
+
+<p>"What is all this about Tom Moore? but why do I ask? since the
+state of my own affairs would not permit me to be of use to him,
+though they are greatly improved since 1816, and may, with some
+more luck and a little prudence, become quite clear. It seems his
+claimants are <i>American</i> merchants? <i>There goes Nemesis!</i> Moore
+abused America. It is always thus in the long run:&mdash;Time, the
+Avenger. You have seen every trampler down, in turn, from
+Buonaparte to the simplest individuals. You saw how some were
+avenged even upon my insignificance, and how in turn * * * paid for
+his atrocity. It is an odd world; but the watch has its mainspring,
+after all.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page185" name="page185"></a>Pg 185</span></p>
+
+<p>"So the Prince has been repealing Lord Edward Fitzgerald's
+forfeiture? <i>Ecco un' sonetto!</i></p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"To be the father of the fatherless,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">To stretch the hand from the throne's height, and raise<br /></span>
+<span class="i4"><i>His</i> offspring, who expired in other days<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">To make thy sire's sway by a kingdom less,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4"><i>This</i> is to be a monarch, and repress<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Envy into unutterable praise.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Dismiss thy guard, and trust thee to such traits,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">For who would lift a hand, except to bless?<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Were it not easy, sir, and is't not sweet<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">To make thyself beloved? and to be<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Omnipotent by Mercy's means? for thus<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Thy sovereignty would grow but more complete,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">A despot thou, and yet thy people free,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">And by the heart, not hand, enslaving us.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"There, you dogs! there's a sonnet for you: you won't have such as
+that in a hurry from Mr. Fitzgerald. You may publish it with my
+name, an' ye wool. He deserves all praise, bad and good; it was a
+very noble piece of principality. Would you like an epigram&mdash;a
+translation?</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"If for silver, or for gold,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">You could melt ten thousand pimples<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Into half a dozen dimples,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Then your face we might behold,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Looking, doubtless, much more snugly,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Yet ev'n <i>then</i> 'twould be d&mdash;&mdash;d <i>ugly</i>.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"This was written on some Frenchwoman, by Rulhieres, I believe.
+Yours."</p></div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page186" name="page186"></a>Pg 186</span></p>
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 338. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Bologna, August 23. 1819.</p>
+
+<p>"I send you a letter to R * *ts, signed Wortley Clutterbuck, which
+you may publish in what form you please, in answer to his article.
+I have had many proofs of men's absurdity, but he beats all in
+folly. Why, the wolf in sheep's clothing has tumbled into the very
+trap! We'll strip him. The letter is written in great haste, and
+amidst a thousand vexations. Your letter only came yesterday, so
+that there is no time to polish: the post goes out to-morrow. The
+date is 'Little Piddlington.' Let * * * * correct the press: he
+knows and can read the handwriting. Continue to keep the
+<i>anonymous</i> about 'Juan;' it helps us to fight against overwhelming
+numbers. I have a thousand distractions at present; so excuse
+haste, and wonder I can act or write at all. Answer by post, as
+usual.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. If I had had time, and been quieter and nearer, I would have
+cut him to hash; but as it is, you can judge for yourselves."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>The letter to the Reviewer, here mentioned, had its origin in rather an
+amusing circumstance. In the first Canto of Don Juan appeared the
+following passage:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"For fear some prudish readers should grow skittish,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I've bribed My Grandmother's Review,&mdash;the British!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"I sent it in a letter to the editor,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Who thank'd me duly by return of post&mdash;<br /></span><span class="pagenum"><a id="page187" name="page187"></a>Pg 187</span>
+<span class="i0">I'm for a handsome article his creditor;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Yet if my gentle Muse he please to roast,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And break a promise after having made it her,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Denying the receipt of what it cost,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And smear his page with gall instead of honey,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">All I can say is&mdash;that he had the money."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>On the appearance of the poem, the learned editor of the Review in
+question allowed himself to be decoyed into the ineffable absurdity of
+taking the charge as serious, and, in his succeeding number, came forth
+with an indignant contradiction of it. To this tempting subject the
+letter, written so hastily off at Bologna, related; but, though printed
+for Mr. Murray, in a pamphlet consisting of twenty-three pages, it was
+never published by him.<a name="FNanchor_43_43" id="FNanchor_43_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_43_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a> Being valuable, however, as one of the best
+specimens we have of Lord Byron's simple and thoroughly English prose, I
+shall here preserve some extracts from it.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>"<b>TO THE EDITOR OF THE BRITISH REVIEW.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"My dear R&mdash;&mdash;ts,</p>
+
+<p>"As a believer in the Church of England&mdash;to say nothing of the
+State&mdash;I have been an occasional reader, and great admirer, though
+not a subscriber, to your Review. But I do not know that any
+article of its contents ever gave me much surprise till the
+eleventh of your late twenty-seventh number made its appearance.
+You have there most manfully refuted a calumnious accusation of
+bribery and corruption, the credence of which in the public mind<span class="pagenum"><a id="page188" name="page188"></a>Pg 188</span>
+might not only have damaged your reputation as a clergyman and an
+editor, but, what would have been still worse, have injured the
+circulation of your journal; which, I regret to hear, is not so
+extensive as the 'purity (as you well observe) of its, &amp;c. &amp;c.' and
+the present taste for propriety, would induce us to expect. The
+charge itself is of a solemn nature; and, although in verse, is
+couched in terms of such circumstantial gravity as to induce a
+belief little short of that generally accorded to the thirty-nine
+articles, to which you so generously subscribed on taking your
+degrees. It is a charge the most revolting to the heart of man from
+its frequent occurrence; to the mind of a statesman from its
+occasional truth; and to the soul of an editor from its moral
+impossibility. You are charged then in the last line of one octave
+stanza, and the whole eight lines of the next, viz. 209th and 210th
+of the first Canto of that 'pestilent poem,' Don Juan, with
+receiving, and still more foolishly acknowledging, the receipt of
+certain moneys to eulogise the unknown author, who by this account
+must be known to you, if to nobody else. An impeachment of this
+nature, so seriously made, there is but one way of refuting; and it
+is my firm persuasion, that whether you did or did not (and <i>I</i>
+believe that you did not) receive the said moneys, of which I wish
+that he had specified the sum, you are quite right in denying all
+knowledge of the transaction. If charges of this nefarious
+description are to go forth, sanctioned by all the solemnity of
+circumstance, and guaranteed by the veracity of verse (as
+Counsellor Phillips would<span class="pagenum"><a id="page189" name="page189"></a>Pg 189</span> say), what is to become of readers
+hitherto implicitly confident in the not less veracious prose of
+our critical journals? what is to become of the reviews; and, if
+the reviews fail, what is to become of the editors? It is common
+cause, and you have done well to sound the alarm. I myself, in my
+humble sphere, will be one of your echoes. In the words of the
+tragedian Liston, 'I love a row,' and you seem justly determined to
+make one.</p>
+
+<p>"It is barely possible, certainly improbable, that the writer might
+have been in jest; but this only aggravates his crime. A joke, the
+proverb says, 'breaks no bones;' but it may break a bookseller, or
+it may be the cause of bones being broken. The jest is but a bad
+one at the best for the author, and might have been a still worse
+one for you, if your copious contradiction did not certify to all
+whom it may concern your own indignant innocence, and the
+immaculate purity of the British Review. I do not doubt your word,
+my dear R&mdash;&mdash;ts, yet I cannot help wishing that, in a case of such
+vital importance, it had assumed the more substantial shape of an
+affidavit sworn before the Lord Mayor Atkins, who readily receives
+any deposition; and doubtless would have brought it in some way as
+evidence of the designs of the Reformers to set fire to London, at
+the same time that he himself meditates the same good office
+towards the river Thames.</p>
+
+<p>"I recollect hearing, soon after the publication, this subject
+discussed at the tea-table of Mr. * * * the poet,&mdash;and Mrs. and the
+Misses * * * * * being in a corner of the room perusing the proof
+sheets of<span class="pagenum"><a id="page190" name="page190"></a>Pg 190</span> Mr. * * *'s poems, the male part of the <i>conversazione</i>
+were at liberty to make some observations on the poem and passage
+in question, and there was a difference of opinion. Some thought
+the allusion was to the 'British Critic;' others, that by the
+expression 'My Grandmother's Review,' it was intimated that 'my
+grandmother' was not the reader of the review, but actually the
+writer; thereby insinuating, my dear Mr. R&mdash;&mdash;ts, that you were an
+old woman; because, as people often say, 'Jeffrey's Review,"
+'Gifford's Review,' in lieu of Edinburgh and Quarterly, so 'My
+Grandmother's Review' and R&mdash;&mdash;ts's might be also synonymous. Now,
+whatever colour this insinuation might derive from the circumstance
+of your wearing a gown, as well as from your time of life, your
+general style, and various passages of your writings,&mdash;I will take
+upon myself to exculpate you from all suspicion of the kind, and
+assert, without calling Mrs. R&mdash;&mdash;ts in testimony, that if ever you
+should be chosen Pope, you will pass through all the previous
+ceremonies with as much credit as any pontiff since the parturition
+of Joan. It is very unfair to judge of sex from writings,
+particularly from those of the British Review. We are all liable to
+be deceived, and it is an indisputable fact that many of the best
+articles in your journal, which were attributed to a veteran
+female, were actually written by you yourself, and yet to this day
+there are people who could never find out the difference. But let
+us return to the more immediate question.</p>
+
+<p>"I agree with you that it is impossible Lord B. should be the
+author, not only because, as a British<span class="pagenum"><a id="page191" name="page191"></a>Pg 191</span> peer and a British poet, it
+would be impracticable for him to have recourse to such facetious
+fiction, but for some other reasons which you have omitted to
+state. In the first place, his Lordship has no grandmother. Now the
+author&mdash;and we may believe him in this&mdash;doth expressly state that
+the 'British' is his 'Grandmother's Review;' and if, as I think I
+have distinctly proved, this was not a mere figurative allusion to
+your supposed intellectual age and sex, my dear friend, it follows,
+whether you be she or no, that there is such an elderly lady still
+extant.</p>
+
+<p>"Shall I give you what I think a prudent opinion? I don't mean to
+insinuate, God forbid! but if, by any accident, there should have
+been such a correspondence between you and the unknown author,
+whoever he may be, send him back his money; I dare say he will be
+very glad to have it again; it can't be much, considering the value
+of the article and the circulation of the journal; and you are too
+modest to rate your praise beyond its real worth:&mdash;don't be angry,
+I know you won't, at this appraisement of your powers of eulogy:
+for on the other hand, my dear fellow, depend upon it your abuse is
+worth, not its own weight, that's a feather, but <i>your</i> weight in
+gold. So don't spare it; if he has bargained for <i>that</i>, give it
+handsomely, and depend upon your doing him a friendly office.</p>
+
+<p>"What the motives of this writer may have been for (as you
+magnificently translate his quizzing you) 'stating, with the
+particularity which belongs to fact, the forgery of a groundless
+fiction,' (do, pray,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page192" name="page192"></a>Pg 192</span> my dear R., talk a little less 'in King
+Cambyses' vein,') I cannot pretend to say; perhaps to laugh at you,
+but that is no reason for your benevolently making all the world
+laugh also. I approve of your being angry, I tell you I am angry
+too, but you should not have shown it so outrageously. Your solemn
+'<i>if</i> somebody personating the Editor of the, &amp;c. &amp;c. has received
+from Lord B. or from any other person,' reminds me of Charley
+Incledon's usual exordium when people came into the tavern to hear
+him sing without paying their share of the reckoning&mdash;'if a maun,
+or <i>ony</i> maun, or <i>ony other</i> maun,' &amp;c. &amp;c.; you have both the
+same redundant eloquence. But why should you think any body would
+personate you? Nobody would dream of such a prank who ever read
+your compositions, and perhaps not many who have heard your
+conversation. But I have been inoculated with a little of your
+prolixity. The fact is, my dear R&mdash;&mdash;ts, that somebody has tried to
+make a fool of you, and what he did not succeed in doing, you have
+done for him and for yourself."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Towards the latter end of August, Count Guiccioli, accompanied by his
+lady, went for a short time to visit some of his Romagnese estates,
+while Lord Byron remained at Bologna alone. And here, with a heart
+softened and excited by the new feeling that had taken possession of
+him, he appears to have given himself up, during this interval of
+solitude, to a train of melancholy and impassioned thought, such as, for
+a time, brought back all the romance of his youth<span class="pagenum"><a id="page193" name="page193"></a>Pg 193</span>ful days. That spring
+of natural tenderness within his soul, which neither the world's efforts
+nor his own had been able to chill or choke up, was now, with something
+of its first freshness, set flowing once more. He again knew what it was
+to love and be loved,&mdash;too late, it is true, for happiness, and too
+wrongly for peace, but with devotion enough, on the part of the woman,
+to satisfy even his thirst for affection, and with a sad earnestness, on
+his own, a foreboding fidelity, which made him cling but the more
+passionately to this attachment from feeling that it would be his last.</p>
+
+<p>A circumstance which he himself used to mention as having occurred at
+this period will show how over-powering, at times, was the rush of
+melancholy over his heart. It was his fancy, during Madame Guiccioli's
+absence from Bologna, to go daily to her house at his usual hour of
+visiting her, and there, causing her apartments to be opened, to sit
+turning over her books, and writing in them.<a name="FNanchor_44_44" id="FNanchor_44_44"></a><a href="#Footnote_44_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a> He would<span class="pagenum"><a id="page194" name="page194"></a>Pg 194</span> then descend
+into her garden, where he passed hours in musing; and it was on an
+occasion of this kind, as he stood looking, in a state of unconscious
+reverie, into one of those fountains so common in the gardens of Italy,
+that there came suddenly into his mind such desolate fancies, such
+bodings of the misery he might bring on her he loved, by that doom which
+(as he has himself written) "makes it fatal to be loved<a name="FNanchor_45_45" id="FNanchor_45_45"></a><a href="#Footnote_45_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a>," that,
+overwhelmed with his own thoughts, he burst into an agony of tears.</p>
+
+<p>During the same few days it was that he wrote in the last page of Madame
+Guiccioli's copy of "Corinne" the following remarkable note:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"My dearest Teresa,&mdash;I have read this book in your garden;&mdash;my
+love, you were absent, or else I could not have read it. It is a
+favourite book of yours, and the writer was a friend of mine. You
+will not understand these English words, and <i>others</i> will not
+understand them&mdash;which is the reason I have not scrawled them in
+Italian. But you will recognise the hand-writing of him who
+passionately loved you, and you will divine that, over a book which
+was yours, he could only think of love. In<span class="pagenum"><a id="page195" name="page195"></a>Pg 195</span> that word, beautiful in
+all languages, but most so in yours&mdash;<i>Amor mio</i>&mdash;is comprised my
+existence here and hereafter. I feel I exist here, and I fear that
+I shall exist hereafter,&mdash;to <i>what</i> purpose you will decide; my
+destiny rests with you, and you are a woman, seventeen years of
+age, and two out of a convent. I wish that you had stayed there,
+with all my heart,&mdash;or, at least, that I had never met you in your
+married state.</p>
+
+<p>"But all this is too late. I love you, and you love me,&mdash;at least,
+you <i>say so</i>, and <i>act</i> as if you <i>did</i> so, which last is a great
+consolation in all events. But <i>I</i> more than love you, and cannot
+cease to love you.</p>
+
+<p>"Think of me, sometimes, when the Alps and the ocean divide
+us,&mdash;but they never will, unless you <i>wish</i> it. BYRON.</p>
+
+<p>"Bologna, August 25. 1819."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 339. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Bologna, August 24. 1819.</p>
+
+<p>"I wrote to you by last post, enclosing a buffooning letter for
+publication, addressed to the buffoon R&mdash;&mdash;ts, who has thought
+proper to tie a canister to his own tail. It was written off-hand,
+and in the midst of circumstances not very favourable to
+facetiousness, so that there may, perhaps, be more bitterness than
+enough for that sort of small acid punch:&mdash;you will tell me.</p>
+
+<p>"Keep the anonymous, in any case: it helps what fun there may be.
+But if the matter grow serious<span class="pagenum"><a id="page196" name="page196"></a>Pg 196</span> about <i>Don Juan</i>, and you feel
+<i>yourself</i> in a scrape, or <i>me</i> either, <i>own that I am the author.</i>
+<i>I</i> will never <i>shrink</i>; and if <i>you</i> do, I can always answer you
+in the question of Guatimozin to his minister&mdash;each being on his
+own coals.<a name="FNanchor_46_46" id="FNanchor_46_46"></a><a href="#Footnote_46_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a></p>
+
+<p>"I wish that I had been in better spirits; but I am out of sorts,
+out of nerves, and now and then (I begin to fear) out of my senses.
+All this Italy has done for me, and not England: I defy all you,
+and your climate to boot, to make me mad. But if ever I do really
+become a bedlamite, and wear a strait waistcoat, let me be brought
+back among you; your people will then be proper company.</p>
+
+<p>"I assure you what I here say and feel has nothing to do with
+England, either in a literary or personal point of view. All my
+present pleasures or plagues are as Italian as the opera. And after
+all, they are but trifles; for all this arises from my 'Dama's'
+being in the country for three days (at Capo-fiume). But as I could
+never live but for one human being at a time, (and, I assure you,
+<i>that one</i> has never been <i>myself</i>, as you may know by the
+consequences, for the <i>selfish</i> are <i>successful</i> in life,) I feel
+alone and unhappy.</p>
+
+<p>"I have sent for my daughter from Venice, and I ride daily, and
+walk in a garden, under a purple canopy of grapes, and sit by a
+fountain, and talk with the gardener of his tools, which seem
+greater than Adam's, and with his wife, and with his son's wife,
+who is the youngest of the party, and, I think, talks<span class="pagenum"><a id="page197" name="page197"></a>Pg 197</span> best of the
+three. Then I revisit the Campo Santo, and my old friend, the
+sexton, has two&mdash;but <i>one</i> the prettiest daughter imaginable; and I
+amuse myself with contrasting her beautiful and innocent face of
+fifteen with the skulls with which he has peopled several cells,
+and particularly with that of one skull dated 1766, which was once
+covered (the tradition goes) by the most lovely features of
+Bologna&mdash;noble and rich. When I look at these, and at this
+girl&mdash;when I think of what <i>they were</i>, and what she must be&mdash;why,
+then, my dear Murray, I won't shock you by saying what I think. It
+is little matter what becomes of us 'bearded men,' but I don't like
+the notion of a beautiful woman's lasting less than a beautiful
+tree&mdash;than her own picture&mdash;her own shadow, which won't change so
+to the sun as her face to the mirror. I must leave off, for my head
+aches consumedly. I have never been quite well since the night of
+the representation of Alfieri's Mirra, a fortnight ago. Yours
+ever."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 340. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Bologna, August 29. 1819.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been in a rage these two days, and am still bilious
+therefrom. You shall hear. A captain of dragoons, * *, Hanoverian
+by birth, in the Papal troops at present, whom I had obliged by a
+loan when nobody would lend him a paul, recommended a horse to me,
+on sale by a Lieutenant * *, an officer who unites the sale of
+cattle to the purchase of men. I bought it. The next day, on
+shoeing the horse, we<span class="pagenum"><a id="page198" name="page198"></a>Pg 198</span> discovered the <i>thrush</i>,&mdash;the animal being
+warranted sound. I sent to reclaim the contract and the money. The
+lieutenant desired to speak with me in person. I consented. He
+came. It was his own particular request. He began a story. I asked
+him if he would return the money. He said no&mdash;but he would
+exchange. He asked an exorbitant price for his other horses. I told
+him that he was a thief. He said he was an <i>officer</i> and a man of
+honour, and pulled out a Parmesan passport signed by General Count
+Neifperg. I answered, that as he was an officer, I would treat him
+as such; and that as to his being a gentleman, he might prove it by
+returning the money: as for his Parmesan passport, I should have
+valued it more if it had been a Parmesan cheese. He answered in
+high terms, and said that if it were the <i>morning</i> (it was about
+eight o'clock in the evening) he would have <i>satisfaction</i>. I then
+lost my temper: 'As for THAT,' I replied, 'you shall have it
+directly,&mdash;it will be <i>mutual</i> satisfaction, I can assure you. You
+are a thief, and, as you say, an officer; my pistols are in the
+next room loaded; take one of the candles, examine, and make your
+choice of weapons.' He replied, that <i>pistols</i> were <i>English
+weapons</i>; <i>he</i> always fought with the <i>sword</i>. I told him that I
+was able to accommodate him, having three regimental swords in a
+drawer near us: and he might take the longest and put himself on
+guard.</p>
+
+<p>"All this passed in presence of a third person. He then said <i>No</i>;
+but to-morrow morning he would give me the meeting at any time or
+place. I answered that it was not usual to appoint meetings<span class="pagenum"><a id="page199" name="page199"></a>Pg 199</span> in the
+presence of witnesses, and that we had best speak man to man, and
+appoint time and instruments. But as the man present was leaving
+the room, the Lieutenant * *, before he could shut the door after
+him, ran out roaring 'Help and murder' most lustily, and fell into
+a sort of hysteric in the arms of about fifty people, who all saw
+that I had no weapon of any sort or kind about me, and followed
+him, asking him what the devil was the matter with him. Nothing
+would do: he ran away without his hat, and went to bed, ill of the
+fright. He then tried his complaint at the police, which dismissed
+it as frivolous. He is, I believe, gone away, or going.</p>
+
+<p>"The horse was warranted, but, I believe, so worded that the
+villain will not be obliged to refund, according to law. He
+endeavoured to raise up an indictment of assault and battery, but
+as it was in a public inn, in a frequented street, there were too
+many witnesses to the contrary; and, as a military man, he has not
+cut a martial figure, even in the opinion of the priests. He ran
+off in such a hurry that he left his hat, and never missed it till
+he got to his hostel or inn. The facts are as I tell you, I can
+assure you. He began by 'coming Captain Grand over me,' or I should
+never have thought of trying his 'cunning in fence.' But what could
+I do? He talked of 'honour, and satisfaction, and his commission;'
+he produced a military passport; there are severe punishments for
+<i>regular duels</i> on the Continent, and trifling ones for
+<i>rencontres</i>, so that it is best to fight it out directly; he had
+robbed, and then wanted to insult me;&mdash;what could I do? My
+patience<span class="pagenum"><a id="page200" name="page200"></a>Pg 200</span> was gone, and the weapons at hand, fair and equal.
+Besides, it was just after dinner, when my digestion was bad, and I
+don't like to be disturbed. His friend * * is at Forli; we shall
+meet on my way back to Ravenna. The Hanoverian seems the greater
+rogue of the two; and if my valour does not ooze away like
+Acres's&mdash;'Odds flints and triggers!' if it should be a rainy
+morning, and my stomach in disorder, there may be something for the
+obituary.</p>
+
+<p>"Now pray, 'Sir Lucius, do not you look upon me as a very ill-used
+gentleman?' I send my Lieutenant to match Mr. Hobhouse's Major
+Cartwright: and so 'good morrow to you, good master Lieutenant.'
+With regard to other things I will write soon, but I have been
+quarrelling and fooling till I can scribble no more."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>In the month of September, Count Guiccioli, being called away by
+business to Ravenna, left his young Countess and her lover to the free
+enjoyment of each other's society at Bologna. The lady's ill health,
+which had been the cause of her thus remaining behind, was thought, soon
+after, to require the still further advantage of a removal to Venice;
+and the Count her husband, being written to on the subject, consented,
+with the most complaisant readiness, that she should proceed thither in
+company with Lord Byron. "Some business" (says the lady's own Memoir)
+"having called Count Guiccioli to Ravenna, I was obliged, by the state
+of my health, instead of accompanying him, to return to Venice, and he
+consented that Lord Byron should be the companion of my journey. We left
+Bologna on the<span class="pagenum"><a id="page201" name="page201"></a>Pg 201</span> fifteenth of September: we visited the Euganean Hills
+and Arqu&agrave;, and wrote our names in the book which is presented to those
+who make this pilgrimage. But I cannot linger over these recollections
+of happiness;&mdash;the contrast with the present is too dreadful. If a
+blessed spirit, while in the full enjoyment of heavenly happiness, were
+sent down to this earth to suffer all its miseries, the contrast could
+not be more dreadful between the past and the present, than what I have
+endured from the moment when that terrible word reached my ears, and I
+for ever lost the hope of again beholding him, one look from whom I
+valued beyond earth's all happiness. When I arrived at Venice, the
+physicians ordered that I should try the country air, and Lord Byron,
+having a villa at La Mira, gave it up to me, and came to reside there
+with me. At this place we passed the autumn, and there I had the
+pleasure of forming your acquaintance."<a name="FNanchor_47_47" id="FNanchor_47_47"></a><a href="#Footnote_47_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a></p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page202" name="page202"></a>Pg 202</span></p>
+
+<p>It was my good fortune, at this period, in the course of a short and
+hasty tour through the north of Italy, to pass five or six days with
+Lord Byron at Venice. I had written to him on my way thither to announce
+my coming, and to say how happy it would make me could I tempt him to
+accompany me as far as Rome.</p>
+
+<p>During my stay at Geneva, an opportunity had been afforded me of
+observing the exceeding readiness with which even persons the least
+disposed to be prejudiced gave an ear to any story relating to Lord
+Byron, in which the proper portions of odium and romance were but
+plausibly mingled. In the course of conversation, one day, with the late
+amiable and enlightened Monsieur D * *, that gentleman related, with
+much feeling, to my fellow-traveller and myself, the details of a late
+act of seduction of which Lord Byron had, he said, been guilty, and
+which was made to comprise within itself all the worst features of such
+unmanly frauds upon innocence;&mdash;the victim, a young unmarried lady, of
+one of the first families of Venice, whom the noble seducer had lured
+from her father's house to his own, and, after a few weeks, most
+inhumanly turned her out of doors. In vain, said the relator, did she
+entreat to become his servant, his slave;&mdash;<span class="pagenum"><a id="page203" name="page203"></a>Pg 203</span>in vain did she ask to
+remain in some dark corner of his mansion, from which she might be able
+to catch a glimpse of his form as he passed. Her betrayer was obdurate,
+and the unfortunate young lady, in despair at being thus abandoned by
+him, threw herself into the canal, from which she was taken out but to
+be consigned to a mad-house. Though convinced that there must be
+considerable exaggeration in this story, it was only on my arrival at
+Venice I ascertained that the whole was a romance; and that out of the
+circumstances (already laid before the reader) connected with Lord
+Byron's fantastic and, it must be owned, discreditable fancy for the
+Fornarina, this pathetic tale, so implicitly believed at Geneva, was
+fabricated.</p>
+
+<p>Having parted at Milan, with Lord John Russell, whom I had accompanied
+from England, and whom I was to rejoin, after a short visit to Rome, at
+Genoa, I made purchase of a small and (as it soon proved) crazy
+travelling carriage, and proceeded alone on my way to Venice. My time
+being limited, I stopped no longer at the intervening places than was
+sufficient to hurry over their respective wonders, and, leaving Padua at
+noon on the 8th of October, I found myself, about two o'clock, at the
+door of my friend's villa, at La Mira. He was but just up, and in his
+bath; but the servant having announced my arrival, he returned a message
+that, if I would wait till he was dressed, he would accompany me to
+Venice. The interval I employed in conversing with my old acquaintance,
+Fletcher, and in viewing, under his guidance, some of the apartments of
+the villa.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page204" name="page204"></a>Pg 204</span></p>
+
+<p>It was not long before Lord Byron himself made his appearance; and the
+delight I felt in meeting him once more, after a separation of so many
+years, was not a little heightened by observing that his pleasure was,
+to the full, as great, while it was rendered doubly touching by the
+evident rarity of such meetings to him of late, and the frank outbreak
+of cordiality and gaiety with which he gave way to his feelings. It
+would be impossible, indeed, to convey to those who have not, at some
+time or other, felt the charm of his manner, any idea of what it could
+be when under the influence of such pleasurable excitement as it was
+most flatteringly evident he experienced at this moment.</p>
+
+<p>I was a good deal struck, however, by the alteration that had taken
+place in his personal appearance. He had grown fatter both in person and
+face, and the latter had most suffered by the change,&mdash;having lost, by
+the enlargement of the features, some of that refined and spiritualised
+look that had, in other times, distinguished it. The addition of
+whiskers, too, which he had not long before been induced to adopt, from
+hearing that some one had said he had a "faccia di musico," as well as
+the length to which his hair grew down on his neck, and the rather
+foreign air of his coat and cap,&mdash;all combined to produce that
+dissimilarity to his former self I had observed in him. He was still,
+however, eminently handsome: and, in exchange for whatever his features
+might have lost of their high, romantic character, they had become more
+fitted for the expression of that arch, waggish wisdom, that Epicurean
+play of humour,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page205" name="page205"></a>Pg 205</span> which he had shown to be equally inherent in his
+various and prodigally gifted nature; while, by the somewhat increased
+roundness of the contours, the resemblance of his finely formed mouth
+and chin to those of the Belvedere Apollo had become still more
+striking.</p>
+
+<p>His breakfast, which I found he rarely took before three or four o'clock
+in the afternoon, was speedily despatched,&mdash;his habit being to eat it
+standing, and the meal in general consisting of one or two raw eggs, a
+cup of tea without either milk or sugar, and a bit of dry biscuit.
+Before we took our departure, he presented me to the Countess Guiccioli,
+who was at this time, as my readers already know, living under the same
+roof with him at La Mira; and who, with a style of beauty singular in an
+Italian, as being fair-complexioned and delicate, left an impression
+upon my mind, during this our first short interview, of intelligence and
+amiableness such as all that I have since known or heard of her has but
+served to confirm.</p>
+
+<p>We now started together, Lord Byron and myself, in my little Milanese
+vehicle, for Fusina,&mdash;his portly gondolier Tita, in a rich livery and
+most redundant mustachios, having seated himself on the front of the
+carriage, to the no small trial of its strength, which had already once
+given way, even under my own weight, between Verona and Vicenza. On our
+arrival at Fusina, my noble friend, from his familiarity with all the
+details of the place, had it in his power to save me both trouble and
+expense in the different arrangements relative to the custom-house,
+remise, &amp;c.; and the good-natured assiduity<span class="pagenum"><a id="page206" name="page206"></a>Pg 206</span> with which he bustled about
+in despatching these matters, gave me an opportunity of observing, in
+his use of the infirm limb, a much greater degree of activity than I had
+ever before, except in sparring, witnessed.</p>
+
+<p>As we proceeded across the Lagoon in his gondola, the sun was just
+setting, and it was an evening such as Romance would have chosen for a
+first sight of Venice, rising "with her tiara of bright towers" above
+the wave; while, to complete, as might be imagined, the solemn interest
+of the scene, I beheld it in company with him who had lately given a new
+life to its glories, and sung of that fair City of the Sea thus
+grandly:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">"I stood in Venice on the Bridge of Sighs;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">A palace and a prison on each hand:<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">I saw from out the wave her structures rise<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">As from the stroke of the enchanter's wand:<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">A thousand years their cloudy wings expand<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Around me, and a dying glory smiles<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">O'er the far times, when many a subject land<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Look'd to the winged lion's marble piles,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Where Venice sat in state, throned in her hundred isles."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>But, whatever emotions the first sight of such a scene might, under
+other circumstances, have inspired me with, the mood of mind in which I
+now viewed it was altogether the very reverse of what might have been
+expected. The exuberant gaiety of my companion, and the
+recollections,&mdash;any thing but romantic,&mdash;into which our conversation
+wandered, put at once completely to flight all poetical and historical
+associations; and our course was, I am almost<span class="pagenum"><a id="page207" name="page207"></a>Pg 207</span> ashamed to say, one of
+uninterrupted merriment and laughter till we found ourselves at the
+steps of my friend's palazzo on the Grand Canal. All that had ever
+happened, of gay or ridiculous, during our London life together,&mdash;his
+scrapes and my lecturings,&mdash;our joint adventures with the Bores and
+Blues, the two great enemies, as he always called them, of London
+happiness,&mdash;our joyous nights together at Watier's, Kinnaird's, &amp;c. and
+"that d&mdash;&mdash;d supper of Rancliffe's which <i>ought</i> to have been a
+dinner,"&mdash;all was passed rapidly in review between us, and with a flow
+of humour and hilarity, on his side, of which it would have been
+difficult, even for persons far graver than I can pretend to be, not to
+have caught the contagion.</p>
+
+<p>He had all along expressed his determination that I should not go to any
+hotel, but fix my quarters at his house during the period of my stay;
+and, had he been residing there himself, such an arrangement would have
+been all that I most desired. But, this not being the case, a common
+hotel was, I thought, a far readier resource; and I therefore entreated
+that he would allow me to order an apartment at the Gran Bretagna, which
+had the reputation, I understood, of being a comfortable hotel. This,
+however, he would not hear of; and, as an inducement for me to agree to
+his plan, said that, as long as I chose to stay, though he should be
+obliged to return to La Mira in the evenings, he would make it a point
+to come to Venice every day and dine with me. As we now turned into the
+dismal canal, and stopped before his damp-looking mansion, my
+predilection for the Gran<span class="pagenum"><a id="page208" name="page208"></a>Pg 208</span> Bretagna returned in full force; and I again
+ventured to hint that it would save an abundance of trouble to let me
+proceed thither. But "No&mdash;no," he answered,&mdash;"I see you think you'll be
+very uncomfortable here; but you'll find that it is not quite so bad as
+you expect."</p>
+
+<p>As I groped my way after him through the dark hall, he cried out, "Keep
+clear of the dog;" and before we had proceeded many paces farther, "Take
+care, or that monkey will fly at you;"&mdash;a curious proof, among many
+others, of his fidelity to all the tastes of his youth, as it agrees
+perfectly with the description of his life at Newstead, in 1809, and of
+the sort of menagerie which his visiters had then to encounter in their
+progress through his hall. Having escaped these dangers, I followed him
+up the staircase to the apartment destined for me. All this time he had
+been despatching servants in various directions,&mdash;one, to procure me a
+<i>laquais de place</i>; another to go in quest of Mr. Alexander Scott, to
+whom he wished to give me in charge; while a third was sent to order his
+Segretario to come to him. "So, then, you keep a Secretary?" I said.
+"Yes," he answered, "a fellow who <i>can't write</i><a name="FNanchor_48_48" id="FNanchor_48_48"></a><a href="#Footnote_48_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a>&mdash;but such are the
+names these pompous people give to things."</p>
+
+<p>When we had reached the door of the apartment it was discovered to be
+locked, and, to all appearance, had been so for some time, as the key
+could not be found;&mdash;a circumstance which, to my<span class="pagenum"><a id="page209" name="page209"></a>Pg 209</span> English apprehension,
+naturally connected itself with notions of damp and desolation, and I
+again sighed inwardly for the Gran Bretagna. Impatient at the delay of
+the key, my noble host, with one of his humorous maledictions, gave a
+vigorous kick to the door and burst it open; on which we at once entered
+into an apartment not only spacious and elegant, but wearing an aspect
+of comfort and habitableness which to a traveller's eye is as welcome as
+it is rare. "Here," he said, in a voice whose every tone spoke kindness
+and hospitality,&mdash;"these are the rooms I use myself, and here I mean to
+establish you."</p>
+
+<p>He had ordered dinner from some Tratteria, and while waiting its
+arrival&mdash;as well as that of Mr. Alexander Scott, whom he had invited to
+join us&mdash;we stood out on the balcony, in order that, before the daylight
+was quite gone, I might have some glimpses of the scene which the Canal
+presented. Happening to remark, in looking up at the clouds, which were
+still bright in the west, that "what had struck me in Italian sunsets
+was that peculiar rosy hue&mdash;" I had hardly pronounced the word "rosy,"
+when Lord Byron, clapping his hand on my mouth, said, with a laugh,
+"Come, d&mdash;&mdash;n it, Tom, don't be poetical." Among the few gondolas
+passing at the time, there was one at some distance, in which sat two
+gentlemen, who had the appearance of being English; and, observing them
+to look our way, Lord Byron putting his arms a-kimbo, said with a sort
+of comic swagger, "Ah! if you, John<span class="pagenum"><a id="page210" name="page210"></a>Pg 210</span> Bulls, knew who the two fellows
+are, now standing up here, I think you <i>would</i> stare!"&mdash;I risk
+mentioning these things, though aware how they may be turned against
+myself, for the sake of the otherwise indescribable traits of manner and
+character which they convey. After a very agreeable dinner, through
+which the jest, the story, and the laugh were almost uninterruptedly
+carried on, our noble host took leave of us to return to La Mira, while
+Mr. Scott and I went to one of the theatres, to see the Ottavia of
+Alfieri.</p>
+
+<p>The ensuing evenings, during my stay, were passed much in the same
+manner,&mdash;my mornings being devoted, under the kind superintendence of
+Mr. Scott, to a hasty, and, I fear, unprofitable view of the treasures
+of art with which Venice abounds. On the subjects of painting and
+sculpture Lord Byron has, in several of his letters, expressed strongly
+and, as to most persons will appear, heretically his opinions. In his
+want, however, of a due appreciation of these arts, he but resembled
+some of his great precursors in the field of poetry;&mdash;both Tasso and
+Milton, for example, having evinced so little tendency to such
+tastes<a name="FNanchor_49_49" id="FNanchor_49_49"></a><a href="#Footnote_49_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a>, that, throughout the<span class="pagenum"><a id="page211" name="page211"></a>Pg 211</span> whole of their pages, there is not, I
+fear, one single allusion to any of those great masters of the pencil
+and chisel, whose works, nevertheless, both had seen. That Lord Byron,
+though despising the imposture and jargon with which the worship of the
+Arts is, like other worships, clogged and mystified, felt deeply, more
+especially in sculpture, whatever imaged forth true grace and energy,
+appears from passages of his poetry, which are in every body's memory,
+and not a line of which but thrills alive with a sense of grandeur and
+beauty such as it never entered into the capacity of a mere connoisseur
+even to conceive.</p>
+
+<p>In reference to this subject, as we were conversing one day after dinner
+about the various collections I had visited that morning, on my saying
+that fearful as I was, at all times, of praising any picture, lest I
+should draw upon myself the connoisseur's sneer for my pains, I would
+yet, to <i>him</i>, venture to own that I had seen a picture at Milan
+which&mdash;"The Hagar!" he exclaimed, eagerly interrupting me; and it was in
+fact this very picture I was about to mention as having wakened in me,
+by the truth of its expression, more real emotion than<span class="pagenum"><a id="page212" name="page212"></a>Pg 212</span> any I had yet
+seen among the chefs-d'oeuvre of Venice. It was with no small degree of
+pride and pleasure I now discovered that my noble friend had felt
+equally with myself the affecting mixture of sorrow and reproach with
+which the woman's eyes tell the whole story in that picture.</p>
+
+<p>On the second evening of my stay, Lord Byron having, as before, left us
+for La Mira, I most willingly accepted the offer of Mr. Scott to
+introduce me to the conversazioni of the two celebrated ladies, with
+whose names, as leaders of Venetian fashion, the tourists to Italy have
+made every body acquainted. To the Countess A * *'s parties Lord Byron
+had chiefly confined himself during the first winter he passed at
+Venice; but the tone of conversation at these small meetings being much
+too learned for his tastes, he was induced, the following year, to
+discontinue his attendance at them, and chose, in preference, the less
+erudite, but more easy, society of the Countess B * *. Of the sort of
+learning sometimes displayed by the "blue" visitants at Madame A * *'s,
+a circumstance mentioned by the noble poet himself may afford some idea.
+The conversation happening to turn, one evening, upon the statue of
+Washington, by Canova, which had been just shipped off for the United
+States, Madame A * *, who was then engaged in compiling a Description
+Raisonn&eacute;e of Canova's works, and was anxious for information respecting
+the subject of this statue, requested that some of her learned guests
+would detail to her all they knew of him. This task a Signor * * (author
+of a book on Geography and Statistics) un<span class="pagenum"><a id="page213" name="page213"></a>Pg 213</span>dertook to perform, and, after
+some other equally sage and authentic details, concluded by informing
+her that "Washington was killed in a duel by Burke."&mdash;"What," exclaimed
+Lord Byron, as he stood biting his lips with impatience during this
+conversation, "what, in the name of folly, are you all thinking
+of?"&mdash;for he now recollected the famous duel between Hamilton and
+Colonel Burr, whom, it was evident, this learned worthy had confounded
+with Washington and Burke!</p>
+
+<p>In addition to the motives easily conceivable for exchanging such a
+society for one that offered, at least, repose from such erudite
+efforts, there was also another cause more immediately leading to the
+discontinuance of his visits to Madame A * *. This lady, who has been
+sometimes honoured with the title of "The De Sta&euml;l of Italy," had
+written a book called "Portraits," containing sketches of the characters
+of various persons of note; and it being her intention to introduce Lord
+Byron into this assemblage, she had it intimated to his Lordship that an
+article in which his portraiture had been attempted was to appear in a
+new edition she was about to publish of her work. It was expected, of
+course, that this intimation would awaken in him some desire to see the
+sketch; but, on the contrary, he was provoking enough not to manifest
+the least symptoms of curiosity. Again and again was the same hint, with
+as little success, conveyed; till, at length, on finding that no
+impression could be produced in this manner, a direct offer was made, in
+Madame A * *'s own name, to submit the article to his perusal. He<span class="pagenum"><a id="page214" name="page214"></a>Pg 214</span> could
+now contain himself no longer. With more sincerity than politeness, he
+returned for answer to the lady, that he was by no means ambitious of
+appearing in her work; that, from the shortness, as well as the distant
+nature of their acquaintance, it was impossible she could have qualified
+herself to be his portrait-painter, and that, in short, she could not
+oblige him more than by committing the article to the flames.</p>
+
+<p>Whether the tribute thus unceremoniously treated ever met the eyes of
+Lord Byron, I know not; but he could hardly, I think, had he seen it,
+have escaped a slight touch of remorse at having thus spurned from him a
+portrait drawn in no unfriendly spirit, and, though affectedly
+expressed, seizing some of the less obvious features of his
+character,&mdash;as, for instance, that diffidence so little to be expected
+from a career like his, with the discriminating niceness of a female
+hand. The following are extracts from this Portrait:&mdash;</p>
+
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"'Toi, dont le monde encore ignore le vrai nom,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Esprit myst&eacute;rieux, Mortel, Ange, ou D&eacute;mon,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Qui que tu sois, Byron, bon ou fatal g&eacute;nie,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">J'aime de tes conceits la sauvage harmonie.'<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">LAMARTINE.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"It would be to little purpose to dwell upon the mere beauty of a
+countenance in which the expression of an extraordinary mind was so
+conspicuous. What serenity was seated on the forehead, adorned with the
+finest chestnut hair, light, curling, and disposed with such art, that
+the art was hidden in the imitation of most pleasing nature! What
+varied<span class="pagenum"><a id="page215" name="page215"></a>Pg 215</span> expression in his eyes! They were of the azure colour of the
+heavens, from which they seemed to derive their origin. His teeth, in
+form, in colour, in transparency, resembled pearls; but his cheeks were
+too delicately tinged with the hue of the pale rose. His neck, which he
+was in the habit of keeping uncovered as much as the usages of society
+permitted, seemed to have been formed in a mould, and was very white.
+His hands were as beautiful as if they had been the works of art. His
+figure left nothing to be desired, particularly by those who found
+rather a grace than a defect in a certain light and gentle undulation of
+the person when he entered a room, and of which you hardly felt tempted
+to enquire the cause. Indeed it was scarcely perceptible,&mdash;the clothes
+he wore were so long.</p>
+
+<p>"He was never seen to walk through the streets of Venice, nor along the
+pleasant banks of the Brenta, where he spent some weeks of the summer;
+and there are some who assert that he has never seen, excepting from a
+window, the wonders of the 'Piazza di San Marco;'&mdash;so powerful in him
+was the desire of not showing himself to be deformed in any part of his
+person. I, however, believe that he has often gazed on those wonders,
+but in the late and solitary hour, when the stupendous edifices which
+surrounded him, illuminated by the soft and placid light of the moon,
+appeared a thousand times more lovely.</p>
+
+<p>"His face appeared tranquil like the ocean on a fine spring morning;
+but, like it, in an instant became changed into the tempestuous and
+terrible, if<span class="pagenum"><a id="page216" name="page216"></a>Pg 216</span> a passion, (a passion did I say?) a thought, a word,
+occurred to disturb his mind. His eyes then lost all their sweetness,
+and sparkled so that it became difficult to look on them. So rapid a
+change would not have been thought possible; but it was impossible to
+avoid acknowledging that the natural state of his mind was the
+tempestuous.</p>
+
+<p>"What delighted him greatly one day annoyed him the next; and whenever
+he appeared constant in the practice of any habits, it arose merely from
+the indifference, not to say contempt, in which he held them all:
+whatever they might be, they were not worthy that he should occupy his
+thoughts with them. His heart was highly sensitive, and suffered itself
+to be governed in an extraordinary degree by sympathy; but his
+imagination carried him away, and spoiled every thing. He believed in
+presages, and delighted in the recollection that he held this belief in
+common with Napoleon. It appeared that, in proportion as his
+intellectual education was cultivated, his moral education was
+neglected, and that he never suffered himself to know or observe other
+restraints than those imposed by his inclinations. Nevertheless, who
+could believe that he had a constant, and almost infantine timidity, of
+which the evidences were so apparent as to render its existence
+indisputable, notwithstanding the difficulty experienced in associating
+with Lord Byron a sentiment which had the appearance of modesty?
+Conscious as he was that, wherever he presented himself, all eyes were
+fixed on him, and all lips, particularly those of the women, were opened
+to say, 'There he<span class="pagenum"><a id="page217" name="page217"></a>Pg 217</span> is, that is Lord Byron,'&mdash;he necessarily found
+himself in the situation of an actor obliged to sustain a character, and
+to render an account, not to others (for about them he gave himself no
+concern), but to himself, of his every action and word. This occasioned
+him a feeling of uneasiness which was obvious to every one.</p>
+
+<p>"He remarked on a certain subject (which in 1814 was the topic of
+universal discourse) that 'the world was worth neither the trouble taken
+in its conquest, nor the regret felt at its loss,' which saying (if the
+worth of an expression could ever equal that of many and great actions)
+would almost show the thoughts and feelings of Lord Byron to be more
+stupendous and unmeasured than those of him respecting whom he spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"His gymnastic exercises were sometimes violent, and at others almost
+nothing. His body, like his spirit, readily accommodated itself to all
+his inclinations. During an entire winter, he went out every morning
+alone to row himself to the island of Armenians, (a small island
+situated in the midst of a tranquil lake, and distant from Venice about
+half a league,) to enjoy the society of those learned and hospitable
+monks, and to learn their difficult language; and, in the evening,
+entering again into his gondola, he went, but only for a couple of
+hours, into company. A second winter, whenever the water of the lake was
+violently agitated, he was observed to cross it, and landing on the
+nearest <i>terra firma</i>, to fatigue at least two horses with riding.</p>
+
+<p>"No one ever heard him utter a word of French,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page218" name="page218"></a>Pg 218</span> although he was
+perfectly conversant with that language. He hated the nation and its
+modern literature; in like manner, he held the modern Italian literature
+in contempt, and said it possessed but one living author,&mdash;a restriction
+which I know not whether to term ridiculous, or false and injurious. His
+voice was sufficiently sweet and flexible. He spoke with much suavity,
+if not contradicted, but rather addressed himself to his neighbour than
+to the entire company.</p>
+
+<p>"Very little food sufficed him; and he preferred fish to flesh for this
+extraordinary reason, that the latter, he said, rendered him ferocious.
+He disliked seeing women eat; and the cause of this extraordinary
+antipathy must be sought in the dread he always had, that the notion he
+loved to cherish of their perfection and almost divine nature might be
+disturbed. Having always been governed by them, it would seem that his
+very self-love was pleased to take refuge in the idea of their
+excellence,&mdash;a sentiment which he knew how (God knows how) to reconcile
+with the contempt in which, shortly afterwards, almost with the
+appearance of satisfaction, he seemed to hold them. But contradictions
+ought not to surprise us in characters like Lord Byron's; and then, who
+does not know that the slave holds in detestation his ruler?</p>
+
+<p>"Lord Byron disliked his countrymen, but only because he knew that his
+morals were held in contempt by them. The English, themselves rigid
+observers of family duties, could not pardon him the neglect of his, nor
+his trampling on principles; there<span class="pagenum"><a id="page219" name="page219"></a>Pg 219</span>fore neither did he like being
+presented to them, nor did they, especially when they had their wives
+with them, like to cultivate his acquaintance. Still there was a strong
+desire in all of them to see him, and the women in particular, who did
+not dare to look at him but by stealth, said in an under voice, 'What a
+pity it is!' If, however, any of his compatriots of exalted rank and of
+high reputation came forward to treat him with courtesy, he showed
+himself obviously flattered by it, and was greatly pleased with such
+association. It seemed that to the wound which remained always open in
+his ulcerated heart such soothing attentions were as drops of healing
+balm, which comforted him.</p>
+
+<p>"Speaking of his marriage,&mdash;a delicate subject, but one still agreeable
+to him, if it was treated in a friendly voice,&mdash;he was greatly moved,
+and said it had been the innocent cause of all his errors and all his
+griefs. Of his wife he spoke with much respect and affection. He said
+she was an illustrious lady, distinguished for the qualities of her
+heart and understanding, and that all the fault of their cruel
+separation lay with himself. Now, was such language dictated by justice
+or by vanity? Does it not bring to mind the saying of Julius, that the
+wife of Caesar must not even be suspected? What vanity in that saying of
+Caesar! In fact, if it had not been from vanity, Lord Byron would have
+admitted this to no one. Of his young daughter, his dear Ada, he spoke
+with great tenderness, and seemed to be pleased at the great sacrifice
+he had made in leaving her to comfort her mother. The intense hatred he<span class="pagenum"><a id="page220" name="page220"></a>Pg 220</span>
+bore his mother-in-law, and a sort of Euryclea of Lady Byron, two women
+to whose influence he, in a great measure, attributed her estrangement
+from him,&mdash;demonstrated clearly how painful the separation was to him,
+notwithstanding some bitter pleasantries which occasionally occur in his
+writings against her also, dictated rather by rancour than by
+indifference."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>From the time of his misunderstanding with Madame A * * *, the visits of
+the noble poet were transferred to the house of the other great rallying
+point of Venetian society, Madame B * * *,&mdash;a lady in whose manners,
+though she had long ceased to be young, there still lingered much of
+that attaching charm, which a youth passed in successful efforts to
+please seldom fails to leave behind. That those powers of pleasing, too,
+were not yet gone, the fidelity of, at least, one devoted admirer
+testified; nor is she supposed to have thought it impossible that Lord
+Byron himself might yet be linked on at the end of that long chain of
+lovers, which had, through so many years, graced the triumphs of her
+beauty. If, however, there could have been, in any case, the slightest
+chance of such a conquest, she had herself completely frustrated it by
+introducing her distinguished visitor to Madame Guiccioli,&mdash;a step by
+which she at last lost, too, even the ornament of his presence at her
+parties, as in consequence of some slighting conduct, on her part,
+towards his "Dama," he discontinued his attendance at her evening
+assemblies, and at the time of my visit to Venice had given up society
+altogether.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page221" name="page221"></a>Pg 221</span></p>
+
+<p>I could soon collect, from the tone held respecting his conduct at
+Madame B * * *'s, how subversive of all the morality of intrigue they
+considered the late step of which he had been guilty in withdrawing his
+acknowledged "Amica" from the protection of her husband, and placing
+her, at once, under the same roof with himself. "You must really (said
+the hostess herself to me) scold your friend;&mdash;till this unfortunate
+affair, he conducted himself <i>so</i> well!"&mdash;a eulogy on his previous moral
+conduct which, when I reported it the following day to my noble host,
+provoked at once a smile and sigh from his lips.</p>
+
+<p>The chief subject of our conversation, when alone, was his marriage, and
+the load of obloquy which it had brought upon him. He was most anxious
+to know the worst that had been alleged of his conduct; and as this was
+our first opportunity of speaking together on the subject, I did not
+hesitate to put his candour most searchingly to the proof, not only by
+enumerating the various charges I had heard brought against him by
+others, but by specifying such portions of these charges as I had been
+inclined to think not incredible myself. To all this he listened with
+patience, and answered with the most unhesitating frankness, laughing to
+scorn the tales of unmanly outrage related of him, but, at the same
+time, acknowledging that there had been in his conduct but too much to
+blame and regret, and stating one or two occasions, during his domestic
+life, when he had been irritated into letting "the breath of bitter
+words" escape him,&mdash;words, rather those of the unquiet spirit that
+possessed him than his<span class="pagenum"><a id="page222" name="page222"></a>Pg 222</span> own, and which he now evidently remembered with
+a degree of remorse and pain which might well have entitled them to be
+forgotten by others.</p>
+
+<p>It was, at the same time, manifest, that, whatever admissions he might
+be inclined to make respecting his own delinquencies, the inordinate
+measure of the punishment dealt out to him had sunk deeply into his
+mind, and, with the usual effect of such injustice, drove him also to be
+unjust himself;&mdash;so much so, indeed, as to impute to the quarter, to
+which he now traced all his ill fate, a feeling of fixed hostility to
+himself, which would not rest, he thought, even at his grave, but
+continue to persecute his memory as it was now embittering his life. So
+strong was this impression upon him, that during one of our few
+intervals of seriousness, he conjured me, by our friendship, if, as he
+both felt and hoped, I should survive him, not to let unmerited censure
+settle upon his name, but, while I surrendered him up to condemnation,
+where he deserved it, to vindicate him where aspersed.</p>
+
+<p>How groundless and wrongful were these apprehensions, the early death
+which he so often predicted and sighed for has enabled us, unfortunately
+but too soon, to testify. So far from having to defend him against any
+such assailants, an unworthy voice or two, from persons more injurious
+as friends than as enemies, is all that I find raised in hostility to
+his name; while by none, I am inclined to think, would a generous
+amnesty over his grave be more readily and cordially concurred in than
+by her, among whose numerous virtues a forgiving charity towards
+himself<span class="pagenum"><a id="page223" name="page223"></a>Pg 223</span> was the only one to which she had not yet taught him to render
+justice.</p>
+
+<p>I have already had occasion to remark, in another part of this work,
+that with persons who, like Lord Byron, live centred in their own
+tremulous web of sensitiveness, those friends of whom they see least,
+and who, therefore, least frequently come in collision with them in
+those every-day realities from which such natures shrink so morbidly,
+have proportionately a greater chance of retaining a hold on their
+affections. There is, however, in long absence from persons of this
+temperament, another description of risk hardly less, perhaps, to be
+dreaded. If the station a friend holds in their hearts is, in near
+intercourse with them, in danger from their sensitiveness, it is almost
+equally, perhaps, at the mercy of their too active imaginations during
+absence. On this very point, I recollect once expressing my
+apprehensions to Lord Byron, in a passage of a letter addressed to him
+but a short time before his death, of which the following is, as nearly
+as I can recall it, the substance:&mdash;"When <i>with</i> you, I feel <i>sure</i> of
+you; but, at a distance, one is often a little afraid of being made the
+victim, all of a sudden, of some of those fanciful suspicions, which,
+like meteoric stones, generate themselves (God knows how) in the upper
+regions of your imagination, and come clattering down upon our heads,
+some fine sunny day, when we are least expecting such an invasion."</p>
+
+<p>In writing thus to him, I had more particularly in recollection a fancy
+of this kind respecting myself, which he had, not long before my present
+visit to<span class="pagenum"><a id="page224" name="page224"></a>Pg 224</span> him at Venice, taken into his head. In a ludicrous, and now,
+perhaps, forgotten publication of mine, giving an account of the
+adventures of an English family in Paris, there had occurred the
+following description of the chief hero of the tale:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"A fine, sallow, sublime sort of Werter-faced man,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With mustachios which gave (what we read of so oft)<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The dear Corsair expression, half savage, half soft,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As hy&aelig;nas in love may be fancied to look, or<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A something between Abelard and old Blucher."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>On seeing this doggrel, my noble friend,&mdash;as I might, indeed, with a
+little more thought, have anticipated,&mdash;conceived the notion that I
+meant to throw ridicule on his whole race of poetic heroes, and
+accordingly, as I learned from persons then in frequent intercourse with
+him, flew out into one of his fits of half humorous rage against me.
+This he now confessed himself, and, in laughing over the circumstance
+with me, owned that he had even gone so far as, in his first moments of
+wrath, to contemplate some little retaliation for this perfidious hit at
+his heroes. "But when I recollected," said he, "what pleasure it would
+give the whole tribe of blockheads and blues to see you and me turning
+out against each other, I gave up the idea." He was, indeed, a striking
+instance of what may be almost invariably observed, that they who best
+know how to wield the weapon of ridicule themselves, are the most alive
+to its power in the hands of others. I remember, one day,&mdash;in the year
+1813, I think,&mdash;as we were conversing together about critics and<span class="pagenum"><a id="page225" name="page225"></a>Pg 225</span> their
+influence on the public. "For my part," he exclaimed, "I don't care what
+they say of me, so they don't quiz me."&mdash;"Oh, you need not fear
+that,"&mdash;I answered, with something, perhaps, of a half suppressed smile
+on my features,&mdash;"nobody could quiz <i>you</i>"&mdash;"<i>You could</i>, you villain!"
+he replied, clenching his hand at me, and looking, at the same time,
+with comic earnestness into my face.</p>
+
+<p>Before I proceed any farther with my own recollections, I shall here
+take the opportunity of extracting some curious particulars respecting
+the habits and mode of life of my friend while at Venice, from an
+account obligingly furnished me by a gentleman who long resided in that
+city, and who, during the greater part of Lord Byron's stay, lived on
+terms of the most friendly intimacy with him.</p>
+
+<p>"I have often lamented that I kept no notes of his observations during
+our rides and aquatic excursions. Nothing could exceed the vivacity and
+variety of his conversation, or the cheerfulness of his manner. His
+remarks on the surrounding objects were always original: and most
+particularly striking was the quickness with which he availed himself of
+every circumstance, however trifling in itself, and such as would have
+escaped the notice of almost any other person, to carry his point in
+such arguments as we might chance to be engaged in. He was feelingly
+alive to the beauties of nature, and took great interest in any
+observations, which, as a dabbler in the arts, I ventured to make upon
+the effects of light and shadow, or the changes pro<span class="pagenum"><a id="page226" name="page226"></a>Pg 226</span>duced in the colour
+of objects by every variation in the atmosphere.</p>
+
+<p>"The spot where we usually mounted our horses had been a Jewish
+cemetery; but the French, during their occupation of Venice, had thrown
+down the enclosures, and levelled all the tombstones with the ground, in
+order that they might not interfere with the fortifications upon the
+Lido, under the guns of which it was situated. To this place, as it was
+known to be that where he alighted from his gondola and met his horses,
+the curious amongst our country people, who were anxious to obtain a
+glimpse of him, used to resort; and it was amusing in the extreme to
+witness the excessive coolness with which ladies, as well as gentlemen,
+would advance within a very few paces of him, eyeing him, some with
+their glasses, as they would have done a statue in a museum, or the wild
+beasts at Exeter 'Change. However flattering this might be to a man's
+vanity, Lord Byron, though he bore it very patiently, expressed himself,
+as I believe he really was, excessively annoyed at it.</p>
+
+<p>"I have said that our usual ride was along the sea-shore, and that the
+spot where we took horse, and of course dismounted, had been a cemetery.
+It will readily be believed, that some caution was necessary in riding
+over the broken tombstones, and that it was altogether an awkward place
+for horses to pass. As the length of our ride was not very great,
+scarcely more than six miles in all, we seldom rode fast, that we might
+at least prolong its duration; and enjoy as much as possible the
+refreshing<span class="pagenum"><a id="page227" name="page227"></a>Pg 227</span> air of the Adriatic. One day, as we were leisurely returning
+homewards, Lord Byron, all at once, and without saying any thing to me,
+set spurs to his horse and started off at full gallop, making the
+greatest haste he could to get to his gondola. I could not conceive what
+fit had seized him, and had some difficulty in keeping even within a
+reasonable distance of him, while I looked around me to discover, if I
+were able, what could be the cause of his unusual precipitation. At
+length I perceived at some distance two or three gentlemen, who were
+running along the opposite side of the island nearest the Lagoon,
+parallel with him, towards his gondola, hoping to get there in time to
+see him alight; and a race actually took place between them, he
+endeavouring to outstrip them. In this he, in fact, succeeded, and,
+throwing himself quickly from his horse, leapt into his gondola, of
+which he hastily closed the blinds, ensconcing himself in a corner so as
+not to be seen. For my own part, not choosing to risk my neck over the
+ground I have spoken of, I followed more leisurely as soon as I came
+amongst the gravestones, but got to the place of embarkation just at the
+same moment with my curious countrymen, and in time to witness their
+disappointment at having had their run for nothing. I found him exulting
+in his success in outstripping them. He expressed in strong terms his
+annoyance at what he called their impertinence, whilst I could not but
+laugh at his impatience, as well as at the mortification of the
+unfortunate pedestrians, whose eagerness to see him, I said, was, in my
+opinion, highly<span class="pagenum"><a id="page228" name="page228"></a>Pg 228</span> flattering to him. That, he replied, depended on the
+feeling with which they came; and he had not the vanity to believe that
+they were influenced by any admiration of his character or of his
+abilities, but that they were impelled merely by idle curiosity. Whether
+it was so or not, I cannot help thinking that if they had been of the
+other sex, he would not have been so eager to escape from their
+observation, as in that case he would have repaid them glance for
+glance.</p>
+
+<p>"The curiosity that was expressed by all classes of travellers to see
+him, and the eagerness with which they endeavoured to pick up any
+anecdotes of his mode of life, were carried to a length which will
+hardly be credited. It formed the chief subject of their enquiries of
+the gondoliers who conveyed them from terra firma to the floating city;
+and these people, who are generally loquacious, were not at all backward
+in administering to the taste and humours of their passengers, relating
+to them the most extravagant and often unfounded stories. They took care
+to point out the house where he lived, and to give such hints of his
+movements as might afford them an opportunity of seeing him. Many of the
+English visiters, under pretext of seeing his house, in which there were
+no paintings of any consequence, nor, besides himself, any thing worthy
+of notice, contrived to obtain admittance through the cupidity of his
+servants, and with the most barefaced impudence forced their way even
+into his bedroom, in the hopes of seeing him. Hence arose, in a great
+measure, his<span class="pagenum"><a id="page229" name="page229"></a>Pg 229</span> bitterness towards them, which he has expressed in a note
+to one of his poems, on the occasion of some unfounded remark made upon
+him by an anonymous traveller in Italy; and it certainly appears well
+calculated to foster that cynicism which prevails in his latter works
+more particularly, and which, as well as the misanthropical expressions
+that occur in those which first raised his reputation, I do not believe
+to have been his natural feeling. Of this I am certain, that I never
+witnessed greater kindness than in Lord Byron.</p>
+
+<p>"The inmates of his family were all extremely attached to him, and would
+have endured any thing on his account. He was indeed culpably lenient to
+them; for even when instances occurred of their neglecting their duty,
+or taking an undue advantage of his good-nature, he rather bantered than
+spoke seriously to them upon it, and could not bring himself to
+discharge them, even when he had threatened to do so. An instance
+occurred within my knowledge of his unwillingness to act harshly towards
+a tradesman whom he had materially assisted, not only by lending him
+money, but by forwarding his interest in every way that he could.
+Notwithstanding repeated acts of kindness on Lord Byron's part, this man
+robbed and cheated him in the most barefaced manner; and when at length
+Lord Byron was induced to sue him at law for the recovery of his money,
+the only punishment he inflicted upon him, when sentence against him was
+passed, was to put him in prison for one week, and then to let him out
+again,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page230" name="page230"></a>Pg 230</span> although his debtor had subjected him to a considerable
+additional expense, by dragging him into all the different courts of
+appeal, and that he never at last recovered one halfpenny of the money
+owed to him. Upon this subject he writes to me from Ravenna, 'If * * is
+in (prison), let him out; if out, put him in for a week, merely for a
+lesson, and give him a good lecture.'</p>
+
+<p>"He was also ever ready to assist the distressed, and he was most
+unostentatious in his charities: for besides considerable sums which he
+gave away to applicants at his own house, he contributed largely by
+weekly and monthly allowances to persons whom he had never seen, and
+who, as the money reached them by other hands, did not even know who was
+their benefactor. One or two instances might be adduced where his
+charity certainly bore an appearance of ostentation; one particularly,
+when he sent fifty louis d'or to a poor printer whose house had been
+burnt to the ground, and all his property destroyed; but even this was
+not unattended with advantage; for it in a manner compelled the Austrian
+authorities to do something for the poor sufferer, which I have no
+hesitation in saying they would not have done otherwise; and I attribute
+it entirely to the publicity of his donation, that they allowed the man
+the use of an unoccupied house belonging to the government until he
+could rebuild his own, or re-establish his business elsewhere. Other
+instances might be perhaps discovered where his liberalities proceeded
+from selfish, and not very<span class="pagenum"><a id="page231" name="page231"></a>Pg 231</span> worthy motives<a name="FNanchor_50_50" id="FNanchor_50_50"></a><a href="#Footnote_50_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a>; but these are rare, and
+it would be unjust in the extreme to assume them as proofs of his
+character."</p>
+
+<p>It has been already mentioned that, in writing to my noble friend to
+announce my coming, I had expressed a hope that he would be able to go
+on with me to Rome; and I had the gratification of finding, on my
+arrival, that he was fully prepared to enter into this plan. On becoming
+acquainted, however, with all the details of his present situation, I so
+far sacrificed my own wishes and pleasure as to advise strongly that he
+should remain at La Mira. In the first place, I saw reason to apprehend
+that his leaving Madame Guiccioli at this crisis might be the means of
+drawing upon him the suspicion of neglecting, if not actually deserting,
+a young person who had just sacrificed so much to her devotion for him,
+and whose position, at this moment, between the Count and Lord Byron, it
+required all the generous prudence of the latter to shield from shame or
+fall. There had just occurred too, as it appeared to me, a most
+favourable opening for the retrieval of, at least, the imprudent part of
+the transaction, by replacing the lady instantly under her husband's
+protection, and thus enabling her still to retain that station in
+society which, in such society, nothing but such imprudence could have
+endangered.</p>
+
+<p>This latter hope had been suggested by a letter he<span class="pagenum"><a id="page232" name="page232"></a>Pg 232</span> one day showed me,
+(as we were dining together alone, at the well-known Pellegrino,) which
+had that morning been received by the Contessa from her husband, and the
+chief object of which was&mdash;<i>not</i> to express any censure of her conduct,
+but to suggest that she should prevail upon her noble admirer to
+transfer into his keeping a sum of 1000<i>l.</i>, which was then lying, if I
+remember right, in the hands of Lord Byron's banker at Ravenna, but
+which the worthy Count professed to think would be more advantageously
+placed in his own. Security, the writer added, would be given, and five
+per cent. interest allowed; as to accept of the sum on any other terms
+he should hold to be an "avvilimento" to him. Though, as regarded the
+lady herself, who has since proved, by a most noble sacrifice, how
+perfectly disinterested were her feelings throughout<a name="FNanchor_51_51" id="FNanchor_51_51"></a><a href="#Footnote_51_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a>, this trait of
+so wholly<span class="pagenum"><a id="page233" name="page233"></a>Pg 233</span> opposite a character in her lord must have still further
+increased her disgust at returning to him, yet so important did it seem,
+as well for her friend's sake as her own, to retrace, while there was
+yet time, their last imprudent step, that even the sacrifice of this
+sum, which I saw would materially facilitate such an arrangement, did
+not appear to me by any means too high a price to pay for it. On this
+point, however, my noble friend entirely differed with me; and nothing
+could be more humorous and amusing than the manner in which, in his
+newly assumed character of a lover of money, he dilated on the many
+virtues of a thousand pounds, and his determination not to part with a
+single one of them to Count Guiccioli. Of his confidence, too, in his
+own power of extricating himself from this difficulty he spoke with
+equal gaiety and humour; and Mr. Scott, who joined our party after
+dinner, having taken the same view of the subject as I did, he laid a
+wager of two sequins with that gentleman, that, without any such
+disbursement, he would yet bring all right again, and "save the lady and
+the money too."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page234" name="page234"></a>Pg 234</span></p>
+
+<p>It is indeed, certain, that he had at this time taken up the whim (for
+it hardly deserves a more serious name) of minute and constant
+watchfulness over his expenditure; and, as most usually happens, it was
+with the increase of his means that this increased sense of the value of
+money came. The first symptom I saw of this new fancy of his was the
+exceeding joy which he manifested on my presenting to him a rouleau of
+twenty Napoleons, which Lord K * *d, to whom he had, on some occasion,
+lent that sum, had intrusted me with, at Milan, to deliver into his
+hands. With the most joyous and diverting eagerness, he tore open the
+paper, and, in counting over the sum, stopped frequently to congratulate
+himself on the recovery of it.</p>
+
+<p>Of his household frugalities I speak but on the authority of others; but
+it is not difficult to conceive that, with a restless spirit like his,
+which delighted always in having something to contend with, and which,
+but a short time before, "for want," as he said, "of something craggy to
+break upon," had tortured itself with the study of the Armenian
+language, he should, in default of all better excitement, find a sort of
+stir and amusement in the task of contesting, inch by inch, every
+encroachment of expense, and endeavouring to suppress what he himself
+calls</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"That climax of all earthly ills,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The inflammation of our weekly bills."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>In truth, his constant recurrence to the praise of avarice in Don Juan,
+and the humorous zest with<span class="pagenum"><a id="page235" name="page235"></a>Pg 235</span> which he delights to dwell on it, shows how
+new-fangled, as well as how far from serious, was his adoption of this
+"good old-gentlemanly vice." In the same spirit he had, a short time
+before my arrival at Venice, established a hoarding-box, with a slit in
+the lid, into which he occasionally put sequins, and, at stated periods,
+opened it to contemplate his treasures. His own ascetic style of living
+enabled him, as far as himself was concerned, to gratify this taste for
+economy in no ordinary degree,&mdash;his daily bill of fare, when the
+Margarita was his companion, consisting, I have been assured, of but
+four beccafichi, of which the Fornarina eat three, leaving even him
+hungry.</p>
+
+<p>That his parsimony, however (if this new phasis of his ever-shifting
+character is to be called by such a name), was very far from being of
+that kind which Bacon condemns, as "withholding men from works of
+liberality," is apparent from all that is known of his munificence, at
+this very period,&mdash;some particulars of which, from a most authentic
+source, have just been cited, proving amply that while, for the
+indulgence of a whim, he kept one hand closed, he gave free course to
+his generous nature by dispensing lavishly from the other. It should be
+remembered, too, that as long as money shall continue to be one of the
+great sources of power, so long will they who seek influence over their
+fellow-men attach value to it as an instrument; and the more lowly they
+are inclined to estimate the disinterestedness of the human heart, the
+more available and precious will they consider the talisman that gives
+such<span class="pagenum"><a id="page236" name="page236"></a>Pg 236</span> power over it. Hence, certainly, it is not among those who have
+thought highest of mankind that the disposition to avarice has most
+generally displayed itself. In Swift the love of money was strong and
+avowed; and to Voltaire the same propensity was also frequently
+imputed,&mdash;on about as sufficient grounds, perhaps, as to Lord Byron.</p>
+
+<p>On the day preceding that of my departure from Venice, my noble host, on
+arriving from La Mira to dinner, told me, with all the glee of a
+schoolboy who had been just granted a holiday, that, as this was my last
+evening, the Contessa had given him leave to "make a night of it," and
+that accordingly he would not only accompany me to the opera, but we
+should sup together at some cafe (as in the old times) afterwards.
+Observing a volume in his gondola, with a number of paper marks between
+the leaves, I enquired of him what it was?&mdash;"Only a book," he answered,
+"from which I am trying to <i>crib</i>, as I do wherever I can<a name="FNanchor_52_52" id="FNanchor_52_52"></a><a href="#Footnote_52_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a>;&mdash;and
+that's the way I get the character of an original poet." On taking it up
+and looking into it, I exclaimed, "Ah, my old friend,
+Agathon!"<a name="FNanchor_53_53" id="FNanchor_53_53"></a><a href="#Footnote_53_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a>&mdash;"What!" he cried, archly, "you have been beforehand with
+me there, have you?"</p>
+
+<p>Though in imputing to himself premeditated plagiarism, he was, of
+course, but jesting, it was, I am inclined to think, his practice, when
+engaged in the composition of any work, to excite thus his vein<span class="pagenum"><a id="page237" name="page237"></a>Pg 237</span> by the
+perusal of others, on the same subject or plan, from which the slightest
+hint caught by his imagination, as he read, was sufficient to kindle
+there such a train of thought as, but for that spark, had never been
+awakened, and of which he himself soon forgot the source. In the present
+instance, the inspiration he sought was of no very elevating
+nature,&mdash;the anti-spiritual doctrines of the Sophist in this Romance<a name="FNanchor_54_54" id="FNanchor_54_54"></a><a href="#Footnote_54_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a>
+being what chiefly, I suspect, attracted his attention to its pages, as
+not unlikely to supply him with fresh argument and sarcasm for those
+depreciating views of human nature and its destiny,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page238" name="page238"></a>Pg 238</span> which he was now,
+with all the wantonness of unbounded genius, enforcing in Don Juan.</p>
+
+<p>Of this work he was, at the time of my visit to him, writing the third
+Canto, and before dinner, one day, read me two or three hundred lines of
+it;&mdash;beginning with the stanzas "Oh Wellington," &amp;c. which at that time
+formed the opening of this third Canto, but were afterwards reserved for
+the commencement of the ninth. My opinion of the poem, both as regarded
+its talent and its mischief, he had already been made acquainted with,
+from my having been one of those,&mdash;his Committee, as he called us,&mdash;to
+whom, at his own desire, the manuscript of the two first Cantos had been
+submitted, and who, as the reader has seen, angered him not a little by
+deprecating the publication of it. In a letter which I, at that time,
+wrote to him on the subject, after praising the exquisite beauty of the
+scenes between Juan and Haid&eacute;e, I ventured to say, "Is it not odd that
+the same licence which, in your early Satire, you blamed <i>me</i> for being
+guilty of on the borders of my twentieth year, you are now yourself
+(with infinitely greater power, and therefore infinitely greater
+mischief) indulging in <i>after</i> thirty!"</p>
+
+<p>Though I now found him, in full defiance of such remonstrances,
+proceeding with this work, he had yet, as his own letters prove, been so
+far influenced by the general outcry against his poem, as to feel the
+zeal and zest with which he had commenced it considerably abated,&mdash;so
+much so, as to render, ultimately, in his own opinion, the third and
+fourth Cantos much inferior in spirit to the two first. So<span class="pagenum"><a id="page239" name="page239"></a>Pg 239</span> sensitive,
+indeed,&mdash;in addition to his usual abundance of this quality,&mdash;did he, at
+length, grow on the subject, that when Mr. W. Bankes, who succeeded me,
+as his visiter, happened to tell him, one day, that he had heard a Mr.
+Saunders (or some such name), then resident at Venice, declare that, in
+his opinion, "Don Juan was all Grub Street," such an effect had this
+disparaging speech upon his mind, (though coming from a person who, as
+he himself would have it, was "nothing but a d&mdash;&mdash;d salt-fish seller,")
+that, for some time after, by his own confession to Mr. Bankes, he could
+not bring himself to write another line of the poem; and, one morning,
+opening a drawer where the neglected manuscript lay, he said to his
+friend, "Look here&mdash;this is all Mr. Saunders's 'Grub Street.'"</p>
+
+<p>To return, however, to the details of our last evening together at
+Venice. After a dinner with Mr. Scott at the Pellegrino, we all went,
+rather late, to the opera, where the principal part in the Baccanali di
+Roma was represented by a female singer, whose chief claim to
+reputation, according to Lord Byron, lay in her having <i>stilettoed</i> one
+of her favourite lovers. In the intervals between the singing he pointed
+out to me different persons among the audience, to whom celebrity of
+various sorts, but, for the most part, disreputable, attached; and of
+one lady who sat near us, he related an anecdote, which, whether new or
+old, may, as creditable to Venetian facetiousness, be worth, perhaps,
+repeating. This lady had, it seems, been pronounced by Napoleon the
+finest woman in Venice; but the Venetians,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page240" name="page240"></a>Pg 240</span> not quite agreeing with this
+opinion of the great man, contented themselves with calling her "La
+Bella <i>per Decr&eacute;to</i>,"&mdash;adding (as the Decrees always begin with the word
+"Considerando"), "Ma <i>senza</i> il Considerando."</p>
+
+<p>From the opera, in pursuance of our agreement to "make a night of it,"
+we betook ourselves to a sort of <i>cabaret</i> in the Place of St. Mark, and
+there, within a few yards of the Palace of the Doges, sat drinking hot
+brandy punch, and laughing over old times, till the clock of St. Mark
+struck the second hour of the morning. Lord Byron then took me in his
+gondola, and, the moon being in its fullest splendour, he made the
+gondoliers row us to such points of view as might enable me to see
+Venice, at that hour, to advantage. Nothing could be more solemnly
+beautiful than the whole scene around, and I had, for the first time,
+the Venice of my dreams before me. All those meaner details which so
+offend the eye by day were now softened down by the moonlight into a
+sort of visionary indistinctness; and the effect of that silent city of
+palaces, sleeping, as it were, upon the waters, in the bright stillness
+of the night, was such as could not but affect deeply even the least
+susceptible imagination. My companion saw that I was moved by it, and
+though familiar with the scene himself, seemed to give way, for the
+moment, to the same strain of feeling; and, as we exchanged a few
+remarks suggested by that wreck of human glory before us, his voice,
+habitually so cheerful, sunk into a tone of mournful sweetness, such as
+I had rarely before heard from him, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="page241" name="page241"></a>Pg 241</span> shall not easily forget. This
+mood, however, was but of the moment; some quick turn of ridicule soon
+carried him off into a totally different vein, and at about three
+o'clock in the morning, at the door of his own palazzo, we parted,
+laughing, as we had met;&mdash;an agreement having been first made that I
+should take an early dinner with him next day at his villa, on my road
+to Ferrara.</p>
+
+<p>Having employed the morning of the following day in completing my round
+of sights at Venice,&mdash;taking care to visit specially "that picture by
+Giorgione," to which the poet's exclamation, "<i>such</i> a woman!"<a name="FNanchor_55_55" id="FNanchor_55_55"></a><a href="#Footnote_55_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a> will
+long continue to attract all votaries of beauty,&mdash;I took my departure
+from Venice, and, at about three o'clock, arrived at La Mira. I found my
+noble host waiting to receive me, and, in passing with him through the
+hall, saw his little Allegra, who, with her nursery maid, was standing
+there as if just returned from a walk. To the perverse fancy he had for
+falsifying his own character, and even imputing to himself faults the
+most alien to his nature, I have already frequently adverted, and had,
+on this occasion, a striking instance of it. After I had spoken a
+little, in passing, to the child, and made some remark on its beauty, he
+said to me,&mdash;<span class="pagenum"><a id="page242" name="page242"></a>Pg 242</span>"Have you any notion&mdash;but I suppose <i>you</i> have&mdash;of what
+they call the parental feeling? For myself, I have not the least." And
+yet, when that child died, in a year or two afterwards, he who now
+uttered this artificial speech was so overwhelmed by the event, that
+those who were about him at the time actually trembled for his reason!</p>
+
+<p>A short time before dinner he left the room, and in a minute or two
+returned, carrying in his hand a white leather bag. "Look here," he
+said, holding it up&mdash;"this would be worth something to Murray, though
+<i>you</i>, I dare say, would not give sixpence for it."&mdash;"What is it?" I
+asked.&mdash;"My Life and Adventures," he answered. On hearing this, I raised
+my hands in a gesture of wonder. "It is not a thing," he continued,
+"that can be published during my lifetime, but you may have it&mdash;if you
+like&mdash;there, do whatever you please with it." In taking the bag, and
+thanking him most warmly, I added, "This will make a nice legacy for my
+little Tom, who shall astonish the latter days of the nineteenth century
+with it." He then added, "You may show it to any of our friends you
+think worthy of it:"&mdash;and this is, nearly word for word, the whole of
+what passed between us on the subject.</p>
+
+<p>At dinner we were favoured with the presence of Madame Guiccioli, who
+was so obliging as to furnish me, at Lord Byron's suggestion, with a
+letter of introduction to her brother, Count Gamba, whom it was
+probable, they both thought, I should meet at Rome. This letter I never
+had an opportunity of presenting; and as it was left open for me to
+read,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page243" name="page243"></a>Pg 243</span> and was, the greater part of it, I have little doubt, dictated by
+my noble friend, I may venture, without impropriety, to give an extract
+from it here;&mdash;premising that the allusion to the "Castle," &amp;c. refers
+to some tales respecting the cruelty of Lord Byron to his wife, which
+the young Count had heard, and, at this time, implicitly believed. After
+a few sentences of compliment to the bearer, the letter proceeds:&mdash;"He
+is on his way to see the wonders of Rome, and there is no one, I am
+sure, more qualified to enjoy them. I shall be gratified and obliged by
+your acting, as far as you can, as his guide. He is a friend of Lord
+Byron's, and much more accurately acquainted with his history than those
+who have related it to you. He will accordingly describe to you, if you
+ask him, <i>the shape, the dimensions</i>, and whatever else you may please
+to require, of <i>that Castle in which he keeps imprisoned a young and
+innocent wife</i>, &amp;c. &amp;c. My dear Pietro, whenever you feel inclined to
+laugh, do send two lines of answer to your sister, who loves and ever
+will love you with the greatest tenderness.&mdash;Teresa Guiccioli."<a name="FNanchor_56_56" id="FNanchor_56_56"></a><a href="#Footnote_56_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a></p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page244" name="page244"></a>Pg 244</span></p>
+
+<p>After expressing his regret that I had not been able to prolong my stay
+at Venice, my noble friend said, "At least, I think, you might spare a
+day or two to go with me to Arqu&agrave;. I should like," he continued,
+thoughtfully, "to visit that tomb with you:"&mdash;then, breaking off into
+his usual gay tone; "a pair of poetical pilgrims&mdash;eh, Tom, what say
+you?"&mdash;That I should have declined this offer, and thus lost the
+opportunity of an excursion which would have been remembered, as a
+bright dream, through all my after-life, is a circumstance I never can
+think of without wonder and self-reproach. But the main design on which
+I had then set my mind of reaching Rome, and, if possible, Naples,
+within the limited period which circumstances allowed, rendered me far
+less alive than I ought to have been to the preciousness of the episode
+thus offered to me.</p>
+
+<p>When it was time for me to depart, he expressed his intention to
+accompany me a few miles; and, ordering his horses to follow, proceeded
+with me in the carriage as far as Str&agrave;, where for the last time&mdash;how
+little thinking it was to be the last!&mdash;I bade my kind and admirable
+friend farewell.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 341. TO MR. HOPPNER.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"October 22. 1819.</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad to hear of your return, but I do not know how to
+congratulate you&mdash;unless you think differently of Venice from what
+I think now, and you thought always. I am, besides, about to renew<span class="pagenum"><a id="page245" name="page245"></a>Pg 245</span>
+your troubles by requesting you to be judge between Mr. E * * * and
+myself in a small matter of imputed peculation and irregular
+accounts on the part of that phoenix of secretaries. As I knew that
+you had not parted friends, at the same time that <i>I</i> refused for
+my own part any judgment but <i>yours</i>, I offered him his choice of
+any person, the <i>least</i> scoundrel native to be found in Venice, as
+his own umpire; but he expressed himself so convinced of your
+impartiality, that he declined any but <i>you</i>. This is in his
+favour.&mdash;The paper within will explain to you the default in his
+accounts. You will hear his explanation, and decide if it so please
+you. I shall not appeal from the decision.</p>
+
+<p>"As he complained that his salary was insufficient, I determined to
+have his accounts examined, and the enclosed was the result.&mdash;It is
+all in black and white with documents, and I have despatched
+Fletcher to explain (or rather to perplex) the matter.</p>
+
+<p>"I have had much civility and kindness from Mr. Dorville during
+your journey, and I thank him accordingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Your letter reached me at your departure<a name="FNanchor_57_57" id="FNanchor_57_57"></a><a href="#Footnote_57_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a>, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="page246" name="page246"></a>Pg 246</span> displeased me
+very much:&mdash;not that it might not be true in its statement and kind
+in its intention, but you have lived long enough to know how
+useless all such representations ever are and must be in cases
+where the passions are concerned. To reason with men in such a
+situation is like reasoning with a drunkard in his cups&mdash;the only
+answer you will get from him is, that he is sober, and you are
+drunk.</p>
+
+<p>"Upon that subject we will (if you like) be silent. You might only
+say what would distress me without answering any purpose whatever;
+and I have too many obligations to you to answer you in the same
+style. So that you should recollect that you have also that
+advantage over me. I hope to see you soon.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose you know that they said at Venice, that I was arrested
+at Bologna as a <i>Carbonaro</i>&mdash;story about as true as their usual
+conversation. Moore has been here&mdash;I lodged him in my house at
+Venice, and went to see him daily; but I could not at that time
+quit La Mira entirely. You and I were not very far from meeting in
+Switzerland. With my best respects to Mrs. Hoppner, believe me ever
+and truly, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. Allegra is here in good health and spirits&mdash;I shall keep her
+with me till I go to England, which will perhaps be in the spring.
+It<span class="pagenum"><a id="page247" name="page247"></a>Pg 247</span> has just occurred to me that you may not perhaps like to
+undertake the office of judge between Mr. E. and your humble
+servant.&mdash;Of course, as Mr. Liston (the comedian, not the
+ambassador) says, '<i>it is all hoptional</i>;' but I have no other
+resource. I do not wish to find him a rascal, if it can be avoided,
+and would rather think him guilty of carelessness than cheating.
+The case is this&mdash;can I, or not, give him a character for
+<i>honesty</i>?&mdash;It is not my intention to continue him in my service."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 342. TO MR. HOPPNER.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"October 25. 1819.</p>
+
+<p>"You need not have made any excuses about the letter: I never said
+but that you might, could, should, or would have reason. I merely
+described my own state of inaptitude to listen to it at that time,
+and in those circumstances. Besides, you did not speak from your
+<i>own</i> authority&mdash;but from what you said you had heard. Now my blood
+boils to hear an Italian speaking ill of another Italian, because,
+though they lie in particular, they speak truth in general by
+speaking ill at all;&mdash;and although they know that they are trying
+and wishing to lie, they do not succeed, merely because they can
+say nothing so bad of each other, that it <i>may</i> not, and must not
+be true, from the atrocity of their long debased national
+character.<a name="FNanchor_58_58" id="FNanchor_58_58"></a><a href="#Footnote_58_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a></p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page248" name="page248"></a>Pg 248</span></p>
+
+<p>"With regard to E., you will perceive a most irregular, extravagant
+account, without proper documents to support it. He demanded an
+increase of salary, which made me suspect him; he supported an
+outrageous extravagance of expenditure, and did not like the
+dismission of the cook; he never complained of him&mdash;as in duty
+bound&mdash;at the time of his robberies. I can only say, that the house
+expense is now under <i>one half</i> of what it then was, as he himself
+admits. He charged for a comb <i>eighteen</i> francs,&mdash;the real price
+was <i>eight</i>. He charged a passage from Fusina for a person named
+Iambelli, who paid it <i>herself</i>, as she will prove if necessary. He
+fancies, or asserts himself, the victim of a domestic complot
+against him;&mdash;accounts are accounts&mdash;prices are prices;&mdash;let him
+make out a fair detail. <i>I</i> am not prejudiced against him&mdash;on the
+contrary, I supported him against the complaints of his wife, and
+of his former master, at a time when I could have crushed him like
+an earwig; and if he is a scoundrel, he is the<span class="pagenum"><a id="page249" name="page249"></a>Pg 249</span> greatest of
+scoundrels, an ungrateful one. The truth is, probably, that he
+thought I was leaving Venice, and determined to make the most of
+it. At present he keeps bringing in <i>account after account</i>, though
+he had always money in hand&mdash;as I believe you know my system was
+never to allow longer than a week's bills to run. Pray read him
+this letter&mdash;I desire nothing to be concealed against which he may
+defend himself.</p>
+
+<p>"Pray how is your little boy? and how are you?&mdash;I shall be up in
+Venice very soon, and we will be bilious together. I hate the place
+and all that it inherits.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 343. TO MR. HOPPNER.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"October 28. 1819.</p>
+
+<p>"I have to thank you for your letter, and your compliment to Don
+Juan. I said nothing to you about it, understanding that it is a
+sore subject with the moral reader, and has been the cause of a
+great row; but I am glad you like it. I will say nothing about the
+shipwreck, except that I hope you think it is as nautical and
+technical as verse could admit in the octave measure.</p>
+
+<p>"The poem has <i>not sold well</i>, so Murray says&mdash;'but the best
+judges, &amp;c. say, &amp;c.' so says that worthy man. I have never seen it
+in print. The third Canto is in advance about one hundred stanzas;
+but the failure of the two first has weakened my <i>estro</i>, and it
+will neither be so good as the<span class="pagenum"><a id="page250" name="page250"></a>Pg 250</span> two former, nor completed, unless I
+get a little more <i>riscaldato</i> in its behalf. I understand the
+outcry was beyond every thing.&mdash;Pretty cant for people who read Tom
+Jones, and Roderick Random, and the Bath Guide, and Ariosto, and
+Dryden, and Pope&mdash;to say nothing of Little's Poems! Of course I
+refer to the <i>morality</i> of these works, and not to any pretension
+of mine to compete with them in any thing but decency. I hope yours
+is the Paris edition, and that you did not pay the London price. I
+have seen neither except in the newspapers.</p>
+
+<p>"Pray make my respects to Mrs. H., and take care of your little
+boy. All my household have the fever and ague, except Fletcher,
+Allegra, and my<i>sen</i> (as we used to say in Nottinghamshire), and
+the horses, and Mutz, and Moretto. In the beginning of November,
+perhaps sooner, I expect to have the pleasure of seeing you. To-day
+I got drenched by a thunder-storm, and my horse and groom too, and
+his horse all bemired up to the middle in a cross-road. It was
+summer at noon, and at five we were bewintered; but the lightning
+was sent perhaps to let us know that the summer was not yet over.
+It is queer weather for the 27th October.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 344. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, October 29. 1819.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours of the 15th came yesterday. I am sorry that you do not
+mention a large letter addressed to<span class="pagenum"><a id="page251" name="page251"></a>Pg 251</span> <i>your care</i> for Lady Byron,
+from me, at Bologna, two months ago. Pray tell me, was this letter
+received and forwarded?</p>
+
+<p>"You say nothing of the vice-consulate for the Ravenna patrician,
+from which it is to be inferred that the thing will not be done.</p>
+
+<p>"I had written about a hundred stanzas of a <i>third</i> Canto to Don
+Juan, but the reception of the two first is no encouragement to you
+nor me to proceed.</p>
+
+<p>"I had also written about 600 lines of a poem, the Vision (or
+Prophecy) of Dante, the subject a view of Italy in the ages down to
+the present&mdash;supposing Dante to speak in his own person, previous
+to his death, and embracing all topics in the way of prophecy, like
+Lycophron's Cassandra; but this and the other are both at a
+stand-still for the present.</p>
+
+<p>"I gave Moore, who is gone to Rome, my Life in MS., in
+seventy-eight folio sheets, brought down to 1816. But this I put
+into his hands for <i>his</i> care, as he has some other MSS. of mine&mdash;a
+Journal kept in 1814, &amp;c. Neither are for publication during my
+life; but when I am cold you may do what you please. In the mean
+time, if you like to read them you may, and show them to anybody
+you like&mdash;I care not.</p>
+
+<p>"The Life is <i>Memoranda</i>, and not <i>Confessions</i> I have left out all
+my <i>loves</i> (except in a general way), and many other of the most
+important things (because I must not compromise other people), so
+that it is like the play of Hamlet&mdash;'the part of Hamlet omitted by
+particular desire.' But you will<span class="pagenum"><a id="page252" name="page252"></a>Pg 252</span> find many opinions, and some fun,
+with a detailed account of my marriage, and its consequences, as
+true as a party concerned can make such account, for I suppose we
+are all prejudiced.</p>
+
+<p>"I have never read over this Life since it was written, so that I
+know not exactly what it may repeat or contain. Moore and I passed
+some merry days together.</p>
+
+<p>"I probably must return for business, or in my way to America.
+Pray, did you get a letter for Hobhouse, who will have told you the
+contents? I understand that the Venezuelan commissioners had orders
+to treat with emigrants; now I want to go there. I should not make
+a bad South-American planter, and I should take my natural
+daughter, Allegra, with me, and settle. I wrote, at length, to
+Hobhouse, to get information from Perry, who, I suppose, is the
+best topographer and trumpeter of the new republicans. Pray write.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours ever.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. Moore and I did nothing but laugh. He will tell you of 'my
+whereabouts,' and all my proceedings at this present; they are as
+usual. You should not let those fellows publish false 'Don Juans;'
+but do not put <i>my name</i>, because I mean to cut R&mdash;&mdash;ts up like a
+gourd, in the preface, if I continue the poem."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 345. TO MR. HOPPNER.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"October 29. 1819.</p>
+
+<p>"The Ferrara story is of a piece with all the rest of the Venetian
+manufacture,&mdash;you may judge. I<span class="pagenum"><a id="page253" name="page253"></a>Pg 253</span> only changed horses there since I
+wrote to you, after my visit in June last. '<i>Convent</i>' and '<i>carry
+off</i>', quotha! and '<i>girl</i>.' I should like to know <i>who</i> has been
+carried off, except poor dear <i>me</i>. I have been more ravished
+myself than anybody since the Trojan war; but as to the arrest and
+its causes, one is as true as the other, and I can account for the
+invention of neither. I suppose it is some confusion of the tale of
+the F * * and of Me. Guiccioli, and half a dozen more; but it is
+useless to unravel the web, when one has only to brush it away. I
+shall settle with Master E. who looks very blue at your
+<i>in-decision</i>, and swears that he is the best arithmetician in
+Europe; and so I think also, for he makes out two and two to be
+five.</p>
+
+<p>"You may see me next week. I have a horse or two more (five in
+all), and I shall repossess myself of Lido, and I will rise
+earlier, and we will go and shake our livers over the beach, as
+heretofore, if you like&mdash;and we will make the Adriatic roar again
+with our hatred of that now empty oyster-shell, without its pearl,
+the city of Venice.</p>
+
+<p>"Murray sent me a letter yesterday: the impostors have published
+<i>two</i> new <i>third</i> Cantos of <i>Don Juan</i>;&mdash;the devil take the
+impudence of some blackguard bookseller or other <i>therefor</i>!
+Perhaps I did not make myself understood; he told me the sale had
+been great, 1200 out of 1500 quarto, I believe (which is nothing
+after selling 13,000 of the Corsair in one day); but that the 'best
+judges,' &amp;c. had said it was very fine, and clever, and
+particularly good English, and poetry, and all those con<span class="pagenum"><a id="page254" name="page254"></a>Pg 254</span>solatory
+things, which are not, however, worth a single copy to a
+bookseller: and as to the author, of course I am in a d&mdash;&mdash;ned
+passion at the bad taste of the times, and swear there is nothing
+like posterity, who, of course, must know more of the matter than
+their grandfathers. There has been an eleventh commandment to the
+women not to read it, and, what is still more extraordinary, they
+seem not to have broken it. But that can be of little import to
+them, poor things, for the reading or non-reading a book will never
+* * * *.</p>
+
+<p>"Count G. comes to Venice next week, and I am requested to consign
+his wife to him, which shall be done. What you say of the long
+evenings at the Mira, or Venice, reminds me of what Curran said to
+Moore:&mdash;'So I hear you have married a pretty woman, and a very good
+creature, too&mdash;an excellent creature. Pray&mdash;um! <i>how do you pass
+your evenings?</i>' It is a devil of a question that, and perhaps as
+easy to answer with a wife as with a mistress.</p>
+
+<p>"If you go to Milan, pray leave at least a <i>Vice-Consul</i>&mdash;the only
+vice that will ever be wanting in Venice. D'Orville is a good
+fellow. But you shall go to England in the spring with me, and
+plant Mrs. Hoppner at Berne with her relations for a few months. I
+wish you had been here (at Venice, I mean, not the Mira) when Moore
+was here&mdash;we were very merry and tipsy. He <i>hated</i> Venice, by the
+way, and swore it was a sad place.<a name="FNanchor_59_59" id="FNanchor_59_59"></a><a href="#Footnote_59_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a></p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page255" name="page255"></a>Pg 255</span></p>
+
+<p>"So Madame Albrizzi's death is in danger&mdash;poor woman! Moore told me
+that at Geneva they had made a devil of a story of the
+Fornaretta:&mdash;'Young lady seduced!&mdash;subsequent abandonment!&mdash;leap
+into the Grand Canal!'&mdash;and her being in the 'hospital of <i>fous</i> in
+consequence!' I should like to know who was nearest being made
+'<i>fou</i>,' and be d&mdash;&mdash;d to them I Don't you think me in the
+interesting character of a very ill used gentleman? I hope your
+little boy is well. Allegrina is flourishing like a pomegranate
+blossom. Yours," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 346. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, November 8. 1819.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Hoppner has lent me a copy of 'Don Juan,' Paris edition, which
+he tells me is read in Switzerland by clergymen and ladies with
+considerable approbation. In the second Canto, you must alter the
+49th stanza to</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"'Twas twilight, and the sunless day went down<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Over the waste of waters, like a veil<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Which if withdrawn would but disclose the frown<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Of one whose hate is mask'd but to assail;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Thus to their hopeless eyes the night was shown,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">And grimly darkled o'er their faces pale<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">And the dim desolate deep; twelve days had Fear<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Been their familiar, and now Death was here.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"I have been ill these eight days with a tertian fever, caught in
+the country on horseback in a thunderstorm. Yesterday I had the
+fourth attack:<span class="pagenum"><a id="page256" name="page256"></a>Pg 256</span> the two last were very smart, the first day as well
+as the last being preceded by vomiting. It is the fever of the
+place and the season. I feel weakened, but not unwell, in the
+intervals, except headach and lassitude.</p>
+
+<p>"Count Guiccioli has arrived in Venice, and has presented his
+spouse (who had preceded him two months for her health and the
+prescriptions of Dr. Aglietti) with a paper of conditions,
+regulations of hours and conduct, and morals, &amp;c. &amp;c. &amp;c. which he
+insists on her accepting, and she persists in refusing. I am
+expressly, it should seem, excluded by this treaty, as an
+indispensable preliminary; so that they are in high dissension, and
+what the result may be I know not, particularly as they are
+consulting friends.</p>
+
+<p>"To-night, as Countess Guiccioli observed me poring over 'Don
+Juan,' she stumbled by mere chance on the 137th stanza of the first
+Canto, and asked me what it meant. I told her, 'Nothing&mdash;but "your
+husband is coming."' As I said this in Italian, with some emphasis,
+she started up in a fright, and said, '<i>Oh, my God, is</i> he
+<i>coming</i>?' thinking it was <i>her own</i>, who either was or ought to
+have been at the theatre. You may suppose we laughed when she found
+out the mistake. You will be amused, as I was;&mdash;it happened not
+three hours ago.</p>
+
+<p>"I wrote to you last week, but have added nothing to the third
+Canto since my fever, nor to 'The Prophecy of Dante.' Of the former
+there are about 100 octaves done; of the latter about 500<span class="pagenum"><a id="page257" name="page257"></a>Pg 257</span>
+lines&mdash;perhaps more. Moore saw the third Juan, as far as it then
+went. I do not know if my fever will let me go on with either, and
+the tertian lasts, they say, a good while. I had it in Malta on my
+way home, and the malaria fever in Greece the year before that. The
+Venetian is not very fierce, but I was delirious one of the nights
+with it, for an hour or two, and, on my senses coming back, found
+Fletcher sobbing on one side of the bed, and La Contessa
+Guiccioli<a name="FNanchor_60_60" id="FNanchor_60_60"></a><a href="#Footnote_60_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a> weeping on the other; so that<span class="pagenum"><a id="page258" name="page258"></a>Pg 258</span> I had no want of
+attendance. I have not yet taken any physician, because, though I
+think they may relieve in chronic disorders, such as gout and the
+like, &amp;c. &amp;c. &amp;c. (though they can't cure them)&mdash;just as surgeons
+are necessary to set bones and tend wounds&mdash;yet I think fevers
+quite out of their reach, and remediable only by diet and nature.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't like the taste of bark, but I suppose that I must take it
+soon.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell Rose that somebody at Milan (an Austrian, Mr. Hoppner says)
+is answering his book. William Bankes is in quarantine at Trieste.
+I have not lately heard from you. Excuse this paper: it is long
+paper shortened for the occasion. What folly is this of Carlile's
+trial? why let him have the honours of a martyr? it will only
+advertise the books in question. Yours, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. As I tell you that the Guiccioli business is on the eve of
+exploding in one way or the other, I will just add that, without
+attempting to influence the decision of the Contessa, a good deal
+depends upon it. If she and her husband make it up, you will,
+perhaps, see me in England sooner than you expect. If not, I shall
+retire with her to France or America, change my name, and lead a
+quiet provincial life. All this may seem odd, but I have got the
+poor girl into a scrape; and as neither her birth, nor her rank,
+nor her connections by<span class="pagenum"><a id="page259" name="page259"></a>Pg 259</span> birth or marriage are inferior to my own, I
+am in honour bound to support her through. Besides, she is a very
+pretty woman&mdash;ask Moore&mdash;and not yet one and twenty.</p>
+
+<p>"If she gets over this and I get over my tertian, I will, perhaps,
+look in at Albemarle Street, some of these days, <i>en passant</i> to
+Bolivar."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 347. TO MR. BANKES.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, November 20. 1819.</p>
+
+<p>"A tertian ague which has troubled me for some time, and the
+indisposition of my daughter, have prevented me from replying
+before to your welcome letter. I have not been ignorant of your
+progress nor of your discoveries, and I trust that you are no worse
+in health from your labours. You may rely upon finding every body
+in England eager to reap the fruits of them; and as you have done
+more than other men, I hope you will not limit yourself to saying
+less than may do justice to the talents and time you have bestowed
+on your perilous researches. The first sentence of my letter will
+have explained to you why I cannot join you at Trieste. I was on
+the point of setting out for England (before I knew of your
+arrival) when my child's illness has made her and me dependent on a
+Venetian Proto-Medico.</p>
+
+<p>"It is now seven years since you and I met;&mdash;which time you have
+employed better for others and more honourably for yourself than I
+have done.</p>
+
+<p>"In England you will find considerable changes, public and
+private,&mdash;you will see some of our old<span class="pagenum"><a id="page260" name="page260"></a>Pg 260</span> college contemporaries
+turned into lords of the Treasury, Admiralty, and the like,&mdash;others
+become reformers and orators,&mdash;many settled in life, as it is
+called,&mdash;and others settled in death; among the latter, (by the
+way, not our fellow collegians,) Sheridan, Curran, Lady Melbourne,
+Monk Lewis, Frederick Douglas, &amp;c. &amp;c. &amp;c.; but you will still find
+Mr. * * living and all his family, as also * * * * *.</p>
+
+<p>"Should you come up this way, and I am still here, you need not be
+assured how glad I shall be to see you; I long to hear some part
+from you, of that which I expect in no long time to see. At length
+you have had better fortune than any traveller of equal enterprise
+(except Humboldt), in returning safe; and after the fate of the
+Brownes, and the Parkes, and the Burckhardts, it is hardly less
+surprise than satisfaction to get you back again.</p>
+
+<p>"Believe me ever</p>
+
+<p>"And very affectionately yours,</p>
+
+<p>"BYRON."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 348. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, December 4. 1819.</p>
+
+<p>"You may do as you please, but you are about a hopeless experiment.
+Eldon will decide against you, were it only that my name is in the
+record. You will also recollect that if the publication is
+pronounced against, on the grounds you mention, as <i>indecent and
+blasphemous</i>, that <i>I</i> lose all right in my daughter's
+<i>guardianship</i> and <i>education</i>, in short, all paternal authority,
+and every thing concerning<span class="pagenum"><a id="page261" name="page261"></a>Pg 261</span> her, except * * * * * * * * It was so
+decided in Shelley's case, because he had written Queen Mab, &amp;c.
+&amp;c. However, you can ask the lawyers, and do as you like: I do not
+inhibit you trying the question; I merely state one of the
+consequences to me. With regard to the copyright, it is hard that
+you should pay for a nonentity: I will therefore refund it, which I
+can very well do, not having spent it, nor begun upon it; and so we
+will be quits on that score. It lies at my banker's.</p>
+
+<p>"Of the Chancellor's law I am no judge; but take up Tom Jones, and
+read his Mrs. Waters and Molly Seagrim; or Prior's Hans Carvel and
+Paulo Purganti: Smollett's Roderick Random, the chapter of Lord
+Strutwell, and many others; Peregrine Pickle, the scene of the
+Beggar Girl; Johnson's <i>London</i>, for coarse expressions; for
+instance, the words '* *,' and '* *;' Anstey's Bath Guide, the
+'Hearken, Lady Betty, hearken;'&mdash;take up, in short, Pope, Prior,
+Congreve, Dryden, Fielding, Smollett, and let the counsel select
+passages, and what becomes of <i>their</i> copyright, if his Wat Tyler
+decision is to pass into a precedent? I have nothing more to say:
+you must judge for yourselves.</p>
+
+<p>"I wrote to you some time ago. I have had a tertian ague; my
+daughter Allegra has been ill also, and I have been almost obliged
+to run away with a married woman; but with some difficulty, and
+many internal struggles, I reconciled the lady with her lord, and
+cured the fever of the child with bark, and my own with cold water.
+I think of setting out for England by the Tyrol in a few days, so
+that I could<span class="pagenum"><a id="page262" name="page262"></a>Pg 262</span> wish you to direct your next letter to Calais. Excuse
+my writing in great haste and late in the morning, or night,
+whichever you please to call it. The third Canto of 'Don Juan' is
+completed, in about two hundred stanzas; very decent, I believe,
+but do not know, and it is useless to discuss until it be
+ascertained if it may or may not be a property.</p>
+
+<p>"My present determination to quit Italy was unlooked for; but I
+have explained the reasons in letters to my sister and Douglas
+Kinnaird, a week or two ago. My progress will depend upon the snows
+of the Tyrol, and the health of my child, who is at present quite
+recovered; but I hope to get on well, and am</p>
+
+<p>"Yours ever and truly.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. Many thanks for your letters, to which you are not to
+consider this as an answer, but as an acknowledgment."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>The struggle which, at the time of my visit to him, I had found Lord
+Byron so well disposed to make towards averting, as far as now lay in
+his power, some of the mischievous consequences which, both to the
+object of his attachment and himself, were likely to result from their
+connection, had been brought, as the foregoing letters show, to a crisis
+soon after I left him. The Count Guiccioli, on his arrival at Venice,
+insisted, as we have seen, that his lady should return with him; and,
+after some conjugal negotiations, in which Lord Byron does not appear to
+have interfered, the young Contessa consented reluctantly to accompany
+her lord to Ravenna,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page263" name="page263"></a>Pg 263</span> it being first covenanted that, in future, all
+communication between her and her lover should cease.</p>
+
+<p>"In a few days after this," says Mr. Hoppner, in some notices of his
+noble friend with which he has favoured me, "he returned to Venice, very
+much out of spirits, owing to Madame Guiccioli's departure, and out of
+humour with every body and every thing around him. We resumed our rides
+at the Lido; and I did my best not only to raise his spirits, but to
+make him forget his absent mistress, and to keep him to his purpose of
+returning to England. He went into no society; and having no longer any
+relish for his former occupation, his time, when he was not writing,
+hung heavy enough on hand."</p>
+
+<p>The promise given by the lovers not to correspond was, as all parties
+must have foreseen, soon violated; and the letters Lord Byron addressed
+to the lady, at this time, though written in a language not his own, are
+rendered frequently even eloquent by the mere force of the feeling that
+governed him&mdash;a feeling which could not have owed its fuel to fancy
+alone, since now that reality had been so long substituted, it still
+burned on. From one of these letters, dated November 25th, I shall so
+far presume upon the discretionary power vested in me, as to lay a short
+extract or two before the reader&mdash;not merely as matters of curiosity,
+but on account of the strong evidence they afford of the struggle
+between passion and a sense of right that now agitated him.</p>
+
+<p>"You are," he says, "and ever will be, my first thought. But, at this
+moment, I am in a state most<span class="pagenum"><a id="page264" name="page264"></a>Pg 264</span> dreadful, not knowing which way to
+decide;&mdash;on the one hand, fearing that I should compromise you for ever,
+by my return to Ravenna and the consequences of such a step, and, on the
+other, dreading that I shall lose both you and myself, and all that I
+have ever known or tasted of happiness, by never seeing you more. I pray
+of you, I implore you to be comforted, and to believe that I cannot
+cease to love you but with my life."<a name="FNanchor_61_61" id="FNanchor_61_61"></a><a href="#Footnote_61_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a> In another part he says, "I go
+to save you, and leave a country insupportable to me without you. Your
+letters to F * * and myself do wrong to my motives&mdash;but you will yet see
+your injustice. It is not enough that I must leave you&mdash;from motives of
+which ere long you will be convinced&mdash;it is not enough that I must fly
+from Italy, with a heart deeply wounded, after having passed all my days
+in solitude since your departure, sick both in body and mind&mdash;but I must
+also have to endure your reproaches without answering and without
+deserving them. Farewell! in that one word is comprised the death of my
+happiness."<a name="FNanchor_62_62" id="FNanchor_62_62"></a><a href="#Footnote_62_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a></p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page265" name="page265"></a>Pg 265</span></p>
+
+<p>He had now arranged every thing for his departure for England, and had
+even fixed the day, when accounts reached him from Ravenna that the
+Contessa was alarmingly ill;&mdash;her sorrow at their separation having so
+much preyed upon her mind, that even her own family, fearful of the
+consequences, had withdrawn all opposition to her wishes, and now, with
+the sanction of Count Guiccioli himself, entreated her lover to hasten
+to Ravenna. What was he, in this dilemma, to do? Already had he
+announced his coming to different friends in England, and every dictate,
+he felt, of prudence and manly fortitude urged his departure. While thus
+balancing between duty and inclination, the day appointed for his
+setting out arrived; and the following picture, from the life, of his
+irresolution on the occasion, is from a letter written by a female
+friend of Madame Guiccioli, who was present at the scene:&mdash;"He was ready
+dressed for the journey, his gloves and cap on, and even his little cane
+in his hand. Nothing was<span class="pagenum"><a id="page266" name="page266"></a>Pg 266</span> now waited for but his coming down
+stairs,&mdash;his boxes being already all on board the gondola. At this
+moment, my Lord, by way of pretext, declares, that if it should strike
+one o'clock before every thing was in order (his arms being the only
+thing not yet quite ready), he would not go that day. The hour strikes,
+and he remains!"<a name="FNanchor_63_63" id="FNanchor_63_63"></a><a href="#Footnote_63_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a></p>
+
+<p>The writer adds, "it is evident he has not the heart to go;" and the
+result proved that she had not judged him wrongly. The very next day's
+tidings from Ravenna decided his fate, and he himself, in a letter to
+the Contessa, thus announces the triumph which she had achieved. "F * *
+* will already have told you, <i>with her accustomed sublimity</i>, that Love
+has gained the victory. I could not summon up resolution enough to leave
+the country where you are, without, at least, once more seeing you. On
+<i>yourself</i>, perhaps, it will depend, whether I ever again shall leave
+you. Of the rest we shall speak when we meet. You ought, by this time,
+to know which is most conducive to your welfare, my presence or my
+absence. For myself, I am a citizen of the world&mdash;all countries are
+alike to me. You have ever been, since our first acquaintance, <i>the sole
+object of my thoughts</i>.<span class="pagenum"><a id="page267" name="page267"></a>Pg 267</span> My opinion was, that the best course I could
+adopt, both for your peace and that of all your family, would have been
+to depart and go far, <i>far</i> away from you;&mdash;since to have been near and
+not approach you would have been, for me, impossible. You have however
+decided that I am to return to Ravenna. I shall accordingly return&mdash;and
+shall <i>do</i>&mdash;and <i>be</i> all that you wish. I cannot say more.<a name="FNanchor_64_64" id="FNanchor_64_64"></a><a href="#Footnote_64_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a></p>
+
+<p>On quitting Venice he took leave of Mr. Hoppner in a short but cordial
+letter, which I cannot better introduce than by prefixing to it the few
+words of comment with which this excellent friend of the noble poet has
+himself accompanied it:&mdash;"I need not say with what painful feeling I
+witnessed the departure of a person who, from the first day of our
+acquaintance, had treated me with unvaried kindness, reposing a
+confidence in me which it was beyond the power of my utmost efforts to
+deserve; admitting me to an intimacy which I had no right<span class="pagenum"><a id="page268" name="page268"></a>Pg 268</span> to claim, and
+listening with patience, and the greatest good temper, to the
+remonstrances I ventured to make upon his conduct."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 349. TO MR. HOPPNER.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"My dear Hoppner,</p>
+
+<p>"Partings are but bitter work at best, so that I shall not venture
+on a second with you. Pray make my respects to Mrs. Hoppner, and
+assure her of my unalterable reverence for the singular goodness of
+her disposition, which is not without its reward even in this
+world&mdash;for those who are no great believers in human virtues would
+discover enough in her to give them a better opinion of their
+fellow-creatures and&mdash;what is still more difficult&mdash;of themselves,
+as being of the same species, however inferior in approaching its
+nobler models. Make, too, what excuses you can for my omission of
+the ceremony of leave-taking. If we all meet again, I will make my
+humblest apology; if not, recollect that I wished you all well;
+and, if you can, forget that I have given you a great deal of
+trouble.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours," &amp;c. &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 350. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, December 10. 1819.</p>
+
+<p>"Since I last wrote, I have changed my mind, and shall not come to
+England. The more I contemplate, the more I dislike the place and
+the prospect. You may, therefore, address to me as usual <i>here</i>,
+though I mean to go to another city. I have<span class="pagenum"><a id="page269" name="page269"></a>Pg 269</span> finished the third
+Canto of Don Juan, but the things I have read and heard discourage
+all further publication&mdash;at least for the present. You may try the
+copy question, but you'll lose it: the cry is up, and cant is up. I
+should have no objection to return the price of the copyright, and
+have written to Mr. Kinnaird by this post on the subject. Talk with
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"I have not the patience, nor do I feel interest enough in the
+question, to contend with the fellows in their own slang; but I
+perceive Mr. Blackwood's Magazine and one or two others of your
+missives have been hyperbolical in their praise, and diabolical in
+their abuse. I like and admire W * *n, and <i>he</i> should not have
+indulged himself in such outrageous licence.<a name="FNanchor_65_65" id="FNanchor_65_65"></a><a href="#Footnote_65_65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a> It is overdone and
+defeats itself. What would he say to the grossness without passion
+and the misanthropy without feeling of Gulliver's Travels?&mdash;When he
+talks of Lady's Byron's business, he talks of what he knows nothing
+about; and you may tell him that no one can more desire a public
+investigation of that affair than I do.</p>
+
+<p>"I sent home by Moore (<i>for</i> Moore only, who has my Journal also)
+my Memoir written up to 1816, and I gave him leave to show it to
+whom he pleased,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page270" name="page270"></a>Pg 270</span> but <i>not to publish</i>, on any account. You may
+read it, and you may let W * *n read it, if he likes&mdash;not for his
+<i>public</i> opinion, but his private; for I like the man, and care
+very little about his Magazine. And I could wish Lady B. herself to
+read it, that she may have it in her power to mark any thing
+mistaken or mis-stated; as it may probably appear after my
+extinction, and it would be but fair she should see it,&mdash;that is to
+say, herself willing.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps I may take a journey to you in the spring; but I <i>have</i>
+been ill and <i>am</i> indolent and indecisive, because few things
+interest me. These fellows first abused me for being gloomy, and
+now they are wroth that I am, or attempted to be, facetious. I have
+got such a cold and headach that I can hardly see what I
+scrawl:&mdash;the winters here are as sharp as needles. Some time ago, I
+wrote to you rather fully about my Italian affairs; at present I
+can say no more except that you shall hear further by and by.</p>
+
+<p>"Your Blackwood accuses me of treating women harshly: it may be so,
+but I have been their martyr; my whole life has been sacrificed
+<i>to</i> them and <i>by</i> them. I mean to leave Venice in a few days, but
+you will address your letters <i>here</i> as usual. When I fix
+elsewhere, you shall know."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Soon after this letter to Mr. Murray he set out for Ravenna, from which
+place we shall find his correspondence for the next year and a half
+dated. For a short time after his arrival, he took up his residence at
+an inn; but the Count Guiccioli having allowed<span class="pagenum"><a id="page271" name="page271"></a>Pg 271</span> him to hire a suite of
+apartments in the Palazzo Guiccioli itself, he was once more lodged
+under the same roof with the Countess Guiccioli.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 351. TO MR. HOPPNER.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, Dec. 31. 1819.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been here this week, and was obliged to put on my armour
+and go the night after my arrival to the Marquis Cavalli's, where
+there were between two and three hundred of the best company I have
+seen in Italy,&mdash;more beauty, more youth, and more diamonds among
+the women than have been seen these fifty years in the
+Sea-Sodom.<a name="FNanchor_66_66" id="FNanchor_66_66"></a><a href="#Footnote_66_66" class="fnanchor">[66]</a> I never saw such a difference between two places of
+the same latitude, (or platitude, it is all one,)&mdash;music, dancing,
+and play, all in the same <i>salle</i>. The G.'s object appeared to be
+to parade her foreign friend as much as possible, and, faith, if
+she seemed to glory in so doing, it was not for me to be ashamed of
+it. Nobody seemed surprised;&mdash;all the women, on the contrary, were,
+as it were, delighted with the excellent example. The vice-legate,
+and all the other vices, were as polite as could be;&mdash;and I, who
+had acted on the reserve, was fairly obliged to take the lady under
+my arm, and look as much like a cicisbeo as I could on so short a
+notice,&mdash;to say nothing of the embarrassment of a cocked hat and
+sword, much more formidable to me than ever it will be to the
+enemy.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page272" name="page272"></a>Pg 272</span></p>
+
+<p>"I write in great haste&mdash;do you answer as hastily. I can understand
+nothing of all this; but it seems as if the G. had been presumed to
+be <i>planted</i>, and was determined to show that she was
+not,&mdash;<i>plantation</i>, in this hemisphere, being the greatest moral
+misfortune. But this is mere conjecture, for I know nothing about
+it&mdash;except that every body are very kind to her, and not
+discourteous to me. Fathers, and all relations, quite agreeable.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours ever,</p>
+
+<p>"B.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. Best respects to Mrs. H.</p>
+
+<p>"I would send the <i>compliments</i> of the season; but the season
+itself is so complimentary with snow and rain that I wait for
+sunshine."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 352. TO MR. MOORE.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"January 2. 1320.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Moore,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"'To-day it is my wedding day;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">And all the folks would stare,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">If wife should dine at Edmonton,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">And I should dine at Ware.'<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Or <i>thus</i>:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"Here's a happy new year! but with reason,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">I beg you'll permit me to say&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Wish me many returns of the <i>season</i>,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">But as <i>few</i> as you please of the <i>day</i>.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"My this present writing is to direct you that, if <i>she chooses</i>,
+she may see the MS. Memoir in your possession. I wish her to have
+fair play, in all<span class="pagenum"><a id="page273" name="page273"></a>Pg 273</span> cases, even though it will not be published till
+after my decease. For this purpose, it were but just that Lady B.
+should know what is there said of her and hers, that she may have
+full power to remark on or respond to any part or parts, as may
+seem fitting to herself. This is fair dealing, I presume, in all
+events.</p>
+
+<p>"To change the subject, are you in England? I send you an epitaph
+for Castlereagh. * * * * * Another for Pitt:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"With death doom'd to grapple<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Beneath this cold slab, he<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Who lied in the Chapel<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Now lies in the Abbey.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"The gods seem to have made me poetical this day:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"In digging up your bones, Tom Paine,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Will. Cobbett has done well:<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">You visit him on earth again,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">He'll visit you in hell.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Or,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"You come to him on earth again,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">He'll go with you to hell.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"Pray let not these versiculi go forth with my name, except among
+the initiated, because my friend H. has foamed into a reformer,
+and, I greatly fear, will subside into Newgate; since the
+Honourable House, according to Galignani's Reports of Parliamentary
+Debates, are menacing a prosecution to a pamphlet of his. I shall
+be very sorry to hear of any thing but good for him, particularly
+in these<span class="pagenum"><a id="page274" name="page274"></a>Pg 274</span> miserable squabbles; but these are the natural effects of
+taking a part in them.</p>
+
+<p>"For my own part I had a sad scene since you went. Count Gu. came
+for his wife, and <i>none</i> of those consequences which Scott
+prophesied ensued. There was no damages, as in England, and so
+Scott lost his wager. But there was a great scene, for she would
+not, at first, go back with him&mdash;at least, she <i>did</i> go back with
+him; but he insisted, reasonably enough, that all communication
+should be broken off between her and me. So, finding Italy very
+dull, and having a fever tertian, I packed up my valise, and
+prepared to cross the Alps; but my daughter fell ill, and detained
+me.</p>
+
+<p>"After her arrival at Ravenna, the Guiccioli fell ill again too;
+and at last, her father (who had, all along, opposed the liaison
+most violently till now) wrote to me to say that she was in such a
+state that <i>he</i> begged me to come and see her,&mdash;and that her
+husband had acquiesced, in consequence of her relapse, and that
+<i>he</i> (her father) would guarantee all this, and that there would be
+no farther scenes in consequence between them, and that I should
+not be compromised in any way. I set out soon after, and have been
+here ever since. I found her a good deal altered, but getting
+better:&mdash;<i>all</i> this comes of reading Corinna.</p>
+
+<p>"The Carnival is about to begin, and I saw about two or three
+hundred people at the Marquis Cavalli's the other evening, with as
+much youth, beauty, and diamonds among the women, as ever averaged
+in the like number. My appearance in waiting on the Guiccioli was
+considered as a thing of course. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="page275" name="page275"></a>Pg 275</span> Marquis is her uncle, and
+naturally considered me as her relation.</p>
+
+<p>"The paper is out, and so is the letter. Pray write. Address to
+Venice, whence the letters will be forwarded. Yours, &amp;c. B."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 353. TO MR. HOPPNER.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, January 20. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"I have not decided any thing about remaining at Ravenna. I may
+stay a day, a week, a year, all my life; but all this depends upon
+what I can neither see nor foresee. I came because I was called,
+and will go the moment that I perceive what may render my departure
+proper. My attachment has neither the blindness of the beginning,
+nor the microscopic accuracy of the close to such liaisons; but
+'time and the hour' must decide upon what I do. I can as yet say
+nothing, because I hardly know any thing beyond what I have told
+you.</p>
+
+<p>"I wrote to you last post for my movables, as there is no getting a
+lodging with a chair or table here ready; and as I have already
+some things of the sort at Bologna which I had last summer there
+for my daughter, I have directed them to be moved; and wish the
+like to be done with those of Venice, that I may at least get out
+of the 'Albergo Imperiale,' which <i>is imperial</i> in all true sense
+of the epithet. Buffini may be paid for his poison. I forgot to
+thank you and Mrs. Hoppner for a whole treasure of toys for Allegra
+before our departure; it was very kind, and we are very grateful.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page276" name="page276"></a>Pg 276</span></p>
+
+<p>"Your account of the weeding of the Governor's party is very
+entertaining. If you do not understand the consular exceptions, I
+do; and it is right that a man of honour, and a woman of probity,
+should find it so, particularly in a place where there are not 'ten
+righteous.' As to nobility&mdash;in England none are strictly noble but
+peers, not even peers' sons, though titled by courtesy; nor knights
+of the garter, unless of the peerage, so that Castlereagh himself
+would hardly pass through a foreign herald's ordeal till the death
+of his father.</p>
+
+<p>"The snow is a foot deep here. There is a theatre, and opera,&mdash;the
+Barber of Seville. Balls begin on Monday next. Pay the porter for
+never looking after the gate, and ship my chattels, and let me
+know, or let Castelli let me know, how my law-suits go on&mdash;but fee
+him only in proportion to his success. Perhaps we may meet in the
+spring yet, if you are for England. I see H * * has got into a
+scrape, which does not please me; he should not have gone so deep
+among those men without calculating the consequences. I used to
+think myself the most imprudent of all among my friends and
+acquaintances, but almost begin to doubt it.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 354. TO MR. HOPPNER.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, January 31. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"You would hardly have been troubled with the removal of my
+furniture, but there is none to be had nearer than Bologna, and I
+have been fain to have<span class="pagenum"><a id="page277" name="page277"></a>Pg 277</span> that of the rooms which I fitted up for my
+daughter there in the summer removed here. The expense will be at
+least as great of the land carriage, so that you see it was
+necessity, and not choice. Here they get every thing from Bologna,
+except some lighter articles from Forli or Faenza.</p>
+
+<p>"If Scott is returned, pray remember me to him, and plead laziness
+the whole and sole cause of my not replying:&mdash;dreadful is the
+exertion of letter-writing. The Carnival here is less boisterous,
+but we have balls and a theatre. I carried Bankes to both, and he
+carried away, I believe, a much more favourable impression of the
+society here than of that of Venice,&mdash;recollect that I speak of the
+<i>native</i> society only.</p>
+
+<p>"I am drilling very hard to learn how to double a shawl, and should
+succeed to admiration if I did not always double it the wrong side
+out; and then I sometimes confuse and bring away two, so as to put
+all the Servanti out, besides keeping their <i>Servite</i> in the cold
+till every body can get back their property. But it is a dreadfully
+moral place, for you must not look at anybody's wife except your
+neighbour's,&mdash;if you go to the next door but one, you are scolded,
+and presumed to be perfidious. And then a relazione or an amicizia
+seems to be a regular affair of from five to fifteen years, at
+which period, if there occur a widowhood, it finishes by a
+sposalizio; and in the mean time it has so many rules of its own
+that it is not much better. A man actually becomes a piece of
+female property,&mdash;they won't let their Serventi marry until there
+is a vacancy for them<span class="pagenum"><a id="page278" name="page278"></a>Pg 278</span>selves. I know two instances of this in one
+family here.</p>
+
+<p>"To-night there was a &mdash;&mdash;<a name="FNanchor_67_67" id="FNanchor_67_67"></a><a href="#Footnote_67_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a> Lottery after the opera; it is an
+odd ceremony. Bankes and I took tickets of it, and buffooned
+together very merrily. He is gone to Firenze. Mrs. J * * should
+have sent you my postscript; there was no occasion to have bored
+you in person. I never interfere in anybody's squabbles,&mdash;she may
+scratch your face herself.</p>
+
+<p>"The weather here has been dreadful&mdash;snow several feet&mdash;a <i>fiume</i>,
+broke down a bridge, and flooded heaven knows how many <i>campi</i>;
+then rain came&mdash;and it is still thawing&mdash;so that my saddle-horses
+have a sinecure till the roads become more practicable. Why did
+Lega give away the goat? a blockhead&mdash;I must have him again.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you pay Missiaglia and the Buffo Buffini of the Gran
+Bretagna? I heard from Moore, who is at Paris; I had previously
+written to him in London, but he has not yet got my letter,
+apparently.</p>
+
+<p>"Believe me," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 355. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, February 7. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"I have had no letter from you these two months; but since I came
+here in December, 1819, I sent you a letter for Moore, who is God
+knows <i>where</i>&mdash;<span class="pagenum"><a id="page279" name="page279"></a>Pg 279</span>in Paris or London, I presume. I have copied and
+cut the third Canto of Don Juan <i>into two</i>, because it was too
+long; and I tell you this beforehand, because in case of any
+reckoning between you and me, these two are only to go for one, as
+this was the original form, and, in fact, the two together are not
+longer than one of the first: so remember that I have not made this
+division to <i>double</i> upon <i>you</i>; but merely to suppress some
+tediousness in the aspect of the thing. I should have served you a
+pretty trick if I had sent you, for example, cantos of 50 stanzas
+each.</p>
+
+<p>"I am translating the first Canto of Pulci's Morgante Maggiore, and
+have half done it; but these last days of the Carnival confuse and
+interrupt every thing.</p>
+
+<p>"I have not yet sent off the Cantos, and have some doubt whether
+they ought to be published, for they have not the spirit of the
+first. The outcry has not frightened but it has <i>hurt</i> me, and I
+have not written <i>con amore</i> this time. It is very decent, however,
+and as dull as 'the last new comedy.'</p>
+
+<p>"I think my translations of Pulci will make you stare. It must be
+put by the original, stanza for stanza, and verse for verse; and
+you will see what was permitted in a Catholic country and a bigoted
+age to a churchman, on the score of religion;&mdash;and so tell those
+buffoons who accuse me of attacking the Liturgy.</p>
+
+<p>"I write in the greatest haste, it being the hour of the Corso, and
+I must go and buffoon with the rest. My daughter Allegra is just
+gone with the<span class="pagenum"><a id="page280" name="page280"></a>Pg 280</span> Countess G. in Count G.'s coach and six to join the
+cavalcade, and I must follow with all the rest of the Ravenna
+world. Our old Cardinal is dead, and the new one not appointed yet;
+but the masquing goes on the same, the vice-legate being a good
+governor. We have had hideous frost and snow, but all is mild
+again.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 356. TO MR. BANKES.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, February 19. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"I have room for you in the house here, as I had in Venice, if you
+think fit to make use of it; but do not expect to find the same
+gorgeous suite of tapestried halls. Neither dangers nor tropical
+heats have ever prevented your penetrating wherever you had a mind
+to it, and why should the snow now?&mdash;Italian snow&mdash;fie on it!&mdash;so
+pray come. Tita's heart yearns for you, and mayhap for your silver
+broad pieces; and your playfellow, the monkey, is alone and
+inconsolable.</p>
+
+<p>"I forget whether you admire or tolerate red hair, so that I rather
+dread showing you all that I have about me and around me in this
+city. Come, nevertheless,&mdash;you can pay Dante a morning visit, and I
+will undertake that Theodore and Honoria will be most happy to see
+you in the forest hard by. We Goths, also, of Ravenna, hope you
+will not despise our arch-Goth, Theodoric. I must leave it to these
+worthies to entertain you all the fore part of the day, seeing that
+I have none at all myself&mdash;the<span class="pagenum"><a id="page281" name="page281"></a>Pg 281</span> lark that rouses me from my
+slumbers, being an afternoon bird. But, then, all your evenings,
+and as much as you can give me of your nights, will be mine. Ay!
+and you will find me eating flesh, too, like yourself or any other
+cannibal, except it be upon Fridays. Then, there are more Cantos
+(and be d&mdash;&mdash;d to them) of what the courteous reader, Mr. S&mdash;&mdash;,
+calls Grub Street, in my drawer, which I have a little scheme to
+commit to your charge for England; only I must first cut up (or cut
+down) two aforesaid Cantos into three, because I am grown base and
+mercenary, and it is an ill precedent to let my Mec&aelig;nas, Murray,
+get too much for his money. I am busy, also, with
+Pulci&mdash;translating&mdash;servilely translating, stanza for stanza, and
+line for line&mdash;two octaves every night,&mdash;the same allowance as at
+Venice.</p>
+
+<p>"Would you call at your banker's at Bologna, and ask him for some
+letters lying there for me, and burn them?&mdash;or I will&mdash;so do not
+burn them, but bring them,&mdash;and believe me ever and very
+affectionately Yours,</p>
+
+<p>"BYRON.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. I have a particular wish to hear from yourself something
+about Cyprus, so pray recollect all that you can.&mdash;Good night."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 357. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, February 21. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"The bull-dogs will be very agreeable. I have only those of this
+country, who, though good, have<span class="pagenum"><a id="page282" name="page282"></a>Pg 282</span> not the tenacity of tooth and
+stoicism in endurance of my canine fellow-citizens: then pray send
+them by the readiest conveyance&mdash;perhaps best by sea. Mr. Kinnaird
+will disburse for them, and deduct from the amount on your
+application or that of Captain Tyler.</p>
+
+<p>"I see the good old King is gone to his place. One can't help being
+sorry, though blindness, and age, and insanity, are supposed to be
+drawbacks on human felicity; but I am not at all sure that the
+latter, at least, might not render him happier than any of his
+subjects.</p>
+
+<p>"I have no thoughts of coming to the coronation, though I should
+like to see it, and though I have a right to be a puppet in it; but
+my division with Lady Byron, which has drawn an equinoctial line
+between me and mine in all other things, will operate in this also
+to prevent my being in the same procession.</p>
+
+<p>"By Saturday's post I sent you four packets, containing Cantos
+third and fourth. Recollect that these two cantos reckon only as
+<i>one</i> with you and me, being, in fact, the third canto cut into
+two, because I found it too long. Remember this, and don't imagine
+that there could be any other motive. The whole is about 225
+stanzas, more or less, and a lyric of 96 lines, so that they are no
+longer than the first <i>single</i> cantos: but the truth is, that I
+made the first too long, and should have cut those down also had I
+thought better. Instead of saying in future for so many cantos, say
+so many stanzas or pages: it was Jacob Tonson's way, and certainly
+the best; it<span class="pagenum"><a id="page283" name="page283"></a>Pg 283</span> prevents mistakes. I might have sent you a dozen
+cantos of 40 stanzas each,&mdash;those of 'The Minstrel' (Beattie's) are
+no longer,&mdash;and ruined you at once, if you don't suffer as it is.
+But recollect that you are not <i>pinned down</i> to any thing you say
+in a letter, and that, calculating even these two cantos as <i>one</i>
+only (which they were and are to be reckoned), you are not bound by
+your offer. Act as may seem fair to all parties.</p>
+
+<p>"I have finished my translation of the first Canto of 'The Morgante
+Maggiore' of Pulci, which I will transcribe and send. It is the
+parent, not only of Whistlecraft, but of all jocose Italian poetry.
+You must print it side by side with the original Italian, because I
+wish the reader to judge of the fidelity: it is stanza for stanza,
+and often line for line, if not word for word.</p>
+
+<p>"You ask me for a volume of manners, &amp;c. on Italy. Perhaps I am in
+the case to know more of them than most Englishmen, because I have
+lived among the natives, and in parts of the country where
+Englishmen never resided before (I speak of Romagna and this place
+particularly); but there are many reasons why I do not choose to
+treat in print on such a subject. I have lived in their houses and
+in the heart of their families, sometimes merely as 'amico di
+casa,' and sometimes as 'amico di cuore' of the Dama, and in
+neither case do I feel myself authorised in making a book of them.
+Their moral is not your moral; their life is not your life; you
+would not understand it; it is not English, nor French, nor German,
+which you would all under<span class="pagenum"><a id="page284" name="page284"></a>Pg 284</span>stand. The conventual education, the
+cavalier servitude, the habits of thought and living are so
+entirely different, and the difference becomes so much more
+striking the more you live intimately with them, that I know not
+how to make you comprehend a people who are at once temperate and
+profligate, serious in their characters and buffoons in their
+amusements, capable of impressions and passions, which are at once
+<i>sudden</i> and <i>durable</i> (what you find in no other nation), and who
+actually have no society (what we would call so), as you may see by
+their comedies; they have no real comedy, not even in Goldoni, and
+that is because they have no society to draw it from.</p>
+
+<p>"Their conversazioni are not society at all. They go to the theatre
+to talk, and into company to hold their tongues. The <i>women</i> sit in
+a circle, and the men gather into groups, or they play at dreary
+faro, or 'lotto reale,' for small sums. Their academic are concerts
+like our own, with better music and more form. Their best things
+are the carnival balls and masquerades, when every body runs mad
+for six weeks. After their dinners and suppers they make extempore
+verses and buffoon one another; but it is in a humour which you
+would not enter into, ye of the north.</p>
+
+<p>"In their houses it is better. I should know something of the
+matter, having had a pretty general experience among their women,
+from the fisherman's wife up to the Nobil Dama, whom I serve. Their
+system has its rules, and its fitnesses, and its decorums, so as to
+be reduced to a kind of discipline or game at hearts, which admits
+few deviations, unless<span class="pagenum"><a id="page285" name="page285"></a>Pg 285</span> you wish to lose it. They are extremely
+tenacious, and jealous as furies, not permitting their lovers even
+to marry if they can help it, and keeping them always close to them
+in public as in private, whenever they can. In short, they transfer
+marriage to adultery, and strike the <i>not</i> out of that commandment.
+The reason is, that they marry for their parents, and love for
+themselves. They exact fidelity from a lover as a debt of honour,
+while they pay the husband as a tradesman, that is, not at all. You
+hear a person's character, male or female, canvassed not as
+depending on their conduct to their husbands or wives, but to their
+mistress or lover. If I wrote a quarto, I don't know that I could
+do more than amplify what I have here noted. It is to be observed
+that while they do all this, the greatest outward respect is to be
+paid to the husbands, not only by the ladies, but by their
+Serventi&mdash;particularly if the husband serves no one himself (which
+is not often the case, however); so that you would often suppose
+them relations&mdash;the Servente making the figure of one adopted into
+the family. Sometimes the ladies run a little restive and elope, or
+divide, or make a scene: but this is at starting, generally, when
+they know no better, or when they fall in love with a foreigner, or
+some such anomaly,&mdash;and is always reckoned unnecessary and
+extravagant.</p>
+
+<p>"You enquire after Dante's Prophecy: I have not done more than six
+hundred lines, but will vaticinate at leisure.</p>
+
+<p>"Of the bust I know nothing. No cameos or seals are to be cut here
+or elsewhere that I know of, in<span class="pagenum"><a id="page286" name="page286"></a>Pg 286</span> any good style. Hobhouse should
+write himself to Thorwaldsen: the bust was made and paid for three
+years ago.</p>
+
+<p>"Pray tell Mrs. Leigh to request Lady Byron to urge forward the
+transfer from the funds. I wrote to Lady Byron on business this
+post, addressed to the care of Mr. D. Kinnaird."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 358. TO MR. BANKES.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, February 26. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"Pulci and I are waiting for you with impatience; but I suppose we
+must give way to the attraction of the Bolognese galleries for a
+time. I know nothing of pictures myself, and care almost as little:
+but to me there are none like the Venetian&mdash;above all, Giorgione. I
+remember well his Judgment of Solomon in the Mariscalchi in
+Bologna. The real mother is beautiful, exquisitely beautiful. Buy
+her, by all means, if you can, and take her home with you: put her
+in safety: for be assured there are troublous times brewing for
+Italy; and as I never could keep out of a row in my life, it will
+be my fate, I dare say, to be over head and ears in it; but no
+matter, these are the stronger reasons for coming to see me soon.</p>
+
+<p>"I have more of Scott's novels (for surely they are Scott's) since
+we met, and am more and more delighted. I think that I even prefer
+them to his poetry, which (by the way) I redde for the first time
+in my life in your rooms in Trinity College.</p>
+
+<p>"There are some curious commentaries on Dante<span class="pagenum"><a id="page287" name="page287"></a>Pg 287</span> preserved here,
+which you should see. Believe me ever, faithfully and most
+affectionately, yours," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 359. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, March 1. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"I sent you by last post the translation of the first Canto of the
+Morgante Maggiore, and wish you to ask Rose about the word
+'sbergo,' <i>i.e.</i> 'usbergo,' which I have translated <i>cuirass</i>. I
+suspect that it means <i>helmet</i> also. Now, if so, which of the
+senses is best accordant with the text? I have adopted cuirass, but
+will be amenable to reasons. Of the natives, some say one, and some
+t'other: but they are no great Tuscans in Romagna. However, I will
+ask Sgricci (the famous improvisatore) to-morrow, who is a native
+of Arezzo. The Countess Guiccioli who is reckoned a very cultivated
+young lady, and the dictionary, say <i>cuirass</i>. I have written
+cuirass, but <i>helmet</i> runs in my head nevertheless&mdash;and will run in
+verse very well, whilk is the principal point. I will ask the Sposa
+Spina Spinelli, too, the Florentine bride of Count Gabriel Rusponi,
+just imported from Florence, and get the sense out of somebody.</p>
+
+<p>"I have just been visiting the new Cardinal, who arrived the day
+before yesterday in his legation. He seems a good old gentleman,
+pious and simple, and not quite like his predecessor, who was a
+bon-vivant, in the worldly sense of the words.</p>
+
+<p>"Enclosed is a letter which I received some time ago from Dallas.
+It will explain itself. I have not answered it. This comes of doing
+people good. At<span class="pagenum"><a id="page288" name="page288"></a>Pg 288</span> one time or another (including copyrights) this
+person has had about fourteen hundred pounds of my money, and he
+writes what he calls a posthumous work about me, and a scrubby
+letter accusing me of treating him ill, when I never did any such
+thing. It is true that I left off letter-writing, as I have done
+with almost everybody else; but I can't see how that was misusing
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"I look upon his epistle as the consequence of my not sending him
+another hundred pounds, which he wrote to me for about two years
+ago, and which I thought proper to withhold, he having had his
+share, methought, of what I could dispone upon others.</p>
+
+<p>"In your last you ask me after my articles of domestic wants; I
+believe they are as usual: the bull-dogs, magnesia, soda-powders,
+tooth-powders, brushes, and every thing of the kind which are here
+unattainable. You still ask me to return to England: alas! to what
+purpose? You do not know what you are requiring. Return I must,
+probably, some day or other (if I live), sooner or later; but it
+will not be for pleasure, nor can it end in good. You enquire after
+my health and SPIRITS in large letters: my health can't be very
+bad, for I cured myself of a sharp tertian ague, in three weeks,
+with cold water, which had held my stoutest gondolier for months,
+notwithstanding all the bark of the apothecary,&mdash;a circumstance
+which surprised Dr. Aglietti, who said it was a proof of great
+stamina, particularly in so epidemic a season. I did it out of
+dislike to the taste of bark (which I can't bear), and succeeded,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page289" name="page289"></a>Pg 289</span>
+contrary to the prophecies of every body, by simply taking nothing
+at all. As to <i>spirits</i>, they are unequal, now high, now low, like
+other people's I suppose, and depending upon circumstances.</p>
+
+<p>"Pray send me W. Scott's new novels. What are their names and
+characters? I read some of his former ones, at least once a day,
+for an hour or so. The last are too hurried: he forgets
+Ravenswood's name, and calls him <i>Edgar</i> and then <i>Norman</i>; and
+Girder, the cooper, is styled now <i>Gilbert</i>, and now <i>John</i>; and he
+don't make enough of Montrose; but Dalgetty is excellent, and so is
+Lucy Ashton, and the b&mdash;&mdash;h her mother. What is <i>Ivanhoe</i>? and what
+do you call his other? are there <i>two</i>? Pray make him write at
+least two a year: I like no reading so well.</p>
+
+<p>"The editor of the Bologna Telegraph has sent me a paper with
+extracts from Mr. Mulock's (his name always reminds me of Muley
+Moloch of Morocco) 'Atheism answered,' in which there is a long
+eulogium of my poesy, and a great 'compatimento' for my misery. I
+never could understand what they mean by accusing me of irreligion.
+However, they may have it their own way. This gentleman seems to be
+my great admirer, so I take what he says in good part, as he
+evidently intends kindness, to which I can't accuse myself of being
+invincible.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours," &amp;c.</p></div><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page290" name="page290"></a>Pg 290</span></p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 360. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, March 5. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"In case, in your country, you should not readily lay hands on the
+Morgante Maggiore, I send you the original text of the first Canto,
+to correspond with the translation which I sent you a few days ago.
+It is from the Naples edition in quarto of 1732,&mdash;<i>dated Florence</i>,
+however, by a trick of <i>the trade</i>, which you, as one of the allied
+sovereigns of the profession, will perfectly understand without any
+further spiegazione.</p>
+
+<p>"It is strange that here nobody understands the real precise
+meaning of 'sbergo,' or 'usbergo<a name="FNanchor_68_68" id="FNanchor_68_68"></a><a href="#Footnote_68_68" class="fnanchor">[68]</a>,' an old Tuscan word, which I
+have rendered <i>cuirass</i> (but am not sure it is not <i>helmet</i>). I
+have asked at least twenty people, learned and ignorant, male and
+female, including poets, and officers civil and military. The
+dictionary says <i>cuirass</i>, but gives no authority; and a female
+friend of mine says <i>positively cuirass</i>, which makes me doubt the
+fact still more than before. Ginguen&eacute; says 'bonnet de fer,' with
+the usual superficial decision of a Frenchman, so that I can't
+believe him: and what between the dictionary, the Italian woman,
+and the Frenchman, there's no trusting to a word they say. The
+context, too, which should decide, admits equally of either
+meaning, as you will perceive. Ask Rose, Hobhouse, Merivale, and
+Foscolo, and vote with the majority. Is Frere<span class="pagenum"><a id="page291" name="page291"></a>Pg 291</span> a good Tuscan? if he
+be, bother him too. I have tried, you see, to be as accurate as I
+well could. This is my third or fourth letter, or packet, within
+the last twenty days."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 361. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, March 14. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"Enclosed is Dante's Prophecy&mdash;Vision&mdash;or what not.<a name="FNanchor_69_69" id="FNanchor_69_69"></a><a href="#Footnote_69_69" class="fnanchor">[69]</a> Where I
+have left more than one reading (which I have done often), you may
+adopt that which Gifford, Frere, Rose, and Hobhouse, and others of
+your Utican Senate think the best or least bad. The preface will
+explain all that is explicable. These are but the four first
+cantos: if approved, I will go on.</p>
+
+<p>"Pray mind in printing; and let some good Italian scholar correct
+the Italian quotations.</p>
+
+<p>"Four days ago I was overturned in an open carriage between the
+river and a steep bank:&mdash;wheels dashed to pieces, slight bruises,
+narrow escape, and all that; but no harm done, though coachman,
+foot-man, horses, and vehicle, were all mixed together like
+macaroni. It was owing to bad driving, as I say; but the coachman
+swears to a start on the part of the horses. We went against a post
+on the verge<span class="pagenum"><a id="page292" name="page292"></a>Pg 292</span> of a steep bank, and capsized. I usually go out of
+the town in a carriage, and meet the saddle horses at the bridge;
+it was in going there that we boggled; but I got my ride, as usual,
+after the accident. They say here it was all owing to St. Antonio
+of Padua, (serious, I assure you,)&mdash;who does thirteen miracles a
+day,&mdash;that worse did not come of it. I have no objection to this
+being his fourteenth in the four-and-twenty-hours. He presides over
+overturns and all escapes therefrom, it seems: and they dedicate
+pictures, &amp;c. to him, as the sailors once did to Neptune, after
+'the high Roman fashion.'</p>
+
+<p>"Yours, in haste."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 362. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, March 20. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"Last post I sent you 'The Vision of Dante,'&mdash;four first Cantos.
+Enclosed you will find, <i>line for line</i>, in <i>third rhyme</i> (<i>terza
+rima</i>), of which your British blackguard reader as yet understands
+nothing, Fanny of Rimini. You know that she was born here, and
+married, and slain, from Gary, Boyd, and such people. I have done
+it into <i>cramp</i> English, line for line, and rhyme for rhyme, to try
+the possibility. You had best append it to the poems already sent
+by last three posts. I shall not allow you to play the tricks you
+did last year, with the prose you <i>post</i>-scribed to Mazeppa, which
+I sent to you <i>not</i> to be published, if not in a periodical
+paper,&mdash;and there you tacked it, without a word of explanation. If
+this is published, publish it <i>with the original</i>, and <i>together</i><span class="pagenum"><a id="page293" name="page293"></a>Pg 293</span>
+with the <i>Pulci</i> translation, <i>or</i> the <i>Dante imitation</i>. I suppose
+you have both by now, and the <i>Juan</i> long before.</p>
+
+<p>"FRANCESCA OF RIMINI.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Translation from the Inferno of Dante, Canto 5th.</i></p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i6">"'The land where I was born sits by the seas,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Upon that shore to which the Po descends,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">With all his followers, in search of peace.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Love, which the gentle heart soon apprehends,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Seized him for the fair person which was ta'en<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">From me, and me even yet the mode offends.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Love, who to none beloved to love again<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Remits, seized me with wish to please, so strong,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">That, as thou seest, yet, yet it doth remain.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Love to one death conducted us along,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">But Caina waits for him our life who ended:'<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">These were the accents utter'd by her tongue,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Since first I listen'd to these souls offended,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">I bow'd my visage and so kept it till&mdash;<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i19">{<i>then</i>}<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">'What think'st thou?' said the bard; {when} I unbended,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">And recommenced: 'Alas! unto such ill<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">How many sweet thoughts, what strong ecstasies<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Led these their evil fortune to fulfil!'<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">And then I turn'd unto their side my eyes,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">And said, 'Francesca, thy sad destinies<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Have made me sorrow till the tears arise.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">But tell me, in the season of sweet sighs,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">By what and how thy Love to Passion rose,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">So as his dim desires to recognise?'<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Then she to me: 'The greatest of all woes<br /></span>
+<span class="i8">{<i>recall to mind</i>}<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Is to {remind us of} our happy days<br /></span>
+<span class="i11">{<i>this</i>}<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">In misery, and {that} thy teacher knows.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page294" name="page294"></a>Pg 294</span>
+<span class="i4">But if to learn our passion's first root preys<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Upon thy spirit with such sympathy,<br /></span>
+<span class="i8">{<i>relate</i>}<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">I will {do<a name="FNanchor_70_70" id="FNanchor_70_70"></a><a href="#Footnote_70_70" class="fnanchor">[70]</a> even} as he who weeps and says.&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">We read one day for pastime, seated nigh,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Of Lancilot, how Love enchain'd him too.<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">We were alone, quite unsuspiciously,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">But oft our eyes met, and our cheeks in hue<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">All o'er discolour'd by that reading were;<br /></span>
+<span class="i16">{<i>overthrew</i>}<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">But one point only wholly {us o'erthrew;}<br /></span>
+<span class="i10">{<i>desired</i>}<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">When we read the {long-sighed-for} smile of her,<br /></span>
+<span class="i15">{<i>a fervent</i>}<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">To be thus kiss'd by such {devoted} lover,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">He who from me can be divided ne'er<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Kiss'd my mouth, trembling in the act all over.<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Accursed was the book and he who wrote!<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">That day no further leaf we did uncover.&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">While thus one Spirit told us of their lot,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">The other wept, so that with pity's thralls<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">I swoon'd as if by death I had been smote,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">And fell down even as a dead body falls.'"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 363. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, March 23. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"I have received your letter of the 7th. Besides the four packets
+you have already received, I have sent the Pulci a few days after,
+and since (a few days ago) the four first Cantos of Dante's
+Prophecy, (the<span class="pagenum"><a id="page295" name="page295"></a>Pg 295</span> best thing I ever wrote, if it be not
+<i>unintelligible</i>,) and by last post a literal translation, word for
+word (versed like the original), of the episode of Francesca of
+Rimini. I want to hear what you think of the new Juans, and the
+translations, and the Vision. They are all things that are, or
+ought to be, very different from one another.</p>
+
+<p>"If you choose to make a print from the Venetian, you may; but she
+don't correspond at all to the character you mean her to represent.
+On the contrary, the Contessa G. does (except that she is fair),
+and is much prettier than the Fornarina; but I have no picture of
+her except a miniature, which is very ill done; and, besides, it
+would not be proper, on any account whatever, to make such a use of
+it, even if you had a copy.</p>
+
+<p>"Recollect that the two new Cantos only count with us for one. You
+may put the Pulci and Dante together: perhaps that were best. So
+you have put your name to Juan, after all your panic. You are a
+rare fellow. I must now put myself in a passion to continue my
+prose. Yours," &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"I have caused write to Thorwaldsen. Pray be careful in sending my
+daughter's picture&mdash;I mean, that it be not hurt in the carriage,
+for it is a journey rather long and jolting."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 364. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, March 28. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"Enclosed is a 'Screed of Doctrine' for you, of which I will
+trouble you to acknowledge the receipt<span class="pagenum"><a id="page296" name="page296"></a>Pg 296</span> by next post. Mr. Hobhouse
+must have the correction of it for the press. You may show it first
+to whom you please.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish to know what became of my two Epistles from St. Paul
+(translated from the Armenian three years ago and more), and of the
+letter to R&mdash;&mdash;ts of last autumn, which you never have attended to?
+There are two packets with this.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. I have some thoughts of publishing the 'Hints from Horace,'
+written ten years ago<a name="FNanchor_71_71" id="FNanchor_71_71"></a><a href="#Footnote_71_71" class="fnanchor">[71]</a>,&mdash;if Hobhouse can rummage them out of my
+papers left at his father's,&mdash;with some omissions and alterations
+previously to be made when I see the proofs."</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 365. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, March 29. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"Herewith you will receive a note (enclosed) on Pope, which you
+will find tally with a part of the text of last post. I have at
+last lost all patience with the atrocious cant and nonsense about
+Pope, with which our present * *s are overflowing, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="page297" name="page297"></a>Pg 297</span> am
+determined to make such head against it as an individual can, by
+prose or verse; and I will at least do it with good will. There is
+no bearing it any longer; and if it goes on, it will destroy what
+little good writing or taste remains amongst us. I hope there are
+still a few men of taste to second me; but if not, I'll battle it
+alone, convinced that it is in the best cause of English
+literature.</p>
+
+<p>"I have sent you so many packets, verse and prose, lately, that you
+will be tired of the postage, if not of the perusal. I want to
+answer some parts of your last letter, but I have not time, for I
+must 'boot and saddle,' as my Captain Craigengelt (an officer of
+the old Napoleon Italian army) is in waiting, and my groom and
+cattle to boot.</p>
+
+<p>"You have given me a screed of metaphor and what not about <i>Pulci</i>,
+and manners, and 'going without clothes, like our Saxon ancestors.'
+Now, the <i>Saxons did not go without clothes</i>; and, in the next
+place, they are not my ancestors, nor yours either; for mine were
+Norman, and yours, I take it by your name, were <i>Gael</i>. And, in the
+next, I differ from you about the 'refinement' which has banished
+the comedies of Congreve. Are not the comedies of <i>Sheridan</i>? acted
+to the thinnest houses? I know (as <i>ex-committed</i>) that 'The School
+for Scandal' was the worst stock piece upon record. I also know
+that Congreve gave up writing because Mrs. Centlivre's balderdash
+drove his comedies off. So it is not decency, but stupidity, that
+does all this; for Sheridan is as decent a writer as need be, and
+Congreve no worse than Mrs. Centlivre, of whom<span class="pagenum"><a id="page298" name="page298"></a>Pg 298</span> Wilks (the actor)
+said, 'not only her play would be damned, but she too.' He alluded
+to 'A Bold Stroke for a Wife.' But last, and most to the purpose,
+Pulci is <i>not</i> an <i>indecent</i> writer&mdash;at least in his first Canto,
+as you will have perceived by this time.</p>
+
+<p>"You talk of <i>refinement</i>:&mdash;are you all <i>more</i> moral? are you <i>so</i>
+moral? No such thing. <i>I</i> know what the world is in England, by my
+own proper experience of the best of it&mdash;at least of the loftiest;
+and I have described it every where as it is to be found in all
+places.</p>
+
+<p>"But to return. I should like to see the <i>proofs</i> of mine answer,
+because there will be something to omit or to alter. But pray let
+it be carefully printed. When convenient let me have an answer.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 366. TO MR. HOPPNER.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, March 31. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"Ravenna continues much the same as I described it. Conversazioni
+all Lent, and much better ones than any at Venice. There are small
+games at hazard, that is, faro, where nobody can point more than a
+shilling or two;&mdash;other card-tables, and as much talk and coffee as
+you please. Every body does and says what they please; and I do not
+recollect any disagreeable events, except being three times falsely
+accused of flirtation, and once being robbed of six sixpences by a
+nobleman of the city, a Count * * *. I did not suspect the
+illustrious<span class="pagenum"><a id="page299" name="page299"></a>Pg 299</span> delinquent; but the Countess V * * * and the Marquis L
+* * * told me of it directly, and also that it was a way he had, of
+filching money when he saw it before him; but I did not ax him for
+the cash, but contented myself with telling him that if he did it
+again, I should anticipate the law.</p>
+
+<p>"There is to be a theatre in April, and a fair, and an opera, and
+another opera in June, besides the fine weather of nature's giving,
+and the rides in the Forest of Pine. With my best respects to Mrs.
+Hoppner, believe me ever, &amp;c. BYRON.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. Could you give me an item of what books remain at Venice? I
+don't want them, but want to know whether the few that are not here
+are there, and were not lost by the way. I hope and trust you have
+got all your wine safe, and that it is drinkable. Allegra is
+prettier, I think, but as obstinate as a mule, and as ravenous as a
+vulture: health good, to judge of the complexion&mdash;temper tolerable,
+but for vanity and pertinacity. She thinks herself handsome, and
+will do as she pleases."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 367. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, April 9. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"In the name of all the devils in the printing-office, why don't
+you write to acknowledge the receipt of the second, third, and
+fourth packets, viz. the Pulci translation and original, the
+<i>Danticles</i>, the Observations on, &amp;c.? You forget that you keep me
+in hot water till I know whether they are arrived, or if I must
+have the bore of re-copying.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page300" name="page300"></a>Pg 300</span></p>
+
+<p>"Have you gotten the cream of translations, Francesca of Rimini,
+from the Inferno? Why, I have sent you a warehouse of trash within
+the last month, and you have no sort of feeling about you: a
+pastry-cook would have had twice the gratitude, and thanked me at
+least for the quantity.</p>
+
+<p>"To make the letter heavier, I enclose you the Cardinal Legate's
+(our Campeius) circular for his conversazione this evening. It is
+the anniversary of the Pope's <i>tiara</i>-tion, and all polite
+Christians, even of the Lutheran creed, must go and be civil. And
+there will be a circle, and a faro-table, (for shillings, that is,
+they don't allow high play,) and all the beauty, nobility, and
+sanctity of Ravenna present. The Cardinal himself is a very
+good-natured little fellow, bishop of Muda, and legate here,&mdash;a
+decent believer in all the doctrines of the church. He has kept his
+housekeeper these forty years * * * *; but is reckoned a pious man,
+and a moral liver.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not quite sure that I won't be among you this autumn, for I
+find that business don't go on&mdash;what with trustees and lawyers&mdash;as
+it should do, 'with all deliberate speed.' They differ about
+investments in Ireland.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"Between the devil and deep sea,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Between the lawyer and trustee,<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>I am puzzled; and so much time is lost by my not being upon the
+spot, what with answers, demurs, rejoinders, that it may be I must
+come and look to it; for one says do, and t'other don't, so that I
+know<span class="pagenum"><a id="page301" name="page301"></a>Pg 301</span> not which way to turn: but perhaps they can manage without
+me.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. I have begun a tragedy on the subject of Marino Faliero, the
+Doge of Venice; but you sha'n't see it these six years, if you
+don't acknowledge my packets with more quickness and precision.
+<i>Always write, if but a line</i>, by return of post, when any thing
+arrives, which is not a mere letter.</p>
+
+<p>"Address direct to Ravenna; it saves a week's time, and much
+postage."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 368. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, April 16. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"Post after post arrives without bringing any acknowledgment from
+you of the different packets (excepting the first) which I sent
+within the last two months, all of which ought to be arrived long
+ere now; and as they were announced in other letters, you ought at
+least to say whether they are come or not. You are not expected to
+write frequent, or long letters, as your time is much occupied; but
+when parcels that have cost some pains in the composition, and
+great trouble in the copying, are sent to you, I should at least be
+put out of suspense, by the immediate acknowledgment, per return of
+post, addressed <i>directly</i> to <i>Ravenna</i>. I am naturally&mdash;knowing
+what continental posts are&mdash;anxious to hear that they are arrived;
+especially as I loathe the task of copying so much, that if there
+was a human<span class="pagenum"><a id="page302" name="page302"></a>Pg 302</span> being that could copy my blotted MSS. he should have
+all they can ever bring for his trouble. All I desire is two lines,
+to say, such a day I received such a packet. There are at least six
+unacknowledged. This is neither kind nor courteous.</p>
+
+<p>"I have, besides, another reason for desiring you to be speedy,
+which is, that there is THAT brewing in Italy which will speedily
+cut off all security of communication, and set all your
+Anglo-travellers flying in every direction, with their usual
+fortitude in foreign tumults. The Spanish and French affairs have
+set the Italians in a ferment; and no wonder: they have been too
+long trampled on. This will make a sad scene for your exquisite
+traveller, but not for the resident, who naturally wishes a people
+to redress itself. I shall, if permitted by the natives, remain to
+see what will come of it, and perhaps to take a turn with them,
+like Dugald Dalgetty and his horse, in case of business; for I
+shall think it by far the most interesting spectacle and moment in
+existence, to see the Italians send the barbarians of all nations
+back to their own dens. I have lived long enough among them to feel
+more for them as a nation than for any other people in existence.
+But they want union, and they want principle; and I doubt their
+success. However, they will try, probably, and if they do, it will
+be a good cause. No Italian can hate an Austrian more than I do:
+unless it be the English, the Austrians seem to me the most
+obnoxious race under the sky.</p>
+
+<p>"But I doubt, if any thing be done, it won't be so quietly as in
+Spain. To be sure, revolutions are<span class="pagenum"><a id="page303" name="page303"></a>Pg 303</span> not to be made with rose-water,
+where there are foreigners as masters.</p>
+
+<p>"Write while you can; for it is but the toss up of a paul that
+there will not be a row that will somewhat retard the mail by and
+by.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 369. TO MR. HOPPNER.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, April 18. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"I have caused write to Siri and Willhalm to send with Vincenza, in
+a boat, the camp-beds and swords left in their care when I quitted
+Venice. There are also several pounds of Mantons best powder in a
+Japan case; but unless I felt sure of getting it away from V.
+without seizure, I won't have it ventured. I can get it in here, by
+means of an acquaintance in the customs, who has offered to get it
+ashore for me; but should like to be certiorated of its safety in
+leaving Venice. I would not lose it for its weight in gold&mdash;there
+is none such in Italy, as I take it to be.</p>
+
+<p>"I wrote to you a week or so ago, and hope you are in good plight
+and spirits. Sir Humphry Davy is here, and was last night at the
+Cardinal's. As I had been there last Sunday, and yesterday was
+warm, I did not go, which I should have done, if I had thought of
+meeting the man of chemistry. He called this morning, and I shall
+go in search of him at Corso time. I believe to-day, being Monday,
+there is no great conversazione, and only the family one at the
+Marchese Cavalli's, where I go as a relation<span class="pagenum"><a id="page304" name="page304"></a>Pg 304</span> sometimes, so that,
+unless he stays a day or two, we should hardly meet in public.</p>
+
+<p>"The theatre is to open in May for the fair, if there is not a row
+in all Italy by that time,&mdash;the Spanish business has set them all a
+constitutioning, and what will be the end, no one knows&mdash;it is also
+necessary thereunto to have a beginning.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. My benediction to Mrs. Hoppner. How is your little boy?
+Allegra is growing, and has increased in good looks and obstinacy."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 370. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, April 23. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"The proofs don't contain the <i>last</i> stanzas of Canto second, but
+end abruptly with the 105th stanza.</p>
+
+<p>"I told you long ago that the new Cantos<a name="FNanchor_72_72" id="FNanchor_72_72"></a><a href="#Footnote_72_72" class="fnanchor">[72]</a> were <i>not</i> good, and I
+also <i>told you a reason</i>. Recollect, I do not oblige you to publish
+them; you may suppress them, if you like, but I can alter nothing.
+I have erased the six stanzas about those two impostors * * * *
+(which I suppose will give you great pleasure), but I can do no
+more. I can neither recast, nor replace; but I give you leave to
+put it all into the fire, if you like, or <i>not</i> to publish, and I
+think that's sufficient.</p>
+
+<p>"I told you that I wrote on with no good will&mdash;that I had been,
+<i>not</i> frightened, but <i>hurt</i> by the outcry, and, besides, that when
+I wrote last November,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page305" name="page305"></a>Pg 305</span> I was ill in body, and in very great
+distress of mind about some private things of my own; but you would
+have it: so I sent it to you, and to make it lighter, cut it in
+two&mdash;but I can't piece it together again. I can't cobble: I must
+'either make a spoon or spoil a horn,'&mdash;and there's an end; for
+there's no remeid: but I leave you free will to suppress the whole,
+if you like it.</p>
+
+<p>"About the <i>Morgante Maggiore, I won't have a line omitted</i>. It may
+circulate, or it may not; but all the criticism on earth sha'n't
+touch a line, unless it be because it is badly translated. Now you
+say, and I say, and others say, that the translation is a good one;
+and so it shall go to press as it is. Pulci must answer for his own
+irreligion: I answer for the translation only.</p>
+
+<p>"Pray let Mr. Hobhouse look to the Italian next time in the proofs:
+this time, while I am scribbling to you, they are corrected by one
+who passes for the prettiest woman in Romagna, and even the
+Marches, as far as Ancona, be the other who she may.</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad you like my answer to your enquiries about Italian
+society. It is fit you should like <i>something</i>, and be d&mdash;&mdash;d to
+you.</p>
+
+<p>"My love to Scott. I shall think higher of knighthood ever after
+for his being dubbed. By the way, he is the first poet titled for
+his talent in Britain: it has happened abroad before now; but on
+the Continent titles are universal and worthless. Why don't you
+send me Ivanhoe and the Monastery? I have never written to Sir
+Walter, for I know<span class="pagenum"><a id="page306" name="page306"></a>Pg 306</span> he has a thousand things, and I a thousand
+nothings, to do; but I hope to see him at Abbotsford before very
+long, and I will sweat his claret for him, though Italian
+abstemiousness has made my brain but a shilpit concern for a Scotch
+sitting 'inter pocula.' I love Scott, and Moore, and all the better
+brethren; but I hate and abhor that puddle of water-worms whom you
+have taken into your troop.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. You say that <i>one half</i> is very good: you are <i>wrong</i>; for,
+if it were, it would be the finest poem in existence. <i>Where</i> is
+the poetry of which <i>one half</i> is good? is it the <i>&AElig;neid</i>? is it
+<i>Milton's</i>? is it <i>Dryden's</i>? is it any one's except <i>Pope's</i> and
+<i>Goldsmith's</i>, of which <i>all</i> is good? and yet these two last are
+the poets your pond poets would explode. But if <i>one half</i> of the
+two new Cantos be good in your opinion, what the devil would you
+have more? No&mdash;no; no poetry is <i>generally</i> good&mdash;only by fits and
+starts&mdash;and you are lucky to get a sparkle here and there. You
+might as well want a midnight <i>all stars</i> as rhyme all perfect.</p>
+
+<p>"We are on the verge of a <i>row</i> here. Last night they have
+overwritten all the city walls with 'Up with the republic!' and
+'Death to the Pope!' &amp;c. &amp;c. This would be nothing in London, where
+the walls are privileged. But here it is a different thing: they
+are not used to such fierce political inscriptions, and the police
+is all on the alert, and the Cardinal glares pale through all his
+purple.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page307" name="page307"></a>Pg 307</span></p>
+
+<p>"April 24. 1820. 8 o'clock, P.M.</p>
+
+<p>"The police have been, all noon and after, searching for the
+inscribers, but have caught none as yet. They must have been all
+night about it, for the 'Live republics&mdash;Death to Popes and
+Priests,' are innumerable, and plastered over all the palaces: ours
+has plenty. There is 'Down with the Nobility,' too; they are down
+enough already, for that matter. A very heavy rain and wind having
+come on, I did not go out and 'skirr the country;' but I shall
+mount to-morrow, and take a canter among the peasantry, who are a
+savage, resolute race, always riding with guns in their hands. I
+wonder they don't suspect the serenaders, for they play on the
+guitar here all night, as in Spain, to their mistresses.</p>
+
+<p>"Talking of politics, as Caleb Quotem says, pray look at the
+<i>conclusion</i> of my Ode on <i>Waterloo</i>, written in the year 1815,
+and, comparing it with the Duke de Berri's catastrophe in 1820,
+tell me if I have not as good a right to the character of '<i>Vates</i>'
+in both senses of the word, as Fitzgerald and Coleridge?</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"'Crimson tears will follow yet&mdash;'<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>and have not they?</p>
+
+<p>"I can't pretend to foresee what will happen among you Englishers
+at this distance, but I vaticinate a row in Italy; in whilk case, I
+don't know that I won't have a finger in it. I dislike the
+Austrians, and think the Italians infamously oppressed; and if they
+begin, why, I will recommend 'the erection of a sconce upon
+Drumsnab,' like Dugald Dalgetty."</p></div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page308" name="page308"></a>Pg 308</span></p>
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 371. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, May 8. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"From your not having written again, an intention which your letter
+of the 7th ultimo indicated, I have to presume that the 'Prophecy
+of Dante' has not been found more worthy than its predecessors in
+the eyes of your illustrious synod. In that case, you will be in
+some perplexity; to end which, I repeat to you, that you are not to
+consider yourself as bound or pledged to publish any thing because
+it is <i>mine</i>, but always to act according to your own views, or
+opinions, or those of your friends; and to be sure that you will in
+no degree offend me by 'declining the article,' to use a technical
+phrase. The <i>prose</i> observations on John Wilson's attack, I do not
+intend for publication at this time; and I send a copy of verses to
+Mr. Kinnaird (they were written last year on crossing the Po) which
+must <i>not</i> be published either. I mention this, because it is
+probable he may give you a copy. Pray recollect this, as they are
+mere verses of society, and written upon private feelings and
+passions. And, moreover, I can't consent to any mutilations or
+omissions of <i>Pulci</i>: the original has been ever free from such in
+Italy, the capital of Christianity, and the translation may be so
+in England; though you will think it strange that they should have
+allowed such <i>freedom</i> for many centuries to the Morgante, while
+the other day they confiscated the whole translation of the fourth
+Canto of Childe Harold, and have persecuted Leoni, the
+translator&mdash;so he writes me, and so I<span class="pagenum"><a id="page309" name="page309"></a>Pg 309</span> could have told him, had he
+consulted me before his publication. This shows how much more
+politics interest men in these parts than religion. Half a dozen
+invectives against tyranny confiscate Childe Harold in a month; and
+eight and twenty cantos of quizzing monks and knights, and church
+government, are let loose for centuries. I copy Leoni's account.</p>
+
+<p>"'Non ignorer&agrave; forse che la mia versione del 4&deg; Canto del Childe
+Harold fu confiscata in ogni parte: ed io stesso ho dovuto soffrir
+vessazioni altrettanto ridicole quanto illiberaii, ad arte che
+alcuni versi fossero esclusi dalla censura. Ma siccome il divieto
+non fa d'ordinario che accrescere la curiosita cos! quel carme
+sull' Italia &egrave; ricercato pi&ugrave; che mai, e penso di farlo ristampare
+in Inghil-terra senza nulla escludere. Sciagurata condizione di
+questa mia patria! se patria si pu&ograve; chiamare una terra cos&igrave;
+avvilita dalla fortuna, dagli uomini, da se medesima.'</p>
+
+<p>"Rose will translate this to you. Has he had his letter? I enclosed
+it to you months ago.</p>
+
+<p>"This intended piece of publication I shall dissuade him from, or
+he may chance to see the inside of St. Angelo's. The last sentence
+of his letter is the common and pathetic sentiment of all his
+countrymen.</p>
+
+<p>"Sir Humphry Davy was here last fortnight, and I was in his company
+in the house of a very pretty Italian lady of rank, who, by way of
+displaying her learning in presence of the great chemist, then
+describing his fourteenth ascension to Mount Ve<span class="pagenum"><a id="page310" name="page310"></a>Pg 310</span>suvius, asked 'if
+there was not a similar volcano in <i>Ireland</i>?' My only notion of an
+Irish volcano consisted of the lake of Killarney, which I naturally
+conceived her to mean; but, on second thoughts, I divined that she
+alluded to <i>Ice</i>land and to Hecla&mdash;and so it proved, though she
+sustained her volcanic topography for some time with all the
+amiable pertinacity of 'the feminie.' She soon after turned to me
+and asked me various questions about Sir Humphry's philosophy, and
+I explained as well as an oracle his skill in gasen safety lamps,
+and ungluing the Pompeian MSS. 'But what do you call him?' said
+she. 'A great chemist,' quoth I. 'What can he do?' repeated the
+lady. 'Almost any thing,' said I. 'Oh, then, mio caro, do pray beg
+him to give me something to dye my eyebrows black. I have tried a
+thousand things, and the colours all come off; and besides, they
+don't grow; can't he invent something to make them grow?' All this
+with the greatest earnestness; and what you will be surprised at,
+she is neither ignorant nor a fool, but really well educated and
+clever. But they speak like children, when first out of their
+convents; and, after all, this is better than an English
+blue-stocking.</p>
+
+<p>"I did not tell Sir Humphry of this last piece of philosophy, not
+knowing how he might take it. Davy was much taken with Ravenna, and
+the PRIMITIVE <i>Italianism</i> of the people, who are unused to
+foreigners: but he only stayed a day.</p>
+
+<p>"Send me Scott's novels and some news.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. I have begun and advanced into the second<span class="pagenum"><a id="page311" name="page311"></a>Pg 311</span> act of a tragedy
+on the subject of the Doge's conspiracy (<i>i.e.</i> the story of Marino
+Faliero); but my present feeling is so little encouraging on such
+matters, that I begin to think I have mined my talent out, and
+proceed in no great phantasy of finding a new vein.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. I sometimes think (if the Italians don't rise) of coming over
+to England in the autumn after the coronation, (at which I would
+not appear, on account of my family schism,) but as yet I can
+decide nothing. The place must be a great deal changed since I left
+it, now more than four years ago."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 372. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, May 20. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"Murray, my dear, make my respects to Thomas Campbell, and tell him
+from me, with faith and friendship, three things that he must right
+in his poets: Firstly, he says Anstey's Bath Guide characters are
+taken from Smollett. 'Tis impossible:&mdash;the Guide was published in
+1766, and Humphrey Clinker in 1771&mdash;<i>dunque</i>, 'tis Smollett who has
+taken from Anstey. Secondly, he does not know to whom Cowper
+alludes, when he says that there was one who 'built a church to
+<i>God</i>, and then blasphemed his name:' it was 'Deo erexit
+<i>Voltaire</i>' to whom that maniacal Calvinist and coddled poet
+alludes. Thirdly, he misquotes and spoils a passage from
+Shakspeare, 'to gild refined gold, to paint the lily,' &amp;c.; for
+<i>lily</i> he puts rose, and bedevils in more words than one the whole
+quotation.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page312" name="page312"></a>Pg 312</span></p>
+
+<p>"Now, Tom is a fine fellow; but he should be correct; for the first
+is an <i>injustice</i> (to Anstey), the second an <i>ignorance</i>, and the
+third a <i>blunder</i>. Tell him all this, and let him take it in good
+part; for I might have rammed it into a review and rowed
+him&mdash;instead of which, I act like a Christian.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 373. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, May 20. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"First and foremost, you must forward my letter to <i>Moore</i> dated 2d
+<i>January</i>, which I said you might open, but desired you <i>to
+forward</i>. Now, you should really not forget these little things,
+because they do mischief among friends. You are an excellent man, a
+great man, and live among great men, but do pray recollect your
+absent friends and authors.</p>
+
+<p>"In the first place, <i>your packets</i>; then a letter from Kinnaird,
+on the most urgent business; another from Moore, about a
+communication to Lady Byron of importance; a fourth from the mother
+of Allegra; and, fifthly, at Ravenna, the Countess G. is on the eve
+of being separated. But the Italian public are on her side,
+particularly the women,&mdash;and the men also, because they say that
+<i>he</i> had no business to take the business up now after a year of
+toleration. All her relations (who are numerous, high in rank, and
+powerful) are furious <i>against him</i> for his conduct. I am warned to
+be on my guard, as he is very capable of employing <i>sicarii</i>&mdash;this
+is Latin as well as Italian, so you can understand it; but I have
+arms,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page313" name="page313"></a>Pg 313</span> and don't mind them, thinking that I could pepper his
+ragamuffins, if they don't come unawares, and that, if they do, one
+may as well end that way as another; and it would besides serve
+<i>you</i> as an advertisement:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"Man may escape from rope or gun, &amp;c.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">But he who takes woman, woman, woman, &amp;c.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"Yours.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. I have looked over the press, but heaven knows how. Think
+what I have on hand and the post going out to-morrow. Do you
+remember the epitaph on Voltaire?</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"'Ci-git l'enfant g&acirc;t&eacute;,' &amp;c.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"'Here lies the spoilt child<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Of the world which he spoil'd.'<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The original is in Grimm and Diderot, &amp;c. &amp;c. &amp;c."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 374. TO MR. MOORE.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, May 24. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"I wrote to you a few days ago. There is also a letter of January
+last for you at Murray's, which will explain to you why I am here.
+Murray ought to have forwarded it long ago. I enclose you an
+epistle from a countrywoman of yours at Paris, which has moved my
+entrails. You will have the goodness, perhaps, to enquire into the
+truth of her story, and I will help her as far as I can,&mdash;though
+not in the useless way she proposes. Her letter is evidently
+unstudied, and so natural, that the orthography is also in a state
+of nature.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page314" name="page314"></a>Pg 314</span></p>
+
+<p>"Here is a poor creature, ill and solitary, who thinks, as a last
+resource, of translating you or me into French! Was there ever such
+a notion? It seems to me the consummation of despair. Pray enquire,
+and let me know, and, if you could draw a bill on me <i>here</i> for a
+few hundred francs, at your banker's, I will duly honour it,&mdash;that
+is, if she is not an impostor.<a name="FNanchor_73_73" id="FNanchor_73_73"></a><a href="#Footnote_73_73" class="fnanchor">[73]</a> If not, let me know, that I may
+get something remitted by my banker Longhi, of Bologna, for I have
+no correspondence myself, at Paris: but tell her she must not
+translate;&mdash;if she does, it will be the height of ingratitude.</p>
+
+<p>"I had a letter (not of the same kind, but in French and flattery)
+from a Madame Sophie Gail, of Paris, whom I take to be the spouse
+of a Gallo-Greek of that name. Who is she? and what is she? and how
+came she to take an interest in my <i>poeshie</i> or its author? If you
+know her, tell her, with my compliments, that, as I only <i>read</i>
+French, I have not answered her letter; but would have done so in
+Italian, if I had not thought it would look like an affectation. I
+have just been scolding my monkey<span class="pagenum"><a id="page315" name="page315"></a>Pg 315</span> for tearing the seal of her
+letter, and spoiling a mock book, in which I put rose leaves. I had
+a civet-cat the other day, too; but it ran away, after scratching
+my monkey's cheek, and I am in search of it still. It was the
+fiercest beast I ever saw, and like * * in the face and manner.</p>
+
+<p>"I have a world of things to say; but, as they are not come to a
+<i>d&eacute;nouement</i>, I don't care to begin their history till it is wound
+up. After you went, I had a fever, but got well again without bark.
+Sir Humphry Davy was here the other day, and liked Ravenna very
+much. He will tell you any thing you may wish to know about the
+place and your humble servitor.</p>
+
+<p>"Your apprehensions (arising from Scott's) were unfounded. There
+are <i>no damages</i> in this country, but there will probably be a
+separation between them, as her family, which is a principal one,
+by its connections, are very much against <i>him</i>, for the whole of
+his conduct;&mdash;and he is old and obstinate, and she is young and a
+woman, determined to sacrifice every thing to her affections. I
+have given her the best advice, viz. to stay with him,&mdash;pointing
+out the state of a separated woman, (for the priests won't let
+lovers live openly together, unless the husband sanctions it,) and
+making the most exquisite moral reflections,&mdash;but to no purpose.
+She says, 'I will stay with him, if he will let you remain with me.
+It is hard that I should be the only woman in Romagna who is not to
+have her Amico; but, if not, I will not live with him; and as for
+the<span class="pagenum"><a id="page316" name="page316"></a>Pg 316</span> consequences, love, &amp;c. &amp;c. &amp;c.'&mdash;you know how females reason
+on such occasions.</p>
+
+<p>"He says he has let it go on till he can do so no longer. But he
+wants her to stay, and dismiss me; for he doesn't like to pay back
+her dowry and to make an alimony. Her relations are rather for the
+separation, as they detest him,&mdash;indeed, so does every body. The
+populace and the women are, as usual, all for those who are in the
+wrong, viz. the lady and her lover. I should have retreated, but
+honour, and an erysipelas which has attacked her, prevent me,&mdash;to
+say nothing of love, for I love her most entirely, though not
+enough to persuade her to sacrifice every thing to a frenzy. 'I see
+how it will end; she will be the sixteenth Mrs. Shuffleton.'</p>
+
+<p>"My paper is finished, and so must this letter.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours ever, B.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. I regret that you have not completed the Italian Fudges.
+Pray, how come you to be still in Paris? Murray has four or five
+things of mine in hand&mdash;the new Don Juan, which his back-shop synod
+don't admire;&mdash;a translation of the first Canto of Pulci's Morgante
+Maggiore, excellent;&mdash;short ditto from Dante, not so much approved;
+the Prophecy of Dante, very grand and worthy, &amp;c. &amp;c. &amp;c.;&mdash;a
+furious prose answer to Blackwood's Observations on Don Juan, with
+a savage Defence of Pope&mdash;likely to make a row. The opinions above
+I quote from Murray and his Utican senate;&mdash;you will form your own,
+when you see the things.</p>
+
+<p>"You will have no great chance of seeing me, for<span class="pagenum"><a id="page317" name="page317"></a>Pg 317</span> I begin to think
+I must finish in Italy. But, if you come my way, you shall have a
+tureen of macaroni. Pray tell me about yourself, and your intents.</p>
+
+<p>"My trustees are going to lend Earl Blessington sixty thousand
+pounds (at six per cent.) on a Dublin mortgage. Only think of my
+becoming an Irish absentee!"</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 375. TO MR. HOPPNER.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, May 25. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"A German named Ruppsecht has sent me, heaven knows why, several
+Deutsche Gazettes, of all which I understand neither word nor
+letter. I have sent you the enclosed to beg you to translate to me
+some remarks, which appear to be <i>Goethe's upon</i> Manfred&mdash;and if I
+may judge by <i>two</i> notes of <i>admiration</i> (generally put after
+something ridiculous by us) and the word '<i>hypocondrisch</i>,' are any
+thing but favourable. I shall regret this, for I should have been
+proud of Goethe's good word; but I sha'n't alter my opinion of him,
+even though he should be savage.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you excuse this trouble, and do me this favour?&mdash;Never
+mind&mdash;soften nothing&mdash;I am literary proof&mdash;having had good and evil
+said in most modern languages.</p>
+
+<p>"Believe me," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 376. TO MR. MOORE.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, June 1. 1820,</p>
+
+<p>"I have received a Parisian letter from W.W., which I prefer
+answering through you, if that worthy<span class="pagenum"><a id="page318" name="page318"></a>Pg 318</span> be still at Paris, and, as
+he says, an occasional visiter of yours. In November last he wrote
+to me a well-meaning letter, stating, for some reasons of his own,
+his belief that a re-union might be effected between Lady B. and
+myself. To this I answered as usual; and he sent me a second
+letter, repeating his notions, which letter I have never answered,
+having had a thousand other things to think of. He now writes as if
+he believed that he had offended me by touching on the topic; and I
+wish you to assure him that I am not at all so,&mdash;but, on the
+contrary, obliged by his good nature. At the same time acquaint him
+the <i>thing is impossible. You know this</i>, as well as I,&mdash;and there
+let it end.</p>
+
+<p>"I believe that I showed you his epistle in autumn last. He asks me
+if I have heard of <i>my</i> 'laureat' at Paris<a name="FNanchor_74_74" id="FNanchor_74_74"></a><a href="#Footnote_74_74" class="fnanchor">[74]</a>,&mdash;somebody who has
+written 'a most sanguinary Ep&icirc;tre' against me; but whether in
+French, or Dutch, or on what score, I know not, and he don't
+say,&mdash;except that (for my satisfaction) he says it is the best
+thing in the fellow's volume. If there is any thing of the kind
+that I <i>ought</i> to know, you will doubtless tell me. I suppose it to
+be something of the usual sort;&mdash;he says, he don't remember the
+author's name.</p>
+
+<p>"I wrote to you some ten days ago, and expect an answer at your
+leisure.</p>
+
+<p>"The separation business still continues, and all the world are
+implicated, including priests and cardinals. The public opinion is
+furious against<span class="pagenum"><a id="page319" name="page319"></a>Pg 319</span> <i>him</i>, because he ought to have cut the matter
+short <i>at first</i>, and not waited twelve months to begin. He has
+been trying at evidence, but can get none <i>sufficient</i>; for what
+would make fifty divorces in England won't do here&mdash;there must be
+the <i>most decided</i> proofs.</p>
+
+<p>"It is the first cause of the kind attempted in Ravenna for these
+two hundred years; for, though they often separate, they assign a
+different motive. You know that the continental incontinent are
+more delicate than the English, and don't like proclaiming their
+coronation in a court, even when nobody doubts it.</p>
+
+<p>"All her relations are furious against him. The father has
+challenged him&mdash;a superfluous valour, for he don't fight, though
+suspected of two assassinations&mdash;one of the famous Monzoni of
+Forli. Warning was given me not to take such long rides in the Pine
+Forest without being on my guard; so I take my stiletto and a pair
+of pistols in my pocket during my daily rides.</p>
+
+<p>"I won't stir from this place till the matter is settled one way or
+the other. She is as femininely firm as possible; and the opinion
+is so much against him, that the <i>advocates</i> decline to undertake
+his cause, because they say that he is either a fool or a
+rogue&mdash;fool, if he did not discover the liaison till now; and
+rogue, if he did know it, and waited, for some bad end, to divulge
+it. In short, there has been nothing like it since the days of
+Guido di Polenta's family, in these parts.</p>
+
+<p>"If the man has me taken off, like Polonius 'say, he<span class="pagenum"><a id="page320" name="page320"></a>Pg 320</span> made a good
+end,'&mdash;for a melodrama. The principal security is, that he has not
+the courage to spend twenty scudi&mdash;the average price of a
+clean-handed bravo&mdash;otherwise there is no want of opportunity, for
+I ride about the woods every evening, with one servant, and
+sometimes an acquaintance, who latterly looks a little queer in
+solitary bits of bushes.</p>
+
+<p>"Good bye.&mdash;Write to yours ever," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 377. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, June 7. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"Enclosed is something which will interest you, to wit, the opinion
+of <i>the</i> greatest man of Germany&mdash;perhaps of Europe&mdash;upon one of
+the great men of your advertisements, (all 'famous hands,' as Jacob
+Tonson used to say of his ragamuffins,)&mdash;in short, a critique of
+<i>Goethe's</i> upon <i>Manfred</i>. There is the original, an English
+translation, and an Italian one; keep them all in your
+archives,&mdash;for the opinions of such a man as Goethe, whether
+favourable or not, are always interesting&mdash;and this is more so, as
+favourable. His <i>Faust</i> I never read, for I don't know German; but
+Matthew Monk Lewis, in 1816, at Coligny, translated most of it to
+me <i>viv&acirc; voce</i>, and I was naturally much struck with it; but it was
+the <i>Steinbach</i> and the <i>Jungfrau</i>, and something else, much more
+than Faustus, that made me write Manfred. The first scene, however,
+and that of Faustus are very similar. Acknowledge this letter.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours ever.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page321" name="page321"></a>Pg 321</span></p>
+
+<p>"P.S. I have received <i>Ivanhoe</i>;&mdash;<i>good</i>. Pray send me some
+tooth-powder and tincture of myrrh, by <i>Waite</i>, &amp;c. Ricciardetto
+should have been <i>translated literally, or not at all</i>. As to
+puffing <i>Whistlecraft</i>, it <i>won't</i> do. I'll tell you why some day
+or other. Cornwall's a poet, but spoilt by the detestable schools
+of the day. Mrs. Hemans is a poet also, but too stiltified and
+apostrophic,&mdash;and quite wrong. Men died calmly before the Christian
+era, and since, without Christianity: witness the Romans, and,
+lately, Thistlewood, Sandt, and Lovel&mdash;<i>men who ought to have been
+weighed down with their crimes, even had they believed</i>. A deathbed
+is a matter of nerves and constitution, and not of religion.
+Voltaire was frightened, Frederick of Prussia not: Christians the
+same, according to their strength rather than their creed. What
+does H * * H * * mean by his stanza? which is octave got drunk or
+gone mad. He ought to have his ears boxed with Thor's hammer for
+rhyming so fantastically."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>The following is the article from Goethe's "Kunst und Alterthum,"
+enclosed in this letter. The grave confidence with which the venerable
+critic traces the fancies of his brother poet to real persons and
+events, making no difficulty even of a double murder at Florence to
+furnish grounds for his theory, affords an amusing instance of the
+disposition so prevalent throughout Europe, to picture Byron as a man of
+marvels and mysteries, as well in his life as his poetry. To these
+exaggerated, or wholly false notions of him, the numerous fictions
+palmed upon the<span class="pagenum"><a id="page322" name="page322"></a>Pg 322</span> world of his romantic tours and wonderful adventures in
+places he never saw, and with persons that never existed<a name="FNanchor_75_75" id="FNanchor_75_75"></a><a href="#Footnote_75_75" class="fnanchor">[75]</a>, have, no
+doubt, considerably contributed; and the consequence is, so utterly out
+of truth and nature are the representations of his life and character
+long current upon the Continent, that it may be questioned whether the
+real "flesh and blood" hero of these pages,&mdash;the social,
+practical-minded, and, with all his faults and eccentricities, <i>English</i>
+Lord Byron,&mdash;may not, to the over-exalted imaginations of most of his
+foreign admirers, appear but an ordinary, unromantic, and prosaic
+personage.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>"<b>GOETHE ON MANFRED.</b></p>
+
+<p>[1820.]</p>
+
+<p>"Byron's tragedy, Manfred, was to me a wonderful phenomenon, and one
+that closely touched me. This singular intellectual poet has taken my
+Faustus to himself, and extracted from it the strongest nourishment for
+his hypochondriac humour. He has made use of the impelling principles in
+his own way,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page323" name="page323"></a>Pg 323</span> for his own purposes, so that no one of them remains the
+same; and it is particularly on this account that I cannot enough admire
+his genius. The whole is in this way so completely formed anew, that it
+would be an interesting task for the critic to point out not only the
+alterations he has made, but their degree of resemblance with, or
+dissimilarity to, the original: in the course of which I cannot deny
+that the gloomy heat of an unbounded and exuberant despair becomes at
+last oppressive to us. Yet is the dissatisfaction we feel always
+connected with esteem and admiration.</p>
+
+<p>"We find thus in this tragedy the quintessence of the most astonishing
+talent born to be its own tormentor. The character of Lord Byron's life
+and poetry hardly permits a just and equitable appreciation. He has
+often enough confessed what it is that torments him. He has repeatedly
+pourtrayed it; and scarcely any one feels compassion for this
+intolerable suffering, over which he is ever laboriously ruminating.
+There are, properly speaking, two females whose phantoms for ever haunt
+him, and which, in this piece also, perform principal parts&mdash;one under
+the name of Astarte, the other without form or actual presence, and
+merely a voice. Of the horrid occurrence which took place with the
+former, the following is related:&mdash;When a bold and enterprising young
+man, he won the affections of a Florentine lady. Her husband discovered
+the amour, and murdered his wife; but the murderer was the same night
+found dead in the street, and there was<span class="pagenum"><a id="page324" name="page324"></a>Pg 324</span> no one on whom any suspicion
+could be attached. Lord Byron removed from Florence, and these spirits
+haunted him all his life after.</p>
+
+<p>"This romantic incident is rendered highly probable by innumerable
+allusions to it in his poems. As, for instance, when turning his sad
+contemplations inwards, he applies to himself the fatal history of the
+king of Sparta. It is as follows:&mdash;Pausanias, a Lacedemonian general,
+acquires glory by the important victory at Plat&aelig;a, but afterwards
+forfeits the confidence of his countrymen through his arrogance,
+obstinacy, and secret intrigues with the enemies of his country. This
+man draws upon himself the heavy guilt of innocent blood, which attends
+him to his end; for, while commanding the fleet of the allied Greeks, in
+the Black Sea, he is inflamed with a violent passion for a Byzantine
+maiden. After long resistance, he at length obtains her from her
+parents, and she is to be delivered up to him at night. She modestly
+desires the servant to put out the lamp, and, while groping her way in
+the dark, she overturns it. Pausanias is awakened from his
+sleep&mdash;apprehensive of an attack from murderers, he seizes his sword,
+and destroys his mistress. The horrid sight never leaves him. Her shade
+pursues him unceasingly, and he implores for aid in vain from the gods
+and the exorcising priests.</p>
+
+<p>"That poet must have a lacerated heart who selects such a scene from
+antiquity, appropriates it to himself, and burdens his tragic image with
+it. The following soliloquy, which is overladen with gloom and a
+weariness of life, is, by this remark, ren<span class="pagenum"><a id="page325" name="page325"></a>Pg 325</span>dered intelligible. We
+recommend it as an exercise to all friends of declamation. Hamlet's
+soliloquy appears improved upon here."<a name="FNanchor_76_76" id="FNanchor_76_76"></a><a href="#Footnote_76_76" class="fnanchor">[76]</a></p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 378. TO MR. MOORE.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, June 9. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"Galignani has just sent me the Paris edition of your works (which
+I wrote to order), and I am glad to see my old friends with a
+French face. I have been skimming and dipping, in and over them,
+like a swallow, and as pleased as one. It is the first time that I
+had seen the Melodies without music; and, I don't know how, but I
+can't read in a music-book&mdash;the crotchets confound the words in my
+head, though I recollect them perfectly when <i>sung</i>. Music assists
+my memory through the ear, not through the eye; I mean, that her
+quavers perplex me upon paper, but they are a help when heard. And
+thus I was glad to see the words without their borrowed robes;&mdash;to
+my mind they look none the worse for their nudity.</p>
+
+<p>"The biographer has made a botch of your life&mdash;calling your father
+'a <i>venerable old</i> gentleman,' and prattling of 'Addison,' and
+'dowager countesses.' If that damned fellow was to <i>write my</i> life,
+I would certainly <i>take his</i>. And then, at the Dublin dinner, you
+have 'made a speech' (do you recollect, at<span class="pagenum"><a id="page326" name="page326"></a>Pg 326</span> Douglas K.'s, 'Sir, he
+made me a speech?') too complimentary to the 'living poets,' and
+somewhat redolent of universal praise. <i>I</i> am but too well off in
+it, but * * *.</p>
+
+<p>"You have not sent me any poetical or personal news of yourself.
+Why don't you complete an Italian Tour of the Fudges? I have just
+been turning over Little, which I knew by heart in 1803, being then
+in my fifteenth summer. Heigho! I believe all the mischief I have
+ever done, or sung, has been owing to that confounded book of
+yours.</p>
+
+<p>"In my last I told you of a cargo of 'Poeshie,' which I had sent to
+M. at his own impatient desire;&mdash;and, now he has got it, he don't
+like it, and demurs. Perhaps he is right. I have no great opinion
+of any of my last shipment, except a translation from Pulci, which
+is word for word, and verse for verse.</p>
+
+<p>"I am in the third Act of a Tragedy; but whether it will be
+finished or not, I know not: I have, at this present, too many
+passions of my own on hand to do justice to those of the dead.
+Besides the vexations mentioned in my last, I have incurred a
+quarrel with the Pope's carabiniers, or gens d'armerie, who have
+petitioned the Cardinal against my liveries, as resembling too
+nearly their own lousy uniform. They particularly object to the
+epaulettes, which all the world with us have on upon gala days. My
+liveries are of the colours conforming to my arms, and have been
+the family hue since the year 1066.</p>
+
+<p>"I have sent a tranchant reply, as you may sup<span class="pagenum"><a id="page327" name="page327"></a>Pg 327</span>pose; and have given
+to understand that, if any soldados of that respectable corps
+insult my servants, I will do likewise by their gallant commanders;
+and I have directed my ragamuffins, six in number, who are
+tolerably savage, to defend themselves, in case of aggression; and,
+on holidays and gaudy days, I shall arm the whole set, including
+myself, in case of accidents or treachery. I used to play pretty
+well at the broad-sword, once upon a time, at Angelo's; but I
+should like the pistol, our national buccaneer weapon, better,
+though I am out of practice at present. However, I can 'wink and
+hold out mine iron.' It makes me think (the whole thing does) of
+Romeo and Juliet&mdash;'now, Gregory, remember thy <i>swashing</i> blow.'</p>
+
+<p>"All these feuds, however, with the Cavalier for his wife, and the
+troopers for my liveries, are very tiresome to a quiet man, who
+does his best to please all the world, and longs for fellowship and
+good will. Pray write. I am yours," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 379. TO MR. MOORE.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, July 13. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"To remove or increase your Irish anxiety about my being 'in a
+wisp<a name="FNanchor_77_77" id="FNanchor_77_77"></a><a href="#Footnote_77_77" class="fnanchor">[77]</a>,' I answer your letter forth-with; premising that, as I am
+a '<i>Will</i> of the wisp,' I may chance to flit out of it. But, first,
+a word on the Memoir;&mdash;I have no objection, nay, I would rather
+that <i>one</i> correct copy was taken and deposit<span class="pagenum"><a id="page328" name="page328"></a>Pg 328</span>ed in honourable
+hands, in case of accidents happening to the original; for you know
+that I have none, and have never even <i>re</i>-read, nor, indeed,
+<i>read</i> at all what is there written; I only know that I wrote it
+with the fullest intention to be 'faithful and true' in my
+narrative, but <i>not</i> impartial&mdash;no, by the Lord! I can't pretend to
+be that, while I feel. But I wish to give every body concerned the
+opportunity to contradict or correct me.</p>
+
+<p>"I have no objection to any proper person seeing what is there
+written,&mdash;seeing it was written, like every thing else, for the
+purpose of being read, however much many writings may fail in
+arriving at that object.</p>
+
+<p>"With regard to 'the wisp,' the Pope has pronounced <i>their
+separation</i>. The decree came yesterday from Babylon,&mdash;it was <i>she</i>
+and <i>her friends</i> who demanded it, on the grounds of her husband's
+(the noble Count Cavalier's) extraordinary usage. <i>He</i> opposed it
+with all his might because of the alimony, which has been assigned,
+with all her goods, chattels, carriage, &amp;c. to be restored by him.
+In Italy they can't divorce. He insisted on her giving me up, and
+he would forgive every thing,&mdash;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But, in this
+country, the very courts hold such proofs in abhorrence, the
+Italians being as much more delicate in public than the English, as
+they are more passionate in private.</p>
+
+<p>"The friends and relatives, who are numerous and powerful, reply to
+him&mdash;'<i>You</i>, yourself, are either fool or knave,&mdash;fool, if you did
+not see the conse<span class="pagenum"><a id="page329" name="page329"></a>Pg 329</span>quences of the approximation of these two young
+persons,&mdash;knave, if you connive at it. Take your choice,&mdash;but don't
+break out (after twelve months of the closest intimacy, under your
+own eyes and positive sanction) with a scandal, which can only make
+you ridiculous and her unhappy.'</p>
+
+<p>"He swore that he thought our intercourse was purely amicable, and
+that <i>I</i> was more partial to him than to her, till melancholy
+testimony proved the contrary. To this they answer, that 'Will of
+<i>this</i> wisp' was not an unknown person, and that 'clamosa Fama' had
+not proclaimed the purity of my morals;&mdash;that <i>her</i> brother, a year
+ago, wrote from Rome to warn him that his wife would infallibly be
+led astray by this ignis fatuus, unless he took proper measures,
+all of which he neglected to take, &amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"Now he says that he encouraged my return to Ravenna, to see '<i>in
+quanti piedi di acqua siamo</i>,' and he has found enough to drown him
+in. In short,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"'Ce ne fut pas le tout; sa femme se plaignit&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Proc&egrave;s&mdash;La parent&eacute; se joint en excuse et dit<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Que du <i>Docteur</i> venoit tout le mauvais m&eacute;nage;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Que cet homme &eacute;toit fou, que sa femme &eacute;toit sage.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">On fit casser le mariage.'<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>It is but to let the women alone, in the way of conflict, for they
+are sure to win against the field. She returns to her father's
+house, and I can only see her under great restrictions&mdash;such is the
+custom of the country. The relations behave very well:&mdash;I offered
+any settlement, but they refused to accept it, and swear she
+<i>shan't</i> live with G. (as he has tried to prove her faithless), but
+that he shall maintain her;<span class="pagenum"><a id="page330" name="page330"></a>Pg 330</span> and, in fact, a judgment to this
+effect came yesterday. I am, of course, in an awkward situation
+enough.</p>
+
+<p>"I have heard no more of the carabiniers who protested against my
+liveries. They are not popular, those same soldiers, and, in a
+small row, the other night, one was slain, another wounded, and
+divers put to flight, by some of the Romagnuole youth, who are
+dexterous, and somewhat liberal of the knife. The perpetrators are
+not discovered, but I hope and believe that none of my ragamuffins
+were in it, though they are somewhat savage, and secretly armed,
+like most of the inhabitants. It is their way, and saves sometimes
+a good deal of litigation.</p>
+
+<p>"There is a revolution at Naples. If so, it will probably leave a
+card at Ravenna in its way to Lombardy.</p>
+
+<p>"Your publishers seem to have used you like mine. M. has shuffled,
+and almost insinuated that my last productions are <i>dull</i>. Dull,
+sir!&mdash;damme, dull! I believe he is right. He begs for the
+completion of my tragedy on Marino Faliero, none of which is yet
+gone to England. The fifth act is nearly completed, but it is
+dreadfully long&mdash;40 sheets of long paper of 4 pages each&mdash;about 150
+when printed; but 'so full of pastime and prodigality' that I think
+it will do.</p>
+
+<p>"Pray send and publish your <i>Pome</i> upon me; and don't be afraid of
+praising me too highly. I shall pocket my blushes.</p>
+
+<p>"'Not actionable!'&mdash;<i>Chantre d'enfer!</i><a name="FNanchor_78_78" id="FNanchor_78_78"></a><a href="#Footnote_78_78" class="fnanchor">[78]</a>&mdash;by * *<span class="pagenum"><a id="page331" name="page331"></a>Pg 331</span> that's 'a
+speech,' and I won't put up with it. A pretty title to give a man
+for doubting if there be any such place!</p>
+
+<p>"So my Gail is gone&mdash;and Miss Mah<i>ony</i> won't take <i>Mo</i>ney. I am
+very glad of it&mdash;I like to be generous free of expense. But beg her
+not to translate me.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, pray tell Galignani that I shall send him a screed of doctrine
+if he don't be more punctual. Somebody <i>regularly detains two</i>, and
+sometimes <i>four</i>, of his Messengers by the way. Do, pray, entreat
+him to be more precise. News are worth money in this remote kingdom
+of the Ostrogoths.</p>
+
+<p>"Pray, reply. I should like much to share some of your Champagne
+and La Fitte, but I am too Italian for Paris in general. Make
+Murray send my letter to you&mdash;it is full of <i>epigrams</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>In the separation that had now taken place between Count Guiccioli and
+his wife, it was one of the conditions that the lady should, in future,
+reside under the paternal roof:&mdash;in consequence of which, Madame
+Guiccioli, on the 16th of July, left Ravenna and retired to a villa
+belonging to Count Gamba, about fifteen miles distant from that city.
+Here Lord Byron occasionally visited her&mdash;about once or twice, perhaps,
+in a month&mdash;passing the rest of his time in perfect solitude. To a mind
+like his, whose world was within itself, such a mode of life could have
+been neither new nor unwelcome; but to the woman, young and admired,
+whose acquaint<span class="pagenum"><a id="page332" name="page332"></a>Pg 332</span>ance with the world and its pleasures had but just begun,
+this change was, it must be confessed, most sudden and trying. Count
+Guiccioli was rich, and, as a young wife, she had gained absolute power
+over him. She was proud, and his station placed her among the highest in
+Ravenna. They had talked of travelling to Naples, Florence, Paris,&mdash;and
+every luxury, in short, that wealth could command was at her disposal.</p>
+
+<p>All this she now voluntarily and determinedly sacrificed for Byron. Her
+splendid home abandoned&mdash;her relations all openly at war with her&mdash;her
+kind father but tolerating, from fondness, what he could not
+approve&mdash;she was now, upon a pittance of 200<i>l.</i> a year, living apart
+from the world, her sole occupation the task of educating herself for
+her illustrious friend, and her sole reward the few brief glimpses of
+him which their now restricted intercourse allowed. Of the man who could
+inspire and keep alive so devoted a feeling, it may be pronounced with
+confidence that he could not have been such as, in the freaks of his own
+wayward humour, he represented himself; while, on the lady's side, the
+whole history of her attachment goes to prove how completely an Italian
+woman, whether by nature or from her social position, is led to invert
+the usual course of such frailties among ourselves, and, weak in
+resisting the first impulses of passion, to reserve the whole strength
+of her character for a display of constancy and devotedness afterwards.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page333" name="page333"></a>Pg 333</span></p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 380. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, July 17. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"I have received some books, and Quarterlies, and Edinburghs, for
+all which I am grateful: they contain all I know of England, except
+by Galignani's newspaper.</p>
+
+<p>"The tragedy is completed, but now comes the task of copy and
+correction. It is very long, (42 <i>sheets</i> of long paper, of four
+pages each,) and I believe must make more than 140 or 150 pages,
+besides many historical extracts as notes, which I mean to append.
+History is closely followed. Dr. Moore's account is in some
+respects false, and in all foolish and flippant. <i>None</i> of the
+chronicles (and I have consulted Sanuto, Sandi, Navagero, and an
+anonymous Siege of Zara, besides the histories of Laugier, Daru,
+Sismondi, &amp;c.) state, or even hint, that he begged his life; they
+merely say that he did not deny the conspiracy. He was one of their
+great men,&mdash;commanded at the siege of Zara,&mdash;beat 80,000
+Hungarians, killing 8000, and at the same time kept the town he was
+besieging in order,&mdash;took Capo d'Istria,&mdash;was ambassador at Genoa,
+Rome, and finally Doge, where he fell for treason, in attempting to
+alter the government, by what Sanuto calls a judgment on him for,
+many years before (when Podesta and Captain of Treviso), having
+knocked down a bishop, who was sluggish in carrying the host at a
+procession. He 'saddles him,' as Thwackum did Square, 'with a
+judgment;' but he does not mention whether he had been punished at<span class="pagenum"><a id="page334" name="page334"></a>Pg 334</span>
+the time for what would appear very strange, even now, and must
+have been still more so in an age of papal power and glory. Sanuto
+says, that Heaven took away his senses for this buffet, and induced
+him to conspire. 'Per&ograve; f&ugrave; permesso che il Faliero perdette
+l'intelletto,' &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know what your parlour-boarders will think of the Drama I
+have founded upon this extraordinary event. The only similar one in
+history is the story of Agis, King of Sparta, a prince <i>with</i> the
+commons against the aristocracy, and losing his life therefor. But
+it shall be sent when copied.</p>
+
+<p>"I should be glad to know why your Quarter<i>ing</i> Reviewers, at the
+close of 'The Fall of Jerusalem,' accuse me of Manicheism? a
+compliment to which the sweetener of 'one of the mightiest spirits'
+by no means reconciles me. The poem they review is very noble; but
+could they not do justice to the writer without converting him into
+my religious antidote? I am not a Manichean, nor an <i>Any</i>-chean. I
+should like to know what harm my 'poeshies' have done? I can't tell
+what people mean by making me a hobgoblin."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 381. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, August 31. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"I have '<i>put my soul</i>' into the tragedy (as you <i>if</i> it); but you
+know that there are d&mdash;&mdash;d souls as well as tragedies. Recollect
+that it is not a political play, though it may look like it: it is
+strictly historical. Read the history and judge.</p>
+
+<p>"Ada's picture is her mother's. I am glad of it&mdash;<span class="pagenum"><a id="page335" name="page335"></a>Pg 335</span>the mother made a
+good daughter. Send me Gifford's opinion, and never mind the
+Archbishop. I can neither send you away, nor give you a hundred
+pistoles, nor a better taste: I send you a tragedy, and you ask for
+'facetious epistles;' a little like your predecessor, who advised
+Dr. Prideaux to 'put some more humour into his Life of Mahomet.'</p>
+
+<p>"Bankes is a wonderful fellow. There is hardly one of my school or
+college contemporaries that has not turned out more or less
+celebrated. Peel, Palmerstone, Bankes, Hobhouse, Tavistock, Bob
+Mills, Douglas Kinnaird, &amp;c. &amp;c. have all talked and been talked
+about.</p>
+
+<p>"We are here going to fight a little next month, if the Huns don't
+cross the Po, and probably if they do. I can't say more now. If any
+thing happens, you have matter for a posthumous work, in MS.; so
+pray be civil. Depend upon it, there will be savage work, if once
+they begin here. The French courage proceeds from vanity, the
+German from phlegm, the Turkish from fanaticism and opium, the
+Spanish from pride, the English from coolness, the Dutch from
+obstinacy, the Russian from insensibility, but the <i>Italian</i> from
+<i>anger</i>; so you'll see that they will spare nothing."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 382. TO MR. MOORE.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, August 31, 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"D&mdash;&mdash;n your 'mezzo cammin<a name="FNanchor_79_79" id="FNanchor_79_79"></a><a href="#Footnote_79_79" class="fnanchor">[79]</a>'&mdash;you should say 'the prime of
+life,' a much more consolatory phrase.<span class="pagenum"><a id="page336" name="page336"></a>Pg 336</span> Besides, it is not correct.
+I was born in 1788, and consequently am but thirty-two. You are
+mistaken on another point. The 'Sequin Box' never came into
+requisition, nor is it likely to do so. It were better that it had,
+for then a man is not <i>bound</i>, you know. As to reform, I did
+reform&mdash;what would you have? 'Rebellion lay in his way, and he
+found it.' I verily believe that nor you, nor any man of poetical
+temperament, can avoid a strong passion of some kind. It is the
+poetry of life. What should I have known or written, had I been a
+quiet, mercantile politician, or a lord in waiting? A man must
+travel, and turmoil, or there is no existence. Besides, I only
+meant to be a Cavalier Servente, and had no idea it would turn out
+a romance, in the Anglo fashion.</p>
+
+<p>"However, I suspect I know a thing or two of Italy&mdash;more than Lady
+Morgan has picked up in her posting. What do Englishmen know of
+Italians beyond their museums and saloons&mdash;and some hack * *, <i>en
+passant</i>? Now, I have lived in the heart of their houses, in parts
+of Italy freshest and least influenced by strangers,&mdash;have seen and
+become (<i>pars magna fui</i>) a portion of their hopes, and fears, and
+passions, and am almost inoculated into a family. This is to see
+men and things as they are.</p>
+
+<p>"You say that I called you 'quiet<a name="FNanchor_80_80" id="FNanchor_80_80"></a><a href="#Footnote_80_80" class="fnanchor">[80]</a>'&mdash;I don't recollect any
+thing of the sort. On the contrary, you are always in scrapes.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page337" name="page337"></a>Pg 337</span></p>
+
+<p>"What think you of the Queen? I hear Mr. Hoby says, 'that it makes
+him weep to see her, she reminds him so much of Jane Shore.'</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"Mr. Hoby the bootmaker's heart is quite sore,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">For seeing the Queen makes him think of Jane Shore;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">And, in fact, * *<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Pray excuse this ribaldry. What is your poem about? Write and tell
+me all about it and you.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. Did you write the lively quiz on Peter Bell? It has wit
+enough to be yours, and almost too much to be any body else's now
+going. It was in Galignani the other day or week."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 383. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, September 7. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"In correcting the proofs you must refer to the <i>manuscript</i>,
+because there are in it various readings. Pray attend to this, and
+choose what Gifford thinks best, Let me hear what he thinks of the
+whole.</p>
+
+<p>"You speak of Lady * *'s illness; she is not of those who die:&mdash;the
+amiable only do; and those whose death would <i>do good</i> live.
+Whenever she is pleased to return, it may be presumed she will take
+her 'divining rod' along with her: it may be of use to her at home,
+as well as to the 'rich man' of the Evangelists.</p>
+
+<p>"Pray do not let the papers paragraph me back to England. They may
+say what they please, any loathsome abuse but that. Contradict it.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page338" name="page338"></a>Pg 338</span></p>
+
+<p>"My last letters will have taught you to expect an explosion here:
+it was primed and loaded, but they hesitated to fire the train. One
+of the cities shirked from the league. I cannot write more at large
+for a thousand reasons. Our 'puir hill folk' offered to strike, and
+raise the first banner, but Bologna paused; and now 'tis autumn,
+and the season half over. 'O Jerusalem! Jerusalem!' The Huns are on
+the Po; but if once they pass it on their way to Naples, all Italy
+will be behind them. The dogs&mdash;the wolves&mdash;may they perish like the
+host of Sennacherib! If you want to publish the Prophecy of Dante,
+you never will have a better time."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 384. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, Sept. 11. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"Here is another historical <i>note</i> for you. I want to be as near
+truth as the drama can be.</p>
+
+<p>"Last post I sent you a note fierce as Faliero himself<a name="FNanchor_81_81" id="FNanchor_81_81"></a><a href="#Footnote_81_81" class="fnanchor">[81]</a>, in
+answer to a trashy tourist, who pretends that he could have been
+introduced to me. Let me have a proof of it, that I may cut its
+lava into some shape.</p>
+
+<p>"What Gifford says is very consolatory (of the first act). English,
+sterling <i>genuine English</i>, is a desideratum amongst you, and I am
+glad that I have<span class="pagenum"><a id="page339" name="page339"></a>Pg 339</span> got so much left; though Heaven knows how I
+retain it: I <i>hear</i> none but from my valet, and his is
+<i>Nottinghamshire</i>: and I <i>see</i> none but in your new publications,
+and theirs is <i>no</i> language at all, but jargon. Even your * * * *
+is terribly stilted and affected, with '<i>very, very</i>' so soft and
+pamby.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! if ever I do come amongst you again, I will give you such a
+'Baviad and M&aelig;viad!' not as good as the old, but even <i>better
+merited</i>. There never was such a <i>set</i> as your <i>ragamuffins</i> (I
+mean <i>not</i> yours only, but every body's). What with the Cockneys,
+and the Lakers, and the <i>followers</i> of Scott, and Moore, and Byron,
+you are in the very uttermost decline and degradation of
+literature. I can't think of it without all the remorse of a
+murderer. I wish that Johnson were alive again to crush them!"</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 385. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, Sept. 14. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"What! not a line? Well, have it your own way.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish you would inform Perry, that his stupid paragraph is the
+cause of all my newspapers being stopped in Paris. The fools
+believe me in your infernal country, and have not sent on their
+gazettes, so that I know nothing of your beastly trial of the
+Queen.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot avail myself of Mr. Gifford's remarks, because I have
+received none, except on the first act. Yours, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page340" name="page340"></a>Pg 340</span>"P.S. Do, pray, beg the editors of papers to say any thing
+blackguard they please; but not to put me amongst their arrivals.
+They do me more mischief by such nonsense than all their abuse can
+do."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 386. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, Sept. 21. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"So you are at your old tricks again. This is the second packet I
+have received unaccompanied by a single line of good, bad, or
+indifferent. It is strange that you have never forwarded any
+further observations of Gifford's. How am I to alter or amend, if I
+hear no further? or does this silence mean that it is well enough
+as it is, or too bad to be repaired? If the last, why do you not
+say so at once, instead of playing pretty, while you know that soon
+or late you must out with the truth.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. My sister tells me that you sent to her to enquire where I
+was, believing in my arrival, <i>driving a curricle</i>, &amp;c. &amp;c. into
+Palace-yard. Do you think me a coxcomb or a madman, to be capable
+of such an exhibition? My sister knew me better, and told you, that
+could not be me. You might as well have thought me entering on 'a
+pale horse,' like Death in the Revelations."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 387. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, Sept. '23. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"Get from Mr. Hobhouse, and send me a proof (with the Latin) of my
+Hints from Horace; it has<span class="pagenum"><a id="page341" name="page341"></a>Pg 341</span> now the <i>nonum prematur in annum</i>
+complete for its production, being written at Athens in 1811. I
+have a notion that, with some omissions of names and passages, it
+will do; and I could put my late observations <i>for</i> Pope amongst
+the notes, with the date of 1820, and so on. As far as
+versification goes, it is good; and, on looking back to what I
+wrote about that period, I am astonished to see how <i>little</i> I have
+trained on. I wrote better then than now; but that comes of my
+having fallen into the atrocious bad taste of the times. If I can
+trim it for present publication, what with the other things you
+have of mine, you will have a volume or two of <i>variety</i> at least,
+for there will be all measures, styles, and topics, whether good or
+no. I am anxious to hear what Gifford thinks of the tragedy: pray
+let me know. I really do not know what to think myself.</p>
+
+<p>"If the Germans pass the Po, they will be treated to a mass out of
+the Cardinal de Retz's <i>Breviary</i>. * *'s a fool, and could not
+understand this: Frere will. It is as pretty a conceit as you would
+wish to see on a summer's day.</p>
+
+<p>"Nobody here believes a word of the evidence against the Queen. The
+very mob cry shame against their countrymen, and say, that for half
+the money spent upon the trial, any testimony whatever may be
+brought out of Italy. This you may rely upon as fact. I told you as
+much before. As to what travellers report, what <i>are travellers</i>?
+Now I have <i>lived</i> among the Italians&mdash;not <i>Florenced</i>, and
+<i>Romed</i>, and galleried, and conversationed it for a few months, and
+then home again; but been of their families,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page342" name="page342"></a>Pg 342</span> and friendships, and
+feuds, and loves, and councils, and correspondence, in a part of
+Italy least known to foreigners,&mdash;and have been amongst them of all
+classes, from the Conte to the Contadine; and you may be sure of
+what I say to you.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 388. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, Sept. 28. 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought that I had told you long ago, that it never was intended
+nor written with any view to the stage. I have said so in the
+preface too. It is too long and too regular for your stage, the
+persons too few, and the <i>unity</i> too much observed. It is more like
+a play of Alfieri's than of your stage (I say this humbly in
+speaking of that great man); but there is poetry, and it is equal
+to Manfred, though I know not what esteem is held of Manfred.</p>
+
+<p>"I have now been nearly as long <i>out</i> of England as I was there
+during the time I saw you frequently. I came home July 14th, 1811,
+and left again April 25th, 1816: so that Sept. 28th, 1820, brings
+me within a very few months of the same duration of time of my stay
+and my absence. In course, I can know nothing of the public taste
+and feelings, but from what I glean from letters, &amp;c. Both seem to
+be as bad as possible.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought <i>Anastasius excellent</i>: did I not say so? Matthews's
+Diary most excellent; it, and Forsyth, and parts of Hobhouse, are
+all we have of truth or sense upon Italy. The Letter to Julia very
+good<span class="pagenum"><a id="page343" name="page343"></a>Pg 343</span> indeed, I do not despise * * * * * *; but if she knit blue
+stockings instead of wearing them, it would be better. <i>You</i> are
+taken in by that false stilted trashy style, which is a mixture of
+all the styles of the day, which are <i>all bombastic</i> (I don't
+except my <i>own</i>&mdash;no one has done more through negligence to corrupt
+the language); but it is neither English nor poetry. Time will
+show.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry Gifford has made no further remarks beyond the first
+Act: does he think all the English equally sterling as he thought
+the first? You did right to send the proofs: I was a fool; but I do
+really detest the sight of proofs: it is an absurdity; but comes
+from laziness.</p>
+
+<p>"You can steal the two Juans into the world quietly, tagged to the
+others. The play as you will&mdash;the Dante too; but the <i>Pulci</i> I am
+proud of: it is superb; you have no such translation. It is the
+best thing I ever did in my life. I wrote the play from beginning
+to end, and not a <i>single scene without interruption</i>, and being
+obliged to break off in the middle; for I had my hands full, and my
+head, too, just then; so it can be no great shakes&mdash;I mean the
+play; and the head too, if you like.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. Politics here still savage and uncertain. However, we are all
+in our 'bandaliers,' to join the 'Highlanders if they cross the
+Forth,' <i>i.e.</i> to crush the Austrians if they cross the Po. The
+rascals!&mdash;and that dog Liverpool, to say their subjects are
+<i>happy</i>! If ever I come back, I'll work some of these ministers.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page344" name="page344"></a>Pg 344</span></p>
+
+<p>"Sept. 29.</p>
+
+<p>"I opened my letter to say, that on reading <i>more</i> of the four
+volumes on Italy, where the author says 'declined an introduction,'
+I perceive (<i>horresco referens</i>) it is written by a WOMAN!!! In
+that case you must suppress my note and answer, and all I have said
+about the book and the writer. I never dreamed of it until now, in
+my extreme wrath at that precious note. I can only say that I am
+sorry that a lady should say any thing of the kind. What I would
+have said to one of the other sex you know already. Her book too
+(as a <i>she</i> book) is not a bad one; but she evidently don't know
+the Italians, or rather don't like them, and forgets the <i>causes</i>
+of their misery and profligacy (<i>Matthews</i> and <i>Forsyth</i> are your
+men for truth and tact), and has gone over Italy in
+<i>company</i>&mdash;<i>always</i> a <i>bad</i> plan: you must be <i>alone</i> with people
+to know them well. Ask her, who was the '<i>descendant of Lady M.W.
+Montague</i>,' and by whom? by Algarotti?</p>
+
+<p>"I suspect that, in Marino Faliero, you and yours won't like the
+<i>politics</i>, which are perilous to you in these times; but recollect
+that it is <i>not a political</i> play, and that I was obliged to put
+into the mouths of the characters the sentiments upon which they
+acted. I hate all things written like Pizarro, to represent France,
+England, and so forth. All I have done is meant to be purely
+Venetian, even to the very prophecy of its present state.</p>
+
+<p>"Your Angles in general know little of the <i>Italians</i>, who detest
+them for their numbers and their GENOA treachery. Besides, the
+English tra<span class="pagenum"><a id="page345" name="page345"></a>Pg 345</span>vellers have not been composed of the best company. How
+could they?&mdash;out of 100,000, how many gentlemen were there, or
+honest men?</p>
+
+<p>"Mitchell's Aristophanes is excellent. Send me the rest of it.</p>
+
+<p>"These fools will force me to write a book about Italy myself, to
+give them 'the loud lie.' They prate about assassination; what is
+it but the origin of duelling&mdash;and '<i>a wild justice</i>,' as Lord
+Bacon calls it? It is the fount of the modern point of honour in
+what the laws can't or <i>won't</i> reach. Every man is liable to it
+more or less, according to circumstances or place. For instance, I
+am living here exposed to it daily, for I have happened to make a
+powerful and unprincipled man my enemy;&mdash;and I never sleep the
+worse for it, or ride in less solitary places, because precaution
+is useless, and one thinks of it as of a disease which may or may
+not strike. It is true that there are those here, who, if he did,
+would 'live to think on't;' but that would not awake my bones: I
+should be sorry if it would, were they once at rest."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 389. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, 8bre 6&deg;, 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"You will have now received all the Acts, corrected, of the Marino
+Faliero. What you say of the 'bet of 100 guineas' made by some one
+who says that he saw me last week, reminds me of what happened in
+1810: you can easily ascertain the fact, and it is an odd one.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page346" name="page346"></a>Pg 346</span>"In the latter end of 1811, I met one evening at the Alfred my old
+school and form fellow (for we were within two of each other, <i>he</i>
+the higher, though both very near the top of our remove,) <i>Peel</i>,
+the Irish secretary. He told me that, in 1810, he met me, as he
+thought, in St. James's Street, but we passed without speaking. He
+mentioned this, and it was denied as impossible, I being then in
+Turkey. A day or two afterward, he pointed out to his brother a
+person on the opposite side of the way:&mdash;'There,' said he, 'is the
+man whom I took for Byron.' His brother instantly answered, 'Why,
+it is Byron, and no one else.' But this is not all:&mdash;I was <i>seen</i>
+by somebody to <i>write down my name</i> amongst the enquirers after the
+King's health, then attacked by insanity. Now, at this very period,
+as nearly as I could make out, I was ill of a <i>strong fever</i> at
+Patras, caught in the marshes near Olympia, from the <i>malaria</i>. If
+I had died there, this would have been a new ghost story for you.
+You can easily make out the accuracy of this from Peel himself, who
+told it in detail. I suppose you will be of the opinion of
+Lucretius, who (denies the immortality of the soul, but) asserts
+that from the 'flying off of the surfaces of bodies, these surfaces
+or cases, like the coats of an onion, are sometimes seen entire
+when they are separated from it, so that the shapes and shadows of
+both the dead and living are frequently beheld.'</p>
+
+<p>"But if they are, are their coats and waistcoats also seen? I do
+not disbelieve that we may be two by some unconscious process, to a
+certain sign, but which of these two I happen at present to be, I<span class="pagenum"><a id="page347" name="page347"></a>Pg 347</span>
+leave you to decide. I only hope that <i>t'other me</i> behaves like a
+gemman.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish you would get Peel asked how far I am accurate in my
+recollection of what he told me; for I don't like to say such
+things without authority.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not sure that I was <i>not spoken</i> with; but this also you can
+ascertain. I have written to you such letters that I stop.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. Last year (in June, 1819), I met at Count Mosti's, at
+Ferrara, an Italian who asked me 'if I knew Lord Byron?' I told him
+<i>no</i> (no one knows himself, <i>you</i> know). 'Then,' says he, 'I do; I
+met him at Naples the other day.' I pulled out my card and asked
+him if that was the way he spelt his name: he answered, <i>yes</i>. I
+suspect that it was a blackguard navy surgeon, who attended a young
+travelling madam about, and passed himself for a lord at the
+post-houses. He was a vulgar dog&mdash;quite of the cock-pit order&mdash;and
+a precious representative I must have had of him, if it was even
+so; but I don't know. He passed himself off as a gentleman, and
+squired about a Countess * * (of this place), then at Venice, an
+ugly battered woman, of bad morals even for Italy."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 390. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, 8bre 8&deg;, 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"Foscolo's letter is exactly the thing wanted; firstly, because he
+is a man of genius; and, next,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page348" name="page348"></a>Pg 348</span> because he is an Italian, and
+therefore the best judge of Italics. Besides,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"He's more an antique Roman than a Dane;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>that is, he is more of the ancient Greek than of the modern
+Italian. Though 'somewhat,' as Dugald Dalgetty says, 'too wild and
+sa<i>l</i>vage' (like 'Ronald of the Mist'), 'tis a wonderful man, and
+my friends Hobhouse and Rose both swear by him; and they are good
+judges of men and of Italian humanity.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"Here are in all <i>two</i> worthy voices gain'd:<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Gifford says it is good 'sterling genuine English,' and Foscolo
+says that the characters are right Venetian. Shakspeare and Otway
+had a million of advantages over me, besides the incalculable one
+of being <i>dead</i> from one to two centuries, and having been both
+born blackguards (which ARE such attractions to the gentle living
+reader); let me then preserve the only one which I could possibly
+have&mdash;that of having been at Venice, and entered more into the
+local spirit of it. I claim no more.</p>
+
+<p>"I know what Foscolo means about Calendaro's <i>spitting</i> at Bertram;
+<i>that's</i> national&mdash;the objection, I mean. The Italians and French,
+with those 'flags of abomination,' their pocket handkerchiefs, spit
+there, and here, and every where else&mdash;in your face almost, and
+therefore <i>object</i> to it on the stage as <i>too familiar</i>. But we who
+<i>spit</i> nowhere&mdash;but in a man's face when we grow savage&mdash;are not
+likely to feel this. Remember <i>Massinger</i>, and Kean's Sir Giles
+Overreach&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"Lord! <i>thus</i> I <i>spit</i> at thee and at thy counsel!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page349" name="page349"></a>Pg 349</span></p>
+<p>Besides, Calendaro does <i>not</i> spit in Bertram's face; he spits <i>at</i>
+him, as I have seen the Mussulmans do upon the ground when they are
+in a rage. Again, he <i>does not in fact despise</i> Bertram, though he
+affects it&mdash;as we all do, when angry with one we think our
+inferior. He is angry at not being allowed to die in his own way
+(although not afraid of death); and recollect that he suspected and
+hated Bertram from the first. Israel Bertuccio, on the other hand,
+is a cooler and more concentrated fellow: he acts upon <i>principle
+and impulse</i>; Calendaro upon <i>impulse</i> and <i>example</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"So there's argument for you.</p>
+
+<p>"The Doge <i>repeats</i>;&mdash;<i>true</i>, but it is from engrossing passion,
+and because he sees <i>different</i> persons, and is always obliged to
+recur to the <i>cause</i> uppermost in his mind. His speeches are
+long:&mdash;true, but I wrote for the <i>closet</i>, and on the French and
+Italian model rather than yours, which I think not very highly of,
+for all your <i>old</i> dramatists, who are long enough too, God
+knows:&mdash;<i>look</i> into any of them.</p>
+
+<p>"I return you Foscolo's letter, because it alludes also to his
+private affairs. I am sorry to see such a man in straits, because I
+know what they are, or what they were. I never met but three men
+who would have held out a finger to me: one was yourself, the other
+William Bankes, and the other a nobleman long ago dead: but of
+these the first was the only one who offered it while I <i>really</i>
+wanted it; the second from good will&mdash;but I was not in need of
+Bankes's aid, and would not have accepted it if I<span class="pagenum"><a id="page350" name="page350"></a>Pg 350</span> had (though I
+love and esteem him); and the <i>third</i> &mdash;&mdash;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;&mdash;.<a name="FNanchor_82_82" id="FNanchor_82_82"></a><a href="#Footnote_82_82" class="fnanchor">[82]</a></p>
+
+<p>"So you see that I have seen some strange things in my time. As for
+your own offer, it was in 1815, when I was in actual uncertainty of
+five pounds. I rejected it; but I have not forgotten it, although
+you probably have.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. Foscolo's Ricciardo was lent, with the <i>leaves uncut</i>, to
+some Italians, now in villeggiatura, so that I have had no
+opportunity of hearing their decision, or of reading it. They
+seized on it as Foscolo's, and on account of the beauty of the
+paper and printing, directly. If I find it takes, I will reprint it
+<i>here</i>. The Italians think as highly of Foscolo as they can of any
+man, divided and miserable as they are, and with neither leisure at
+present to read, nor head nor heart to judge of any thing but
+extracts from French newspapers and the Lugano Gazette.</p>
+
+<p>"We are all looking at one another, like wolves on their prey in
+pursuit, only waiting for the first falling on to do unutterable
+things. They are a great world in chaos, or angels in hell, which
+you please; but out of chaos came Paradise, and out of hell&mdash;I
+don't know what; but the devil went <i>in</i> there, and he was a fine
+fellow once, you know.</p>
+
+<p>"You need never favour me with any periodical publication, except
+the Edinburgh Quarterly, and an occasional Blackwood; or now and
+then a Monthly Review; for the rest I do not feel curiosity enough
+to look beyond their covers.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page351" name="page351"></a>Pg 351</span></p>
+
+<p>"To be sure I took in the British finely. He fell precisely into
+the glaring trap laid for him. It was inconceivable how he could be
+so absurd as to imagine us serious with him.</p>
+
+<p>"Recollect, that if you put my name to 'Don Juan' in these canting
+days, any lawyer might oppose my guardian right of my daughter in
+Chancery, on the plea of its containing the <i>parody</i>;&mdash;such are the
+perils of a foolish jest. I was not aware of this at the time, but
+you will find it correct, I believe; and you may be sure that the
+Noels would not let it slip. Now I prefer my child to a poem at any
+time, and so should you, as having half a dozen.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me know your notions.</p>
+
+<p>"If you turn over the earlier pages of the Huntingdon peerage
+story, you will see how common a name Ada was in the early
+Plantagenet days. I found it in my own pedigree in the reign of
+John and Henry, and gave it to my daughter. It was also the name of
+Charlemagne's sister. It is in an early chapter of Genesis, as the
+name of the wife of Lamech; and I suppose Ada is the feminine of
+<i>Adam</i>. It is short, ancient, vocalic, and had been in my family;
+for which reason I gave it to my daughter."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 391. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, 8bre 12&deg;, 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"By land and sea carriage a considerable quantity of books have
+arrived; and I am obliged and grateful: but 'medio de fonte
+leporum, surgit<span class="pagenum"><a id="page352" name="page352"></a>Pg 352</span> amari aliquid,' &amp;c. &amp;c.; which, being interpreted,
+means,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"I'm thankful for your books, dear Murray;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">But why not send Scott's Monast<i>ery</i>?<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>the only book in four <i>living</i> volumes I would give a baioccolo to
+see&mdash;'bating the rest of the same author, and an occasional
+Edinburgh and Quarterly, as brief chroniclers of the times. Instead
+of this, here are Johnny Keats's * * poetry, and three novels by
+God knows whom, except that there is Peg * * *'s name to one of
+them&mdash;a spinster whom I thought we had sent back to her spinning.
+Crayon is very good; Hogg's Tales rough, but RACY, and welcome.</p>
+
+<p>"Books of travels are expensive, and I don't want them, having
+travelled already; besides, they lie. Thank the author of 'The
+Profligate' for his (or her) present. Pray send me <i>no more</i> poetry
+but what is rare and decidedly good. There is such a trash of Keats
+and the like upon my tables that I am ashamed to look at them. I
+say nothing against your parsons, your S * *s and your C * *s&mdash;it
+is all very fine&mdash;but pray dispense me from the pleasure. Instead
+of poetry, if you will favour me with a few soda-powders, I shall
+be delighted: but all prose ('bating <i>travels</i> and novels NOT by
+Scott) is welcome, especially Scott's Tales of my Landlord, and so
+on.</p>
+
+<p>"In the notes to Marino Faliero, it may be as well to say that
+'<i>Benintende</i>' was not really of <i>the Ten</i>, but merely <i>Grand
+Chancellor</i>, a separate office (although important): it was an
+arbitrary alteration<span class="pagenum"><a id="page353" name="page353"></a>Pg 353</span> of mine. The Doges too were all <i>buried</i> in
+St. <i>Mark's before</i> Faliero. It is singular that when his
+predecessor, Andrea Dandolo, died, <i>the Ten</i> made a law that <i>all</i>
+the <i>future Doges</i> should be <i>buried with their families, in their
+own churches,&mdash;one would think by a kind of presentiment</i>. So that
+all that is said of his <i>ancestral Doges</i>, as buried at St. John's
+and Paul's, is altered from the fact, <i>they being in St. Mark's.
+Make a note</i> of this, and put <i>Editor</i> as the subscription to it.</p>
+
+<p>"As I make such pretensions to accuracy, I should not like to be
+<i>twitted</i> even with such trifles on that score. Of the play they
+may say what they please, but not so of my costume and <i>dram.
+pers.</i> they having been real existences.</p>
+
+<p>"I omitted Foscolo in my list of living <i>Venetian worthies, in the
+notes</i>, considering him as an <i>Italian</i> in general, and not a mere
+provincial like the rest; and as an Italian I have spoken of him in
+the preface to Canto 4th of Childe Harold.</p>
+
+<p>"The French translation of us!!! <i>oim&egrave;! oim&egrave;!</i>&mdash;the German; but I
+don't understand the latter and his long dissertation at the end
+about the Fausts. Excuse haste. Of politics it is not safe to
+speak, but nothing is decided as yet.</p>
+
+<p>"I am in a very fierce humour at not having Scott's Monastery. You
+are <i>too liberal</i> in quantity, and somewhat careless of the
+quality, of your missives. All the <i>Quarterlies</i> (four in number) I
+had had before from you, and <i>two</i> of the Edinburgh; but no matter;
+we shall have new ones by and by. No more Keats, I entreat:&mdash;flay
+him alive; if some<span class="pagenum"><a id="page354" name="page354"></a>Pg 354</span> of you don't, I must skin him myself. There is
+no bearing the drivelling idiotism of the manikin.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't feel inclined to care further about 'Don Juan.' What do
+you think a very pretty Italian lady said to me the other day? She
+had read it in the French, and paid me some compliments, with due
+DRAWBACKS, upon it. I answered that what she said was true, but
+that I suspected it would live longer than Childe Harold. '<i>Ah
+but</i>' (said she). '<i>I would rather have the fame of Childe Harold
+for three years than an</i> IMMORTALITY <i>of Don Juan!</i>' The truth is
+that <i>it is</i> TOO TRUE, and the women hate many things which strip
+off the tinsel of <i>sentiment</i>; and they are right, as it would rob
+them of their weapons. I never knew a woman who did not hate <i>De
+Grammont's Memoirs</i> for the same reason: even Lady * * used to
+abuse them.</p>
+
+<p>"Rose's work I never received. It was seized at Venice. Such is the
+liberality of the Huns, with their two hundred thousand men, that
+they dare not let such a volume as his circulate."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 392. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, 8bre 16&deg;, 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"The Abbot has just arrived; many thanks; as also for the
+<i>Monastery&mdash;when you send it!!!</i></p>
+
+<p>"The Abbot will have a more than ordinary interest for me, for an
+ancestor of mine by the mother's side, Sir J. Gordon of Gight, the
+handsomest of his day, died on a scaffold at Aberdeen for his
+loyalty to Mary, of whom he was an imputed para<span class="pagenum"><a id="page355" name="page355"></a>Pg 355</span>mour as well as her
+relation. His fate was much commented on in the Chronicles of the
+times. If I mistake not, he had something to do with her escape
+from Loch Leven, or with her captivity there. But this you will
+know better than I.</p>
+
+<p>"I recollect Loch Leven as it were but yesterday. I saw it in my
+way to England in 1798, being then ten years of age. My mother, who
+was as haughty as Lucifer with her descent from the Stuarts, and
+her right line from the <i>old Gordons, not the Seyton Gordons</i>, as
+she disdainfully termed the ducal branch, told me the story, always
+reminding me how superior <i>her</i> Gordons were to the southern
+Byrons, notwithstanding our Norman, and always masculine descent,
+which has never lapsed into a female, as my mother's Gordons had
+done in her own person.</p>
+
+<p>"I have written to you so often lately, that the brevity of this
+will be welcome. Yours," &amp;c.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p><b>LETTER 393. TO MR. MURRAY.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Ravenna, 8bre 17&deg;, 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"Enclosed is the Dedication of Marino Faliero to <i>Goethe</i>.
+Query,&mdash;is his title <i>Baron</i> or not? I think yes. Let me know your
+opinion, and so forth.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. Let me know what Mr. Hobhouse and you have decided about the
+two prose letters and their publication.</p>
+
+<p>"I enclose you an Italian abstract of the German translator of
+Manfred's Appendix, in which you will perceive quoted what Goethe
+says of the <i>whole body</i><span class="pagenum"><a id="page356" name="page356"></a>Pg 356</span> of English poetry (and <i>not</i> of me in
+particular). On this the Dedication is founded, as you will
+perceive, though I had thought of it before, for I look upon him as
+a great man."</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>The very singular Dedication transmitted with this letter has never
+before been published, nor, as far as I can learn, ever reached the
+hands of the illustrious German. It is written in the poet's most
+whimsical and mocking mood; and the unmeasured severity poured out in it
+upon the two favourite objects of his wrath and ridicule compels me to
+deprive the reader of some of its most amusing passages.</p>
+
+<p><b>DEDICATION TO BARON GOETHE, &amp;c. &amp;c. &amp;c.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Sir,&mdash;In the Appendix to an English work lately translated into
+German and published at Leipsic, a judgment of yours upon English
+poetry is quoted as follows: 'That in English poetry, great genius,
+universal power, a feeling of profundity, with sufficient
+tenderness and force, are to be found; but that <i>altogether these
+do not constitute poets</i>,' &amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"I regret to see a great man falling into a great mistake. This
+opinion of yours only proves that the '<i>Dictionary of ten thousand
+living English Authors</i>' has not been translated into German. You
+will have read, in your friend Schlegel's version, the dialogue in
+Macbeth&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i6">"'There are <i>ten thousand</i>!<br /></span>
+<span class="i4"><i>Macbeth</i>. <i>Geese</i>, villain?<br /></span>
+<span class="i4"><i>Answer</i>. <i>Authors</i>, sir.'<br /></span>
+</div></div><p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page357" name="page357"></a>Pg 357</span></p>
+
+<p>Now, of these 'ten thousand authors,' there are actually nineteen
+hundred and eighty-seven poets, all alive at this moment, whatever
+their works may be, as their booksellers well know; and amongst
+these there are several who possess a far greater reputation than
+mine, although considerably less than yours. It is owing to this
+neglect on the part of your German translators that you are not
+aware of the works of * * *.</p>
+
+<p>"There is also another, named * * * *</p>
+
+<p>"I mention these poets by way of sample to enlighten you. They form
+but two bricks of our Babel, (WINDSOR bricks, by the way,) but may
+serve for a specimen of the building.</p>
+
+<p>"It is, moreover, asserted that 'the predominant character of the
+whole body of the present English poetry is a <i>disgust</i> and
+<i>contempt</i> for life.' But I rather suspect that, by one single work
+of <i>prose</i>, <i>you</i> yourself have excited a greater contempt for life
+than all the English volumes of poesy that ever were written.
+Madame de Sta&euml;l says, that 'Werther has occasioned more suicides
+than the most beautiful woman;' and I really believe that he has
+put more individuals out of this world than Napoleon himself,
+except in the way of his profession. Perhaps, Illustrious Sir, the
+acrimonious judgment passed by a celebrated northern journal upon
+you in particular, and the Germans in general, has rather
+indisposed you towards English poetry as well as criticism. But you
+must not regard our critics, who are at bottom good-natured
+fellows, considering their two professions,&mdash;taking up the law in
+court, and laying<span class="pagenum"><a id="page358" name="page358"></a>Pg 358</span> it down out of it. No one can more lament their
+hasty and unfair judgment, in your particular, than I do; and I so
+expressed myself to your friend Schlegel, in 1816, at Coppet.</p>
+
+<p>"In behalf of my 'ten thousand' living brethren, and of myself, I
+have thus far taken notice of an opinion expressed with regard to
+'English poetry' in general, and which merited notice, because it
+was YOURS.</p>
+
+<p>"My principal object in addressing you was to testify my sincere
+respect and admiration of a man, who, for half a century, has led
+the literature of a great nation, and will go down to posterity as
+the first literary character of his age.</p>
+
+<p>"You have been fortunate, Sir, not only in the writings which have
+illustrated your name, but in the name itself, as being
+sufficiently musical for the articulation of posterity. In this you
+have the advantage of some of your countrymen, whose names would
+perhaps be immortal also&mdash;if any body could pronounce them.</p>
+
+<p>"It may, perhaps, be supposed, by this apparent tone of levity,
+that I am wanting in intentional respect towards you; but this will
+be a mistake: I am always flippant in prose. Considering you, as I
+really and warmly do, in common with all your own, and with most
+other nations, to be by far the first literary character which has
+existed in Europe since the death of Voltaire, I felt, and feel,
+desirous to inscribe to you the following work,&mdash;<i>not</i> as being
+either a tragedy or a <i>poem</i>, (for I cannot pronounce upon its
+pretensions to be either one or the other,<span class="pagenum"><a id="page359" name="page359"></a>Pg 359</span> or both, or neither,)
+but as a mark of esteem and admiration from a foreigner to the man
+who has been hailed in Germany 'THE GREAT GOETHE.'</p>
+
+<p>"I have the honour to be,</p>
+
+<p>"With the truest respect,</p>
+
+<p>"Your most obedient and</p>
+
+<p>"Very humble servant,</p>
+
+<p>"BYRON.</p>
+
+<p>"Ravenna, 8bre 14&deg;, 1820.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. I perceive that in Germany, as well as in Italy, there is a
+great struggle about what they call '<i>Classical</i>' and
+'<i>Romantic</i>,'&mdash;terms which were not subjects of classification in
+England, at least when I left it four or five years ago. Some of
+the English scribblers, it is true, abused Pope and Swift, but the
+reason was that they themselves did not know how to write either
+prose or verse; but nobody thought them worth making a sect of.
+Perhaps there may be something of the kind sprung up lately, but I
+have not heard much about it, and it would be such bad taste that I
+shall be very sorry to believe it."</p></div>
+
+
+<h5>END OF THE FOURTH VOLUME.</h5>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> It will be perceived that, as far as this, the original
+matter of the third Act has been retained.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> "Raven-stone (Rabenstein), a translation of the German word
+for the gibbet, which in Germany and Switzerland is permanent, and made
+of stone."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> This fine soliloquy, and a great part of the subsequent
+scene, have, it is hardly necessary to remark been retained in the
+present form of the Drama.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> Altered in the present form, to "some strange things in
+them, Herman."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> An allusion (such as often occurs in these letters) to an
+anecdote with which he had been amused.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> A tragedy, by the Rev. Mr. Maturin.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> A country-house on the Euganean hills, near Este, which Mr.
+Hoppner, who was then the English Consul-General at Venice, had for some
+time occupied, and which Lord Byron afterwards rented of him, but never
+resided in it.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> So great was the demand for horses, on the line of march of
+the Austrians, that all those belonging to private individuals were put
+in requisition for their use, and Lord Byron himself received an order
+to send his for the same purpose. This, however, he positively refused
+to do, adding, that if an attempt were made to take them by force, he
+would shoot them through the head in the middle of the road, rather than
+submit to such an act of tyranny upon a foreigner who was merely a
+temporary resident in the country. Whether his answer was ever reported
+to the higher authorities I know not; but his horses were suffered to
+remain unmolested in his stables.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> On this paragraph, in the MS. copy of the above letter, I
+find the following note, in the handwriting of Mr. Gifford:&mdash;
+</p><p>
+"There is more good sense, and feeling, and judgment in this passage,
+than in any other I ever read, or Lord Byron wrote."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> A paper in the Edinburgh Magazine, in which it was
+suggested that the general conception of Manfred, and much of what is
+excellent in the manner of its execution, had been borrowed from "The
+Tragical History of Dr. Faustus," of Marlow.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> "Vide your letter."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> Beppo.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> This possibly may have been the subject of the Poem given
+in p. 152. of the first volume.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> Having seen by accident the passage in one of his letters
+to Mr. Murray, in which he denounces, as false and worthless, the
+poetical system on which the greater number of his contemporaries, as
+well as himself, founded their reputation, I took an opportunity, in the
+next letter I wrote to him, of jesting a little on this opinion, and his
+motives for it. It was, no doubt (I ventured to say), excellent policy
+in him, who had made sure of his own immortality in this style of
+writing, thus to <i>throw overboard</i> all <i>us poor devils</i>, who were
+embarked with him. He was, in fact, I added, behaving towards us much in
+the manner of the methodist preacher who said to his congregation&mdash;"You
+may think, at the Last Day, to get to heaven by laying hold on my
+skirts; but I'll cheat you all, for I'll wear a spencer, I'll wear a
+spencer!"</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> On the birth of this child, who was christened John
+William Rizzo, Lord Byron wrote the four following lines, which are in
+no other respect remarkable than that they were thought worthy of being
+metrically translated into no less than ten different languages; namely,
+Greek, Latin, Italian (also in the Venetian dialect), German, French,
+Spanish, Illyrian, Hebrew, Armenian, and Samaritan:&mdash;
+</p>
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"His father's sense, his mother's grace<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">In him, I hope, will always fit so;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With (still to keep him in good case)<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">The health and appetite of Rizzo."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+<p>
+The original lines, with the different versions just mentioned, were
+printed, in a small neat volume (which now lies before me), in the
+seminary of Padua.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> Having ascertained that the utmost this translator could
+expect to make by his manuscript was two hundred francs, Lord Byron
+offered him that sum, if he would desist from publishing. The Italian,
+however, held out for more; nor could he be brought to terms, till it
+was intimated to him pretty plainly from Lord Byron that, should the
+publication be persisted in, he would horsewhip him the very first time
+they met. Being but little inclined to suffer martyrdom in the cause,
+the translator accepted the two hundred francs, and delivered up his
+manuscript, entering at the same time into a written engagement never to
+translate any other of the noble poet's works.
+</p><p>
+Of the qualifications of this person as a translator of English poetry,
+some idea may be formed from the difficulty he found himself under
+respecting the meaning of a line in the Incantation in Manfred,&mdash;"And
+the wisp on the morass,"&mdash;which he requested of Mr. Hoppner to expound
+to him, not having been able to find in the dictionaries to which he had
+access any other signification of the word "wisp" than "a bundle of
+straw."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> A continuation of Vathek, by the author of that very
+striking and powerful production. The "Tales" of which this unpublished
+sequel consists are, I understand, those supposed to have been related
+by the Princes in the Hall of Eblis.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> There follows, in this place, among other matter, a long
+string of verses, in various metres, to the amount of about sixty lines,
+so full of light gaiety and humour, that it is with some reluctance I
+suppress them. They might, however, have the effect of giving pain in
+quarters where even the author himself would not have deliberately
+inflicted it;&mdash;from a pen like his, touches may be wounds, and without
+being actually intended as such.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> Among Lord Byron's papers, I find some verses addressed to
+him, about this time, by Mr. W. Rose, with the following note annexed to
+them:&mdash;"These verses were sent to me by W.S. Rose, from Abaro, in the
+spring of 1818. They are good and true; and Rose is a fine fellow, and
+one of the few English who understand <i>Italy</i>, without which Italian is
+nothing." The verses begin thus:
+</p>
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Byron<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a>, while you make gay what circle fits ye,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Bandy Venetian slang with the Benz&ograve;n,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or play at company with the Albrizzi,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The self-pleased pedant, and patrician crone,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Grimanis, Mocenigos, Balbis, Rizzi,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Compassionate our cruel case,&mdash;alone,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Our pleasure an academy of frogs,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who nightly serenade us from the bogs," &amp;c. &amp;c.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> "I have <i>hunted</i> out a precedent for this unceremonious
+address."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> I had said, I think, in my letter to him, that this
+practice of carrying one stanza into another was "something like taking
+on horses another stage without baiting."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> I had, in first transcribing the above letter for the
+press, omitted the whole of this caustic, and, perhaps, over-severe
+character of Mr. Hunt; but the tone of that gentleman's book having, as
+far as himself is concerned, released me from all those scruples which
+prompted the suppression, I have considered myself at liberty to restore
+the passage.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_23_23" id="Footnote_23_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> The following are extracts from a letter of Shelley's to a
+friend at this time.
+</p>
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Venice, August, 1818.
+</p><p>
+"We came from Padua hither in a gondola; and the gondolier, among
+other things, without any hint on our part, began talking of Lord
+Byron. He said he was a 'Giovanotto Inglese,' with a 'nome
+stravagante,' who lived very luxuriously, and spent great sums of
+money.
+</p><p>
+"At three o'clock I called on Lord Byron. He was delighted to see
+me, and our first conversation of course consisted in the object of
+our visit. He took me in his gondola, across the Laguna, to a long,
+strandy sand, which defends Venice from the Adriatic. When we
+disembarked, we found his horses waiting for us, and we rode along
+the sands, talking. Our conversation consisted in histories of his
+own wounded feelings, and questions as to my affairs, with great
+professions of friendship and regard for me. He said that if he had
+been in England, at the time of the Chancery affair, he would have
+moved heaven and earth to have prevented such a decision. He talked
+of literary matters,&mdash;his fourth Canto, which he says is very good,
+and indeed repeated some stanzas, of great energy, to me. When we
+returned to his palace, which is one if the most magnificent in
+Venice," &amp;c. &amp;c.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_24_24" id="Footnote_24_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> In the preface also to this poem, under the fictitious
+name of Count Maddalo, the following just and striking portrait of Lord
+Byron is drawn:&mdash;
+</p><p>
+"He is a person of the most consummate genius, and capable, if he would
+direct his energies to such an end, of becoming the redeemer of his
+degraded country. But it is his weakness to be proud: he derives, from a
+comparison of his own extraordinary mind with the dwarfish intellects
+that surround him, an intense apprehension of the nothingness of human
+life. His passions and his powers are incomparably greater than those of
+other men, and instead of the latter having been employed in curbing the
+former, they have mutually lent each other strength. His ambition preys
+upon itself for want of objects which it can consider worthy of
+exertion. I say that Maddalo is proud, because I can find no other word
+to express the concentred and impatient feelings which consume him; but
+it is on his own hopes and affections only that he seems to trample, for
+in social life no human being can be more gentle, patient, and
+unassuming than Maddalo. He is cheerful, frank, and witty. His more
+serious conversation is a sort of intoxication. He has travelled much;
+and there is an inexpressible charm in his relation of his adventures in
+different countries."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_25_25" id="Footnote_25_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> Deeply is it, for many reasons, to be regretted that this
+friendly purpose did not succeed.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_26_26" id="Footnote_26_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> This little child had been sent to him by its mother about
+four or five months before, under the care of a Swiss nurse, a young
+girl not above nineteen or twenty years of age, and in every respect
+unfit to have the charge of such an infant, without the superintendence
+of some more experienced person. "The child, accordingly," says my
+informant, "was but ill taken care of;&mdash;not that any blame could attach
+to Lord Byron, for he always expressed himself most anxious for her
+welfare, but because the nurse wanted the necessary experience. The poor
+girl was equally to be pitied; for, as Lord Byron's household consisted
+of English and Italian men servants, with whom she could hold no
+converse, and as there was no other female to consult with and assist
+her in her charge, nothing could be more forlorn than her situation
+proved to be."
+</p><p>
+Soon after the date of the above letter, Mrs. Hoppner, the lady of the
+Consul General, who had, from the first, in compassion both to father
+and child, invited the little Allegra occasionally to her house, very
+kindly proposed to Lord Byron to take charge of her altogether, and an
+arrangement was accordingly concluded upon for that purpose.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_27_27" id="Footnote_27_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a>
+</p>
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"I had one only fount of quiet left,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And that they poison'd! <i>My pure household gods</i><br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><i>Were shivered on my hearth.</i>" MARINO FALIERO.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_28_28" id="Footnote_28_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> This correction, I observe, has never been made,&mdash;the
+passage still remaining, unmeaningly,
+</p>
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"<i>Lost</i> the unbalanced scale."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_29_29" id="Footnote_29_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> This passage also remains uncorrected.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_30_30" id="Footnote_30_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> "Nell' Aprile del 1819, io feci la conoscenza di Lord
+Byron; e mi fu presentato a Venezia dalla Contessa Benzoni nella di lei
+societ&agrave;. Questa presentazione che ebbe tante consequenze per tutti e due
+fu fatta contro la volont&agrave; d'entrambi, e solo per condiscendenza
+l'abbiamo permessa. Io stanca pi&ugrave; che mai quella sera par le ore tarde
+che si costuma fare in Venezia andai con molta ripugnanza e solo per
+ubbidire al Conte Guiccioli in quella societ&agrave;. Lord Byron che scansava
+di fare nuove conoscenze, dicendo sempre che aveva interamente
+rinunciato alle passioni e che non voleva esporsi pi&ugrave; alle loro
+consequenze, quando la Contessa Benzoni la preg&ograve; di volersi far
+presentare a me egl&igrave; recus&ograve;, e solo per la compi&agrave;cenza glielo permise.
+La nobile e bellissima sua fisonomia, il suono della sua voce, le sue
+maniere, i mille incanti che lo circondavano lo rendevano un essere cos&igrave;
+differente, cos&igrave; superiore a tutti quelli che io aveva sino allora
+veduti che non potei a meno di non provarne la pi&ugrave; profonda impressione.
+Da quella sera in poi in tutti i giorni che mi fermai in Venezia ei
+siamo seinpre veduti."&mdash;MS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_31_31" id="Footnote_31_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31_31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a> This story, as given in the Preface to the "Vampire," is
+as follows:&mdash;
+</p><p>
+"It appears that one evening Lord B., Mr. P.B. Shelley, two ladies, and
+the gentleman before alluded to, after having perused a German work
+called Phantasmagoria, began relating ghost stories, when his Lordship
+having recited the beginning of Christabel, then unpublished, the whole
+took so strong a hold of Mr. Shelley's mind, that he suddenly started
+up, and ran out of the room. The physician and Lord Byron followed, and
+discovered him leaning against a mantel-piece, with cold drops of
+perspiration trickling down his face. After having given him something
+to refresh him, upon enquiring into the cause of his alarm, they found
+that his wild imagination having pictured to him the bosom of one of the
+ladies with eyes (which was reported of a lady in the neighbourhood
+where he lived), he was obliged to leave the room in order to destroy
+the impression."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_32_32" id="Footnote_32_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32_32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a> A clerk of the English Consulate, whom he at this time
+employed to control his accounts.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_33_33" id="Footnote_33_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33_33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a> The Po.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_34_34" id="Footnote_34_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34_34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a> Though Lord Byron, like most other persons, in writing to
+different friends, was sometimes led to repeat the same circumstances
+and thoughts, there is, from the ever ready fertility of his mind, much
+less of such repetition in his correspondence than in that, perhaps, of
+any other multifarious letter-writer; and, in the instance before us,
+where the same facts and reflections are, for the second time,
+introduced, it is with such new touches, both of thought and expression,
+as render them, even a second time, interesting;&mdash;what is wanting in the
+novelty of the matter being made up by the new aspect given to it.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_35_35" id="Footnote_35_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35_35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a> There were, in the former edition, both here and in a
+subsequent letter, some passages reflecting upon the late Sir Samuel
+Romilly, which, in my anxiety to lay open the workings of Lord Byron's
+mind upon a subject in which so much of his happiness and character were
+involved, I had been induced to retain, though aware of the erroneous
+impression under which they were written;&mdash;the evident morbidness of the
+feeling that dictated the attack, and the high, stainless reputation of
+the person assailed, being sufficient, I thought, to neutralise any ill
+effects such reflections might otherwise have produced. As I find it,
+however, to be the opinion of all those whose opinions I most respect,
+that, even with these antidotes, such an attack upon such a man ought
+not to be left on record, I willingly expunge all trace of it from these
+pages.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_36_36" id="Footnote_36_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36_36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a>
+</p>
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Tal qual di ramo in ramo si raccoglie<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Per la pineta in sul lito di Chiassi,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Quando Eolo Scirocco fuor discioglie."<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">DANTE, PURG. Canto xxviii.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+<p>
+Dante himself (says Mr. Carey, in one of the notes on his admirable
+translation of this poet) "perhaps wandered in this wood during his
+abode with Guido Novello da Polenta."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_37_37" id="Footnote_37_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37_37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a> "Partendo io da Venezia egli promise di venir a vedermi a
+Ravenna. La Tomba di Dante, il classico bosco di pini, gli avvanzi di
+antichit&agrave; che a Ravenna si trovano davano a me ragioni plausibili per
+invitarlo a venire, ed a lui per accettare l'invito. Egli venne difatti
+nel mese Guigno, e giunse a Ravenna nel giorno della Solennit&agrave; del
+Corpus Domini, mentre io attaccata da una malattia de consunzione ch'
+ebbe principio dalla mia partenza da Venezia ero vicina a morire.
+L'arrivo in Ravenna d'un forestiero distinto, in un paese cos&igrave; lontano
+dalle strade che ordinariamente tengono i viaggiatori era un avvenimento
+del quale molto si parlava, indagandosene i motivi, che
+involontariamente poi egli feci conoscere. Perch&egrave; avendo egli domandato
+di me per venire a vedermi ed essendogli risposto 'che non potrebbe
+vedermi pi&ugrave; perch&egrave; ero vicina a morire'&mdash;egli rispose che in quel caso
+voleva morire egli pure; la qual cosa essendosi poi ripetata si conobbe
+cosi l'oggetto del suo viaggio.
+</p><p>
+"Il Conte Guiccioli visit&ograve; Lord Byron, essendolo conosciuto in Venezia,
+e nella speranza che la di lui compagnia potesse distrarmi ed essermi di
+qualche giovamento nello stato in cui mi trovavo egli lo invit&ograve; di
+venire a visitarmi. Il giorno appresso egli venne. Non si potrebbero
+descrivere le cure, i pensieri delicati, quanto egli fece per me. Per
+molto tempo egli non ebbe per le mani che dei Libri di Medicina; e poco
+confidandosi nel miei medici ottenne dal Conte Guiccioli il permesso di
+far venire un valente medico di lui amico nel quale egli aveva molta
+confidenza. Le cure del Professore Aglietti (cosi si chiama questo
+distinto Italiano) la tranquillit&agrave;, anzi la felicit&agrave; inesprimibile che
+mi cagionava la presenza di Lord Byron migliorarono cos&igrave; rapidamente la
+mia salute che entro lo spazio di due mesi potei seguire mio marito in
+un giro che egli doveva fare per le sue terre."&mdash;MS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_38_38" id="Footnote_38_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38_38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a> That this task of "governing" him was one of more ease
+than, from the ordinary view of his character, might be concluded, I
+have more than once, in these pages, expressed my opinion, and shall
+here quote, in corroboration of it, the remark of his own servant
+(founded on an observation of more than twenty years), in speaking of
+his master's matrimonial fate:&mdash;
+</p><p>
+"It is very odd, but I never yet knew a lady that could not manage my
+Lord, <i>except</i> my Lady."
+</p><p>
+"More knowledge," says Johnson, "may be gained of a man's real character
+by a short conversation with one of his servants than from the most
+formal and studied narrative."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_39_39" id="Footnote_39_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39_39"><span class="label">[39]</span></a> The Vice-Consul of Mr. Hoppner.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_40_40" id="Footnote_40_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40_40"><span class="label">[40]</span></a> An English widow lady, of considerable property in the
+north of England, who, having seen the little Allegra at Mr. Hoppner's,
+took an interest in the poor child's fate, and having no family of her
+own, offered to adopt and provide for this little girl, if Lord Byron
+would consent to renounce all claim to her. At first he seemed not
+disinclined to enter into her views&mdash;so far, at least, as giving
+permission that she should take the child with her to England and
+educate it; but the entire surrender of his paternal authority he would
+by no means consent to. The proposed arrangement accordingly was never
+carried into effect.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_41_41" id="Footnote_41_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41_41"><span class="label">[41]</span></a> "During my illness," says Madame Guiccioli, in her
+recollections of this period, "he was for ever near me, paying me the
+most amiable attentions, and when I became convalescent he was
+constantly at my side. In society, at the theatre, riding, walking, he
+never was absent from me. Being deprived at that time of his books, his
+horses, and all that occupied him at Venice, I begged him to gratify me
+by writing something on the subject of Dante, and, with his usual
+facility and rapidity, he composed his 'Prophecy.'"&mdash;"Durante la mia
+malattia L.B. era sempre presso di me, prestandomi le pi&ugrave; sensibili
+cure, e quando passai allo stato di convalescenza egli era sempre al mio
+fianco;&mdash;e in societ&agrave;, e al teatro, e cavalcando, e passeggiando egli
+non si allontanava mai da me. In quel' epoca essendo egli privo de' suoi
+libri, e de' suoi cavalli, e di tuttoci&ograve; che lo occupava in Venezia io
+lo pregai di volersi occupare per me scrivendo qualche cosa sul Dante;
+ed egli colla usata sua facilita e rapidita scrisse la sua Profezia."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_42_42" id="Footnote_42_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42_42"><span class="label">[42]</span></a> The "Dama," in whose company he witnessed this
+representation, thus describes its effect upon him:&mdash;"The play was that
+of Mirra; the actors, and particularly the actress who performed the
+part of Mirra, seconded with much success the intentions of our great
+dramatist. Lord Byron took a strong interest in the representation, and
+it was evident that he was deeply affected. At length there came a point
+of the performance at which he could no longer restrain his
+emotions;&mdash;he burst into a flood of tears, and, his sobs preventing him
+from remaining any longer in the box, he rose and left the theatre.&mdash;I
+saw him similarly affected another time during a representation of
+Alfieri's 'Philip,' at Ravenna."&mdash;"Gli attori, e specialmente l' attrice
+che rappresentava Mirra secondava assai bene la mente del nostro grande
+tragico. L.B. prece molto interesse alla rappresentazione, e si
+conosceva che era molto commosso. Venne un punto poi della tragedia in
+cui non pot&egrave; pi&ugrave; frenare la sua emozione,&mdash;diede in un diretto pianto e
+i singhiozzi gl' impedirono di pi&ugrave; restare nel palco; onde si lev&ograve;, e
+parti dal teatro. In uno stato simile lo viddi un altra volta a Ravenna
+ad una rappresentazione del Filippo d'Alfieri."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_43_43" id="Footnote_43_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43_43"><span class="label">[43]</span></a> It appeared afterwards in the Liberal.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_44_44" id="Footnote_44_44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_44_44"><span class="label">[44]</span></a> One of these notes, written at the end of the 5th chapter,
+18th book of Corinne ("Fragmens des Pens&eacute;es de Corinne") is as
+follows:&mdash;
+</p>
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"I knew Madame de Sta&euml;l well,&mdash;better than she knew Italy,&mdash;but I
+little thought that, one day, I should <i>think with her thoughts</i>,
+in the country where she has laid the scene of her most attractive
+productions. She is sometimes right, and often wrong, about Italy
+and England; but almost always true in delineating the heart, which
+is of but one nation, and of no country,&mdash;or, rather, of all.
+</p><p>
+"BYRON.
+</p><p>
+"Bologna, August 23. 1819."</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_45_45" id="Footnote_45_45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_45_45"><span class="label">[45]</span></a>
+</p>
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Oh Love! what is it, in this world of ours,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Which makes it fatal to be loved? ah! why<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With cypress branches hast thou wreath'd thy bowers,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And made thy best interpreter a sigh?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As those who dote on odours pluck the flowers,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And place them on their breasts&mdash;but place to die.&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thus the frail beings we would fondly cherish<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Are laid within our bosoms but to perish."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_46_46" id="Footnote_46_46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_46_46"><span class="label">[46]</span></a>
+</p>
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Am I now reposing on a bed of flowers?"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+<p>
+See ROBERTSON.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_47_47" id="Footnote_47_47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_47_47"><span class="label">[47]</span></a> "Il Conte Guiccioli doveva per affari ritornare a Ravenna;
+lo stato della mia salute esiggeva che io ritornassi in vece a Venezia.
+Egli acconsenti dunque che Lord Byron, mi fosse compagno di viaggio.
+Partimmo da Bologna alli 15 di S<sup>re</sup>.&mdash;visitammo insieme i Colli Euganei
+ed Arqu&agrave;; scrivemmo i nostri nomi nel libro che si presenta a quelli che
+fanno quel pellegrinaggio. Ma sopra tali rimembranze di felicit&agrave; non
+posso fermarmi, caro Sign<sup>r</sup>. Moore; l'opposizione col presente &eacute; troppo
+forte, e se un anima benedetta nel pieno godimento di tutte le felicit&agrave;
+celesti fosse mandata quaggi&ugrave; e condannata a sopportare tutte le miserie
+della nostra terra non potrebbe sentire pi&ugrave; terribile contrasto fr&agrave; il
+passato ed il presente di quello che io sento dacch&egrave; quella terribile
+parola &egrave; giunta alle mie orecchie, dacch&egrave; ho perduto la speranza di pi&ugrave;
+vedere quello di cui uno sguardo valeva per me pi&ugrave; di tutte le felicit&agrave;
+della terra. Giunti a Venezia i medici mi ordinarono di respirare l'aria
+della campagna. Egli aveva una villa alla Mira,&mdash;la cedesse a me, e
+venne meco. L&agrave; passammo l'autunno, e l&agrave; ebbi il bene di fare la vostra
+conoscenza."&mdash;MS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_48_48" id="Footnote_48_48"></a><a href="#FNanchor_48_48"><span class="label">[48]</span></a> The title of Segretario is sometimes given, as in this
+case, to a head-servant or house-steward.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_49_49" id="Footnote_49_49"></a><a href="#FNanchor_49_49"><span class="label">[49]</span></a> That this was the case with Milton is acknowledged by
+Richardson, who admired both Milton and the Arts too warmly to make such
+an admission upon any but valid grounds. "He does not appear," says this
+writer, "to have much regarded what was done with the pencil; no, not
+even when in Italy, in Rome, in the Vatican. Neither does it seem
+Sculpture was much esteemed by him." After an authority like this, the
+theories of Hayley and others, with respect to the impressions left upon
+Milton's mind by the works of art he had seen in Italy, are hardly worth
+a thought. Though it may be conceded that Dante was an admirer of the
+Arts, his recommendation of the Apocalypse to Giotto, as a source of
+subjects for the pencil, shows, at least, what indifferent judges poets
+are, in general, of the sort of fancies fittest to be embodied by the
+painter.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_50_50" id="Footnote_50_50"></a><a href="#FNanchor_50_50"><span class="label">[50]</span></a> The writer here, no doubt, alludes to such questionable
+liberalities as those exercised towards the husbands of his two
+favourites, Madame S * * and the Fornarina.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_51_51" id="Footnote_51_51"></a><a href="#FNanchor_51_51"><span class="label">[51]</span></a> The circumstance here alluded to may be most clearly,
+perhaps, communicated to my readers through the medium of the following
+extract from a letter which Mr. Barry (the friend and banker of Lord
+Byron) did me the favour of addressing to me, soon after his Lordship's
+death:&mdash;"When Lord Byron went to Greece, he gave me orders to advance
+money to Madame G * *; but that lady would never consent to receive any.
+His Lordship had also told me that he meant to leave his will in my
+hands, and that there would be a bequest in it of 10,000<i>l.</i> to Madame G
+* *. He mentioned this circumstance also to Lord Blessington. When the
+melancholy news of his death reached me, I took for granted that this
+will would be found among the sealed papers he had left with me; but
+there was no such instrument. I immediately then wrote to Madame G * *,
+enquiring if she knew any thing concerning it, and mentioning, at the
+same time, what his Lordship had said is to the legacy. To this the lady
+replied, that he had frequently spoken to her on the same subject, but
+that she had always cut the conversation short, as it was a topic she by
+no means liked to hear him speak upon. In addition, she expressed a wish
+that no such will as I had mentioned would be found; as her
+circumstances were already sufficiently independent, and the world might
+put a wrong construction on her attachment, should it appear that her
+fortunes were, in any degree, bettered by it."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_52_52" id="Footnote_52_52"></a><a href="#FNanchor_52_52"><span class="label">[52]</span></a> This will remind the reader of Moli&egrave;re's avowal in
+speaking of wit:&mdash;"C'est mon bien, et je le prends partout o&ugrave; je le
+trouve."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_53_53" id="Footnote_53_53"></a><a href="#FNanchor_53_53"><span class="label">[53]</span></a> The History of Agathon, by Wieland.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_54_54" id="Footnote_54_54"></a><a href="#FNanchor_54_54"><span class="label">[54]</span></a> Between Wieland, the author of this Romance, and Lord
+Byron, may be observed some of those generic points of resemblance which
+it is so interesting to trace in the characters of men of genius. The
+German poet, it is said, never perused any work that made a strong
+impression upon him, without being stimulated to commence one, himself,
+on the same topic and plan; and in Lord Byron the imitative principle
+was almost equally active,&mdash;there being few of his poems that might not,
+in the same manner, be traced to the strong impulse given to his
+imagination by the perusal of some work that had just before interested
+him. In the history, too, of their lives and feelings, there was a
+strange and painful coincidence,&mdash;the revolution that took place in all
+Wieland's opinions, from the Platonism and romance of his youthful days,
+to the material and Epicurean doctrines that pervaded all his maturer
+works, being chiefly, it is supposed, brought about by the shock his
+heart had received from a disappointment of its affections in early
+life. Speaking of the illusion of this first passion, in one of his
+letters, he says,&mdash;"It is one for which no joys, no honours, no gifts of
+fortune, not even wisdom itself can afford an equivalent, and which,
+when it has once vanished, returns no more."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_55_55" id="Footnote_55_55"></a><a href="#FNanchor_55_55"><span class="label">[55]</span></a>
+</p>
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"'Tis but a portrait of his son and wife,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And self; but such a woman! love in life!"<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">BEPPO, Stanza xii.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+<p>
+This seems, by the way, to be an incorrect description of the picture,
+as, according to Vasari and others, Giorgione never was married, and
+died young.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_56_56" id="Footnote_56_56"></a><a href="#FNanchor_56_56"><span class="label">[56]</span></a> "Egli viene per vedere le meraviglie di questa Citt&agrave;, e
+sono certa che nessuno meglio di lui saprebbe gustarle. Mi sar&agrave; grato
+che vi facciate sua guida come potrete, e voi poi me ne avrete obbligo.
+Egli &egrave; amico de Lord Byron&mdash;s&agrave; la sua storia assai pi&ugrave; precisamente di
+quelli che a voi la raccontarono. Egli dunque vi racconter&agrave; se lo
+interrogherete <i>la forma, le dimensioni</i>, e tuttoci&ograve; che vi piacer&agrave; del
+<i>Castello ove tiene imprigionata una giovane innocente sposa</i>, &amp;c. &amp;c.
+Mio caro Pietro, quando ti sei bene sfogato a ridere, allora rispondi
+due righe alla tua sorella, che t' ama e t' amer&agrave; sempre colla maggiore
+tenerezza."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_57_57" id="Footnote_57_57"></a><a href="#FNanchor_57_57"><span class="label">[57]</span></a> Mr. Hoppner, before his departure from Venice for
+Switzerland, had, with all the zeal of a true friend, written a letter
+to Lord Byron, entreating him "to leave Ravenna while yet he had a whole
+skin, and urging him not to risk the safety of a person he appeared so
+sincerely attached to&mdash;as well as his own&mdash;for the gratification of a
+momentary passion, which could only be a source of regret to both
+parties." In the same letter Mr. Hoppner informed him of some reports he
+had heard lately at Venice, which, though possibly, he said, unfounded,
+had much increased his anxiety respecting the consequences of the
+connection formed by him.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_58_58" id="Footnote_58_58"></a><a href="#FNanchor_58_58"><span class="label">[58]</span></a> "This language" (says Mr. Hoppner, in some remarks upon
+the above letter) "is strong, but it was the language of prejudice; and
+he was rather apt thus to express the feelings of the moment, without
+troubling himself to consider how soon he might be induced to change
+them. He was at this time so sensitive on the subject of Madame * *,
+that, merely because some persons had disapproved of her conduct, he
+declaimed in the above manner against the whole nation. I never"
+(continues Mr. Hoppner) "was partial to Venice; but disliked it almost
+from the first month of my residence there. Yet I experienced more
+kindness in that place than I ever met with in any country, and
+witnessed acts of generosity and disinterestedness such as rarely are
+met with elsewhere."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_59_59" id="Footnote_59_59"></a><a href="#FNanchor_59_59"><span class="label">[59]</span></a> I beg to say that this report of my opinion of Venice is
+coloured somewhat too deeply by the feelings of the reporter.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_60_60" id="Footnote_60_60"></a><a href="#FNanchor_60_60"><span class="label">[60]</span></a> The following curious particulars of his delirium are
+given by Madame Guiccioli:&mdash;"At the beginning of winter Count Guiccioli
+came from Ravenna to fetch me. When he arrived, Lord Byron was ill of a
+fever, occasioned by his having got wet through;&mdash;a violent storm having
+surprised him while taking his usual exercise on horseback. He had been
+delirious the whole night, and I had watched continually by his bedside.
+During his delirium he composed a good many verses, and ordered his
+servant to write them down from his dictation. The rhythm of these
+verses was quite correct, and the poetry itself had no appearance of
+being the work of a delirious mind. He preserved them for some time
+after he got well, and then burned them."&mdash;"Sul cominciare dell' inverno
+il Conte Guiccioli venne a prendermi per ricondurmi a Ravenna. Quando
+egli giunse Ld. Byron era ammalato di febbri prese per essersi bagnato
+avendolo sorpreso un forte temporale mentre faceva l' usato suo
+esercizio a cavallo. Egli aveva delirato tutta la notte, ed io aveva
+sempre vegliato presso al suo letto. Nel suo delirio egli compose molti
+versi che ordin&ograve; al suo domestico di scrivere sotto la sua dittatura. La
+misura dei versi era esatissima, e la poesia pure non pareva opera di
+una mente in delirio. Egli la conserv&ograve; lungo tempo dopo restabilito&mdash;poi
+l' abbrucci&ograve;."
+</p><p>
+I have been informed, too, that, during his ravings at this time, he was
+constantly haunted by the idea of his mother-in-law,&mdash;taking every one
+that came near him for her, and reproaching those about him for letting
+her enter his room.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_61_61" id="Footnote_61_61"></a><a href="#FNanchor_61_61"><span class="label">[61]</span></a> "Tu sei, e sarai sempre mio primo pensier. Ma in questo
+momento sono in un' stato orribile non sapendo cosa decidere;&mdash;temendo,
+da una parte, comprometterti in eterno col mio ritorno a Ravenna, e
+colle sue consequenze; e, dal' altra perderti, e me stesso, e tutto quel
+che ho conosciuto o gustato di felicit&agrave;, nel non vederti pi&ugrave;. Ti prego,
+ti supplico calmarti, e credere che non posso cessare ad amarti che
+colla vita."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_62_62" id="Footnote_62_62"></a><a href="#FNanchor_62_62"><span class="label">[62]</span></a> "Io parto, per <i>salvarti</i>, e lascio un paese divenuto
+insopportabile senza di te. Le tue lettere alla F * *, ed anche a me
+stesso fanno torto ai miei motivi; ma col tempo vedrai la tua
+ingiustizia. Tu parli del dolor&mdash;io lo sento, ma mi mancano le parole.
+Non basta lasciarti per dei motivi dei quali tu eri persuasa (non molto
+tempo fa)&mdash;non basta partire dall' Italia col cuore lacerato, dopo aver
+passato tutti i giorni dopo la tua partenza nella solitudine, ammalato
+di corpo e di anima&mdash;ma ho anche a sopportare i tuoi rimproveri, senza
+replicarti, e senza meritarli. Addio&mdash;in quella parola &egrave; compresa la
+morte <i>di</i> mia felicit&agrave;."
+</p><p>
+The close of this last sentence exhibits one of the very few instances
+of incorrectness that Lord Byron falls into in these letters;&mdash;the
+proper construction being "<i>della</i> mia felicit&agrave;."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_63_63" id="Footnote_63_63"></a><a href="#FNanchor_63_63"><span class="label">[63]</span></a> "Egli era tutto vestito di viaggio coi guanti fra le mani,
+col suo bonnet, e persino colla piccola sua canna; non altro aspettavasi
+che egli scendesse le scale, tutti i bauli erano in barca. Milord fa la
+pretesta che se suona un ora dopo il mezzodi e che non sia ogni cosa
+all' ordine (poich&egrave; le armi sole non erano in pronto) egli non
+partirebbe pi&ugrave; per quel giorno. L'ora suona ed egli resta."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_64_64" id="Footnote_64_64"></a><a href="#FNanchor_64_64"><span class="label">[64]</span></a> "La F * * ti avra detta, <i>colla sua solita sublimit&agrave;</i>, che
+l'Amor ha vinto. Io non ho potuto trovare forza di anima per lasciare il
+paese dove tu sei, senza vederti almeno un' altra volta:&mdash;forse
+dipender&agrave; da <i>te</i> se mai ti lascio pi&ugrave;. Per il resto parleremo. Tu
+dovresti adesso sapere cosa sar&agrave; pi&ugrave; convenevole al tuo ben essere la
+mia presenza o la mia lontananza. Io sono cittadino del mondo&mdash;tutti i
+paesi sono eguali per me. Tu sei stata sempre (dopo che ci siamo
+conosciuti) <i>l'unico oggetto di miei</i> pensieri. Credeva che il miglior
+partito per la pace tua e la pace di tua famiglia fosse il mio partire,
+e andare ben <i>lontano</i>; poich&egrave; stare vicino e non avvicinarti sarebbe
+per me impossible. Ma tu hai deciso che io debbo ritornare a
+Ravenna&mdash;tornaro&mdash;e far&ograve;&mdash;e sar&ograve; ci&ograve; die tu vuoi. Non posso dirti di
+pi&ugrave;."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_65_65" id="Footnote_65_65"></a><a href="#FNanchor_65_65"><span class="label">[65]</span></a> This is one of the many mistakes into which his distance
+from the scene of literary operations led him. The gentleman, to whom
+the hostile article in the Magazine is here attributed, has never,
+either then or since, written upon the subject of the noble poet's
+character or genius, without giving vent to a feeling of admiration as
+enthusiastic as it is always eloquently and powerfully expressed.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_66_66" id="Footnote_66_66"></a><a href="#FNanchor_66_66"><span class="label">[66]</span></a>
+</p>
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Gehenna of the waters! thou Sea-Sodom!"<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">MARINO FALIERO.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_67_67" id="Footnote_67_67"></a><a href="#FNanchor_67_67"><span class="label">[67]</span></a> The word here, being under the seal, is illegible.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_68_68" id="Footnote_68_68"></a><a href="#FNanchor_68_68"><span class="label">[68]</span></a> It has been suggested to me that usbergo is obviously the
+same as hauberk, habergeon, &amp;c. all from the German <i>halsberg</i>, or
+covering of the neck.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_69_69" id="Footnote_69_69"></a><a href="#FNanchor_69_69"><span class="label">[69]</span></a> There were in this Poem, originally, three lines of
+remarkable strength and severity, which, as the Italian poet against
+whom they were directed was then living, were omitted in the
+publication. I shall here give them from memory.
+</p>
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"The prostitution of his Muse and wife,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Both beautiful, and both by him debased,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Shall salt his bread and give him means of life."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_70_70" id="Footnote_70_70"></a><a href="#FNanchor_70_70"><span class="label">[70]</span></a> "In some of the editions, it is, 'diro,' in others
+'faro;'&mdash;an essential difference between 'saying' and 'doing,' which I
+know not how to decide. Ask Foscolo. The d&mdash;&mdash;d editions drive me mad."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_71_71" id="Footnote_71_71"></a><a href="#FNanchor_71_71"><span class="label">[71]</span></a> When making the observations which occur in the early
+part of this work, on the singular preference given by the noble
+author to the "Hints from Horace," I was not aware of the revival
+of this strange predilection, which (as it appears from the above
+letter, and, still more strongly, from some that follow) took place
+so many years after, in the full maturity of his powers and taste.
+Such a delusion is hardly conceivable, and can only, perhaps, be
+accounted for by that tenaciousness of early opinions and
+impressions by which his mind, in other respects so versatile, was
+characterised.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_72_72" id="Footnote_72_72"></a><a href="#FNanchor_72_72"><span class="label">[72]</span></a> Of Don Juan.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_73_73" id="Footnote_73_73"></a><a href="#FNanchor_73_73"><span class="label">[73]</span></a> According to his desire, I waited upon this young lady,
+having provided myself with a rouleau of fifteen or twenty Napoleons to
+present to her from his Lordship; but, with a very creditable spirit, my
+young countrywoman declined the gift, saying that Lord Byron had
+mistaken the object of her application to him, which was to request
+that, by allowing her to have the sheets of some of his works before
+publication, he would enable her to prepare early translations for the
+French booksellers, and thus afford her the means of acquiring something
+towards a livelihood.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_74_74" id="Footnote_74_74"></a><a href="#FNanchor_74_74"><span class="label">[74]</span></a> M. Lamartine.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_75_75" id="Footnote_75_75"></a><a href="#FNanchor_75_75"><span class="label">[75]</span></a> Of this kind are the accounts, filled with all sorts of
+circumstantial wonders, of his residence in the island of Mytilene;&mdash;his
+voyages to Sicily,&mdash;to Ithaca, with the Countess Guiccioli, &amp;c.
+&amp;c. But the most absurd, perhaps, of all these fabrications, are the
+stories told by Pouqueville, of the poet's religious conferences in the
+cell of Father Paul, at Athens; and the still more unconscionable
+fiction in which Rizo has indulged, in giving the details of a pretended
+theatrical scene, got up (according to this poetical historian) between
+Lord Byron and the Archbishop of Arta, at the tomb of Botzaris, in
+Missolonghi.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_76_76" id="Footnote_76_76"></a><a href="#FNanchor_76_76"><span class="label">[76]</span></a> The critic here subjoins the soliloquy from Manfred,
+beginning "We are the fools of time and terror," in which the allusion
+to Pausanias occurs.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_77_77" id="Footnote_77_77"></a><a href="#FNanchor_77_77"><span class="label">[77]</span></a> An Irish phrase for being in a scrape.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_78_78" id="Footnote_78_78"></a><a href="#FNanchor_78_78"><span class="label">[78]</span></a> The title given him by M. Lamartine, in one of his Poems.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_79_79" id="Footnote_79_79"></a><a href="#FNanchor_79_79"><span class="label">[79]</span></a> I had congratulated him upon arriving at what Dante calls
+the "mezzo cammin" of life, the age of thirty-three.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_80_80" id="Footnote_80_80"></a><a href="#FNanchor_80_80"><span class="label">[80]</span></a> I had mistaken the concluding words of his letter of the
+9th of June.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_81_81" id="Footnote_81_81"></a><a href="#FNanchor_81_81"><span class="label">[81]</span></a> The angry note against English travellers appended to this
+tragedy, in consequence of an assertion made by some recent tourist,
+that he (or as it afterwards turned out, she) "had repeatedly declined
+an introduction to Lord Byron while in Italy."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_82_82" id="Footnote_82_82"></a><a href="#FNanchor_82_82"><span class="label">[82]</span></a> The paragraph is left thus imperfect in the original.</p></div>
+
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Life of Lord Byron, Vol. IV, by Thomas Moore
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Life of Lord Byron, Vol. IV, by Thomas Moore
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Life of Lord Byron, Vol. IV
+ With His Letters and Journals
+
+Author: Thomas Moore
+
+Release Date: August 19, 2005 [EBook #16549]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LIFE OF LORD BYRON, VOL. IV ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Taavi Kalju and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+LIFE
+
+OF
+
+LORD BYRON:
+
+WITH HIS LETTERS AND JOURNALS.
+
+BY THOMAS MOORE, ESQ.
+
+IN SIX VOLUMES.--VOL. IV.
+
+NEW EDITION.
+
+
+LONDON: JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET. 1854.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS OF VOL. IV
+
+
+LETTERS AND JOURNALS OF LORD BYRON, WITH NOTICES OF HIS LIFE, from
+April, 1817, to October, 1820.
+
+
+
+
+NOTICES
+
+OF THE
+
+LIFE OF LORD BYRON.
+
+
+
+
+LETTER 272. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, April 9. 1817.
+
+ "Your letters of the 18th and 20th are arrived. In my own I have
+ given you the rise, progress, decline, and fall, of my recent
+ malady. It is gone to the devil: I won't pay him so bad a
+ compliment as to say it came from him;--he is too much of a
+ gentleman. It was nothing but a slow fever, which quickened its
+ pace towards the end of its journey. I had been bored with it some
+ weeks--with nocturnal burnings and morning perspirations; but I am
+ quite well again, which I attribute to having had neither medicine
+ nor doctor thereof.
+
+ "In a few days I set off for Rome: such is my purpose. I shall
+ change it very often before Monday next, but do you continue to
+ direct and address to _Venice_, as heretofore. If I go, letters
+ will be forwarded: I say '_if_,' because I never know what I shall
+ do till it is done; and as I mean most firmly to set out for Rome,
+ it is not unlikely I may find myself at St. Petersburg.
+
+ "You tell me to 'take care of myself;'--faith, and I will. I won't
+ be posthumous yet, if I can help it. Notwithstanding, only think
+ what a 'Life and Adventures,' while I am in full scandal, would be
+ worth, together with the 'membra' of my writing-desk, the sixteen
+ beginnings of poems never to be finished! Do you think I would not
+ have shot myself last year, had I not luckily recollected that Mrs.
+ C * * and Lady N * *, and all the old women in England would have
+ been delighted;--besides the agreeable 'Lunacy,' of the 'Crowner's
+ Quest,' and the regrets of two or three or half a dozen? Be assured
+ that I _would live_ for two reasons, or more;--there are one or two
+ people whom I have to put out of the world, and as many into it,
+ before I can 'depart in peace;' if I do so before, I have not
+ fulfilled my mission. Besides, when I turn thirty, I will turn
+ devout; I feel a great vocation that way in Catholic churches, and
+ when I hear the organ.
+
+ "So * * is writing again! Is there no Bedlam in Scotland? nor
+ thumb-screw? nor gag? nor hand-cuff? I went upon my knees to him
+ almost, some years ago, to prevent him from publishing a political
+ pamphlet, which would have given him a livelier idea of 'Habeas
+ Corpus' than the world will derive from his present production upon
+ that suspended subject, which will doubtless be followed by the
+ suspension of other of his Majesty's subjects.
+
+ "I condole with Drury Lane and rejoice with * *,--that is, in a
+ modest way,--on the tragical end of the new tragedy.
+
+ "You and Leigh Hunt have quarrelled then, it seems? I introduce him
+ and his poem to you, in the hope that (malgre politics) the union
+ would be beneficial to both, and the end is eternal enmity; and yet
+ I did this with the best intentions: I introduce * * *, and * * *
+ runs away with your money: my friend Hobhouse quarrels, too, with
+ the Quarterly: and (except the last) I am the innocent Istmhus
+ (damn the word! I can't spell it, though I have crossed that of
+ Corinth a dozen times) of these enmities.
+
+ "I will tell you something about Chillon.--A Mr. _De Luc_, ninety
+ years old, a Swiss, had it read to him, and is pleased with it,--so
+ my sister writes. He said that he was _with Rousseau_ at _Chillon_,
+ and that the description is perfectly correct. But this is not all:
+ I recollected something of the name, and find the following passage
+ in 'The Confessions,' vol. iii. page 247. liv. viii.:--
+
+ "'De tous ces amusemens celui qui me plut davantage fut une
+ promenade autour du Lac, que je fis en bateau avec _De Luc_ pere,
+ sa bru, ses _deux fils_, et ma Therese. Nous mimes sept jours a
+ cette tournee par le plus beau temps du monde. J'en gardai le vif
+ souvenir des sites qui m'avoient frappe a l'autre extremite du Lac,
+ et dont je fis la description, quelques annees apres, dans la
+ Nouvelle Heloise'
+
+ "This nonagenarian, De Luc, must be one of the 'deux fils.' He is
+ in England--infirm, but still in faculty. It is odd that he should
+ have lived so long, and not wanting in oddness that he should have
+ made this voyage with Jean Jacques, and afterwards, at such an
+ interval, read a poem by an Englishman (who had made precisely the
+ same circumnavigation) upon the same scenery.
+
+ "As for 'Manfred,' it is of no use sending _proofs_; nothing of
+ that kind comes. I sent the whole at different times. The two first
+ Acts are the best; the third so so; but I was blown with the first
+ and second heats. You must call it 'a Poem,' for it is _no Drama_,
+ and I do not choose to have it called by so * * a name--a 'Poem in
+ dialogue,' or--Pantomime, if you will; any thing but a green-room
+ synonyme; and this is your motto--
+
+ "'There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,
+ Than are dreamt of in your philosophy.'
+
+ "Yours ever, &c.
+
+ "My love and thanks to Mr. Gifford."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 273. TO MR. MOORE.
+
+ "Venice, April 11. 1817.
+
+ "I shall continue to write to you while the fit is on me, by way of
+ penance upon you for your former complaints of long silence. I dare
+ say you would blush, if you could, for not answering. Next week I
+ set out for Rome. Having seen Constantinople, I should like to look
+ at t'other fellow. Besides, I want to see the Pope, and shall take
+ care to tell him that I vote for the Catholics and no Veto.
+
+ "I sha'n't go to Naples. It is but the second best sea-view, and I
+ have seen the first and third, viz. Constantinople and Lisbon, (by
+ the way, the last is but a river-view; however, they reckon it
+ after Stamboul and Naples, and before Genoa,) and Vesuvius is
+ silent, and I have passed by AEtna. So I shall e'en return to Venice
+ in July; and if you write, I pray you to address to Venice, which
+ is my head, or rather my _heart_, quarters.
+
+ "My late physician, Dr. Polidori, is here on his way to England,
+ with the present Lord G * * and the widow of the late earl. Dr.
+ Polidori has, just now, no more patients, because his patients are
+ no more. He had lately three, who are now all dead--one embalmed.
+ Horner and a child of Thomas Hope's are interred at Pisa and Rome.
+ Lord G * * died of an inflammation of the bowels: so they took them
+ out, and sent them (on account of their discrepancies), separately
+ from the carcass, to England. Conceive a man going one way, and his
+ intestines another, and his immortal soul a third!--was there ever
+ such a distribution? One certainly has a soul; but how it came to
+ allow itself to be enclosed in a body is more than I can imagine. I
+ only know if once mine gets out, I'll have a bit of a tussle before
+ I let it get in again to that or any other.
+
+ "And so poor dear Mr. Maturin's second tragedy has been neglected
+ by the discerning public! * * will be d----d glad of this, and
+ d----d without being glad, if ever his own plays come upon 'any
+ stage.'
+
+ "I wrote to Rogers the other day, with a message for you. I hope
+ that he flourishes. He is the Tithonus of poetry--immortal
+ already. You and I must wait for it.
+
+ "I hear nothing--know nothing. You may easily suppose that the
+ English don't seek me, and I avoid them. To be sure, there are but
+ few or none here, save passengers. Florence and Naples are their
+ Margate and Ramsgate, and much the same sort of company too, by all
+ accounts, which hurts us among the Italians.
+
+ "I want to hear of Lalla Rookh--are you out? Death and fiends! why
+ don't you tell me where you are, what you are, and how you are? I
+ shall go to Bologna by Ferrara, instead of Mantua: because I would
+ rather see the cell where they caged Tasso, and where he became mad
+ and * *, than his own MSS. at Modena, or the Mantuan birthplace of
+ that harmonious plagiary and miserable flatterer, whose cursed
+ hexameters were drilled into me at Harrow. I saw Verona and Vicenza
+ on my way here--Padua too.
+
+ "I go alone,--but alone, because I mean to return here. I only want
+ to see Rome. I have not the least curiosity about Florence, though
+ I must see it for the sake of the Venus, &c. &c.; and I wish also
+ to see the Fall of Terni. I think to return to Venice by Ravenna
+ and Rimini, of both of which I mean to take notes for Leigh Hunt,
+ who will be glad to hear of the scenery of his Poem. There was a
+ devil of a review of him in the Quarterly, a year ago, which he
+ answered. All answers are imprudent: but, to be sure, poetical
+ flesh and blood must have the last word--that's certain. I
+ thought, and think, very highly of his Poem; but I warned him of
+ the row his favourite antique phraseology would bring him into.
+
+ "You have taken a house at Hornsey: I had much rather you had taken
+ one in the Apennines. If you think of coming out for a summer, or
+ so, tell me, that I may be upon the hover for you.
+
+ "Ever," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 274. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, April 14. 1817.
+
+ "By the favour of Dr. Polidori, who is here on his way to England
+ with the present Lord G * *, (the late earl having gone to England
+ by another road, accompanied by his bowels in a separate coffer,) I
+ remit to you, to deliver to Mrs. Leigh, _two miniatures_;
+ previously you will have the goodness to desire Mr. Love (as a
+ peace-offering between him and me) to set them in plain gold, with
+ my arms complete, and 'Painted by Prepiani--Venice, 1817,' on the
+ back. I wish also that you would desire Holmes to make a copy of
+ _each_--that is, both--for myself, and that you will retain the
+ said copies till my return. One was done while I was very unwell;
+ the other in my health, which may account for their dissimilitude.
+ I trust that they will reach their destination in safety.
+
+ "I recommend the Doctor to your good offices with your government
+ friends; and if you can be of any use to him in a literary point of
+ view, pray be so.
+
+ "To-day, or rather yesterday, for it is past midnight, I have been
+ up to the battlements of the highest tower in Venice, and seen it
+ and its view, in all the glory of a clear Italian sky. I also went
+ over the Manfrini Palace, famous for its pictures. Amongst them,
+ there is a portrait of _Ariosto_ by _Titian_, surpassing all my
+ anticipation of the power of painting or human expression: it is
+ the poetry of portrait, and the portrait of poetry. There was also
+ one of some learned lady, centuries old, whose name I forget, but
+ whose features must always be remembered. I never saw greater
+ beauty, or sweetness, or wisdom:--it is the kind of face to go mad
+ for, because it cannot walk out of its frame. There is also a
+ famous dead Christ and live Apostles, for which Buonaparte offered
+ in vain five thousand louis; and of which, though it is a capo
+ d'opera of Titian, as I am no connoisseur, I say little, and
+ thought less, except of one figure in it. There are ten thousand
+ others, and some very fine Giorgiones amongst them, &c. &c. There
+ is an original Laura and Petrarch, very hideous both. Petrarch has
+ not only the dress, but the features and air of an old woman, and
+ Laura looks by no means like a young one, or a pretty one. What
+ struck me most in the general collection was the extreme
+ resemblance of the style of the female faces in the mass of
+ pictures, so many centuries or generations old, to those you see
+ and meet every day among the existing Italians. The queen of Cyprus
+ and Giorgione's wife, particularly the latter, are Venetians as it
+ were of yesterday; the same eyes and expression, and, to my mind,
+ there is none finer.
+
+ "You must recollect, however, that I know nothing of painting; and
+ that I detest it, unless it reminds me of something I have seen, or
+ think it possible to see, for which reason I spit upon and abhor
+ all the Saints and subjects of one half the impostures I see in the
+ churches and palaces; and when in Flanders, I never was so
+ disgusted in my life, as with Rubens and his eternal wives and
+ infernal glare of colours, as they appeared to me; and in Spain I
+ did not think much of Murillo and Velasquez. Depend upon it, of all
+ the arts, it is the most artificial and unnatural, and that by
+ which the nonsense of mankind is most imposed upon. I never yet saw
+ the picture or the statue which came a league within my conception
+ or expectation; but I have seen many mountains, and seas, and
+ rivers, and views, and two or three women, who went as far beyond
+ it,--besides some horses; and a lion (at Veli Pacha's) in the
+ Morea; and a tiger at supper in Exeter Change.
+
+ "When you write, continue to address to me at _Venice_. Where do
+ you suppose the books you sent to me are? At _Turin_! This comes of
+ '_the Foreign Office_' which is foreign enough, God knows, for any
+ good it can be of to me, or any one else, and be d----d to it, to
+ its last clerk and first charlatan, Castlereagh.
+
+ "This makes my hundredth letter at least.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, April 14. 1817.
+
+ "The present proofs (of the whole) begin only at the 17th page; but
+ as I had corrected and sent back the first Act, it does not
+ signify.
+
+ "The third Act is certainly d----d bad, and, like the Archbishop of
+ Grenada's homily (which savoured of the palsy), has the dregs of my
+ fever, during which it was written. It must on _no account_ be
+ published in its present state. I will try and reform it, or
+ rewrite it altogether; but the impulse is gone, and I have no
+ chance of making any thing out of it. I would not have it published
+ as it is on any account. The speech of Manfred to the Sun is the
+ only part of this act I thought good myself; the rest is certainly
+ as bad as bad can be, and I wonder what the devil possessed me.
+
+ "I am very glad indeed that you sent me Mr. Gifford's opinion
+ without _deduction_. Do you suppose me such a booby as not to be
+ very much obliged to him? or that in fact I was not, and am not,
+ convinced and convicted in my conscience of this same overt act of
+ nonsense?
+
+ "I shall try at it again: in the mean time, lay it upon the shelf
+ (the whole Drama, I mean): but pray correct your copies of the
+ first and second Acts from the original MS.
+
+ "I am not coming to England; but going to Rome in a few days. I
+ return to Venice in _June_; so, pray, address all letters, &c. to
+ me _here_, as usual, that is, to _Venice_. Dr. Polidori this day
+ left this city with Lord G * * for England. He is charged with
+ some books to your care (from me), and two miniatures also to the
+ same address, _both_ for my sister.
+
+ "Recollect not to publish, upon pain of I know not what, until I
+ have tried again at the third Act. I am not sure that I _shall_
+ try, and still less that I shall succeed, if I do; but I am very
+ sure, that (as it is) it is unfit for publication or perusal; and
+ unless I can make it out to my own satisfaction, I won't have any
+ part published.
+
+ "I write in haste, and after having lately written very often.
+ Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 276. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Foligno, April 26. 1817.
+
+ "I wrote to you the other day from Florence, inclosing a MS.
+ entitled 'The Lament of Tasso.' It was written in consequence of my
+ having been lately at Ferrara. In the last section of this MS. _but
+ one_ (that is, the penultimate), I think that I have omitted a line
+ in the copy sent to you from Florence, viz. after the line--
+
+ "And woo compassion to a blighted name,
+
+ insert,
+
+ "Sealing the sentence which my foes proclaim.
+
+ The _context_ will show you _the sense_, which is not clear in this
+ quotation. _Remember, I write this in the supposition that you have
+ received my Florentine packet._
+
+ "At Florence I remained but a day, having a hurry for Rome, to
+ which I am thus far advanced. However, I went to the two galleries,
+ from which one returns drunk with beauty. The Venus is more for
+ admiration than love; but there are sculpture and painting, which
+ for the first time at all gave me an idea of what people mean by
+ their _cant_, and what Mr. Braham calls 'entusimusy' (_i.e._
+ enthusiasm) about those two most artificial of the arts. What
+ struck me most were, the mistress of Raphael, a portrait; the
+ mistress of Titian, a portrait; a Venus of Titian in the Medici
+ gallery--_the_ Venus; Canova's Venus also in the other gallery:
+ Titian's mistress is also in the other gallery (that is, in the
+ Pitti Palace gallery): the Parcae of Michael Angelo, a picture: and
+ the Antinous, the Alexander, and one or two not very decent groups
+ in marble; the Genius of Death, a sleeping figure, &c. &c.
+
+ "I also went to the Medici chapel--fine frippery in great slabs of
+ various expensive stones, to commemorate fifty rotten and forgotten
+ carcasses. It is unfinished, and will remain so.
+
+ "The church of 'Santa Croce' contains much illustrious nothing. The
+ tombs of Machiavelli, Michael Angelo, Galileo Galilei, and Alfieri,
+ make it the Westminster Abbey of Italy. I did not admire any of
+ these tombs--beyond their contents. That of Alfieri is heavy, and
+ all of them seem to me overloaded. What is necessary but a bust and
+ name? and perhaps a date? the last for the unchronological, of whom
+ I am one. But all your allegory and eulogy is infernal, and worse
+ than the long wigs of English numskulls upon Roman bodies in the
+ statuary of the reigns of Charles II., William, and Anne.
+
+ "When you write, write to _Venice_, as usual; I mean to return
+ there in a fortnight. I shall not be in England for a long time.
+ This afternoon I met Lord and Lady Jersey, and saw them for some
+ time: all well; children grown and healthy; she very pretty, but
+ sunburnt; he very sick of travelling; bound for Paris. There are
+ not many English on the move, and those who are, mostly homewards.
+ I shall not return till business makes me, being much better where
+ I am in health, &c. &c.
+
+ "For the sake of my personal comfort, I pray you send me
+ immediately _to Venice_--_mind, Venice_--viz. _Waites'
+ tooth-powder_, _red_, a quantity; _calcined magnesia_, of the best
+ quality, a quantity; and all this by safe, sure, and speedy means;
+ and, by the Lord! do it.
+
+ "I have done nothing at Manfred's third Act. You must wait; I'll
+ have at it in a week or two, or so. Yours ever," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 277. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Rome, May 5. 1817.
+
+ "By this post, (or next at farthest) I send you in two _other_
+ covers, the new third Act of 'Manfred.' I have re-written the
+ greater part, and returned what is not altered in the _proof_ you
+ sent me. The Abbot is become a good man, and the Spirits are
+ brought in at the death. You will find I think, some good poetry
+ in this new act, here and there; and if so, print it, without
+ sending me farther proofs, _under Mr. Gifford's correction_, if he
+ will have the goodness to overlook it. Address all answers to
+ Venice, as usual; I mean to return there in ten days.
+
+ "'The Lament of Tasso,' which I sent from Florence, has, I trust,
+ arrived: I look upon it as a 'these be good rhymes,' as Pope's papa
+ said to him when he was a boy. For the two--it and the Drama--you
+ will disburse to me (_via_ Kinnaird) _six_ hundred guineas. You
+ will perhaps be surprised that I set the same price upon this as
+ upon the Drama; but, besides that I look upon it as _good_, I won't
+ take less than three hundred guineas for any thing. The two
+ together will make you a larger publication than the 'Siege' and
+ 'Parisina;' so you may think yourself let off very easy: that is to
+ say, if these poems are good for any thing, which I hope and
+ believe.
+
+ "I have been some days in Rome the Wonderful. I am seeing sights,
+ and have done nothing else, except the new third Act for you. I
+ have this morning seen a live pope and a dead cardinal: Pius VII.
+ has been burying Cardinal Bracchi, whose body I saw in state at the
+ Chiesa Nuova. Rome has delighted me beyond every thing, since
+ Athens and Constantinople. But I shall not remain long this visit.
+ Address to Venice.
+
+ "Ever, &c.
+
+ "P.S. I have got my saddle-horses here, and have ridden, and am
+ riding, all about the country."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From the foregoing letters to Mr. Murray, we may collect some curious
+particulars respecting one of the most original and sublime of the noble
+poet's productions, the Drama of Manfred. His failure (and to an extent
+of which the reader shall be enabled presently to judge), in the
+completion of a design which he had, through two Acts, so magnificently
+carried on,--the impatience with which, though conscious of this
+failure, he as usual hurried to the press, without deigning to woo, or
+wait for, a happier moment of inspiration,--his frank docility in, at
+once, surrendering up his third Act to reprobation, without urging one
+parental word in its behalf,--the doubt he evidently felt, whether, from
+his habit of striking off these creations at a heat, he should be able
+to rekindle his imagination on the subject,--and then, lastly, the
+complete success with which, when his mind _did_ make the spring, he at
+once cleared the whole space by which he before fell short of
+perfection,--all these circumstances, connected with the production of
+this grand poem, lay open to us features, both of his disposition and
+genius, in the highest degree interesting, and such as there is a
+pleasure, second only to that of perusing the poem itself, in
+contemplating.
+
+As a literary curiosity, and, still more, as a lesson to genius, never
+to rest satisfied with imperfection or mediocrity, but to labour on till
+even failures are converted into triumphs, I shall here transcribe the
+third Act, in its original shape, as first sent to the publisher:--
+
+ACT III.--SCENE I.
+
+A Hall in the Castle of Manfred.
+
+ MANFRED and HERMAN.
+
+_Man._ What is the hour?
+
+_Her._ It wants but one till sunset,
+And promises a lovely twilight.
+
+_Man._ Say,
+Are all things so disposed of in the tower
+As I directed?
+
+_Her._ All, my lord, are ready:
+Here is the key and casket.
+
+_Man._ It is well:
+Thou may'st retire. [_Exit_ HERMAN.
+
+_Man._ (_alone._) There is a calm upon me--
+Inexplicable stillness! which till now
+Did not belong to what I knew of life.
+If that I did not know philosophy
+To be of all our vanities the motliest,
+The merest word that ever fool'd the ear
+From out the schoolman's jargon, I should deem
+The golden secret, the sought 'Kalon,' found,
+And seated in my soul. It will not last,
+But it is well to have known it, though but once:
+It hath enlarged my thoughts with a new sense,
+And I within my tablets would note down
+That there is such a feeling. Who is there?
+
+ _Re-enter_ HERMAN.
+
+_Her._ My lord, the Abbot of St. Maurice craves
+To greet your presence.
+
+ _Enter the_ ABBOT OF ST. MAURICE.
+
+_Abbot._ Peace be with Count Manfred!
+
+_Man._ Thanks, holy father! welcome to these walls;
+Thy presence honours them, and blesseth those
+Who dwell within them.
+
+_Abbot._ Would it were so, Count!
+But I would fain confer with thee alone.
+
+_Man._ Herman, retire. What would my reverend guest?
+
+ [_Exit_ HERMAN.
+
+_Abbot._ Thus, without prelude:--Age and zeal, my office,
+And good intent, must plead my privilege;
+Our near, though not acquainted neighbourhood,
+May also be my herald. Rumours strange,
+And of unholy nature, are abroad,
+And busy with thy name--a noble name
+For centuries; may he who bears it now
+Transmit it unimpair'd.
+
+_Man._ Proceed,--I listen.
+
+_Abbot._ 'Tis said thou boldest converse with the things
+Which are forbidden to the search of man;
+That with the dwellers of the dark abodes,
+The many evil and unheavenly spirits
+Which walk the valley of the shade of death,
+Thou communest. I know that with mankind,
+Thy fellows in creation, thou dost rarely
+Exchange thy thoughts, and that thy solitude
+Is as an anchorite's, were it but holy.
+
+_Man._ And what are they who do avouch these things?
+
+_Abbot._ My pious brethren--the scared peasantry--
+Even thy own vassals--who do look on thee
+With most unquiet eyes. Thy life's in peril.
+
+_Man._ Take it.
+
+_Abbot._ I come to save, and not destroy--
+I would not pry into thy secret soul;
+But if these things be sooth, there still is time
+For penitence and pity: reconcile thee
+With the true church, and through the church to heaven.
+
+_Man._ I hear thee. This is my reply; Whate'er
+I may have been, or am, doth rest between
+Heaven and myself.--I shall not choose a mortal
+To be my mediator. Have I sinn'd
+Against your ordinances? prove and punish![1]
+
+_Abbot._ Then, hear and tremble! For the headstrong wretch
+Who in the mail of innate hardihood
+Would shield himself, and battle for his sins,
+There is the stake on earth, and beyond earth eternal--
+
+_Man._ Charity, most reverend father,
+Becomes thy lips so much more than this menace,
+That I would call thee back to it; but say,
+What wouldst thou with me?
+
+_Abbot._ It may be there are
+Things that would shake thee--but I keep them back,
+And give thee till to-morrow to repent.
+Then if thou dost not all devote thyself
+To penance, and with gift of all thy lands
+To the monastery--
+
+_Man._ I understand thee,--well!
+
+_Abbot._ Expect no mercy; I have warned thee.
+
+_Man._ (_opening the casket._) Stop--
+There is a gift for thee within this casket.
+
+ [MANFRED _opens the casket, strikes a light, and burns some
+ incense._
+
+Ho! Ashtaroth!
+
+ _The_ DEMON ASHTAROTH _appears, singing as follows:--_
+
+ The raven sits
+ On the raven-stone,
+ And his black wing flits
+ O'er the milk-white bone;
+ To and fro, as the night-winds blow,
+ The carcass of the assassin swings;
+ And there alone, on the raven-stone[2],
+ The raven flaps his dusky wings.
+
+ The fetters creak--and his ebon beak
+ Croaks to the close of the hollow sound;
+ And this is the tune by the light of the moon
+ To which the witches dance their round--
+ Merrily, merrily, cheerily, cheerily,
+ Merrily, speeds the ball:
+ The dead in their shrouds, and the demons in clouds,
+ Flock to the witches' carnival.
+
+_Abbot._ I fear thee not--hence--hence--
+Avaunt thee, evil one!--help, ho! without there!
+
+_Man._ Convey this man to the Shreckhorn--to its peak--
+To its extremest peak--watch with him there
+From now till sunrise; let him gaze, and know
+He ne'er again will be so near to heaven.
+But harm him not; and, when the morrow breaks,
+Set him down safe in his cell--away with him!
+
+_Ash._ Had I not better bring his brethren too,
+Convent and all, to bear him company?
+
+_Man._ No, this will serve for the present. Take him up.
+
+_Ash._ Come, friar! now an exorcism or two,
+And we shall fly the lighter.
+
+ ASHTAROTH _disappears with the_ ABBOT, _singing as follows:--_
+
+ A prodigal son and a maid undone,
+ And a widow re-wedded within the year;
+ And a worldly monk and a pregnant nun,
+ Are things which every day appear.
+
+ MANFRED _alone._
+
+_Man._ Why would this fool break in on me, and force
+My art to pranks fantastical?--no matter,
+It was not of my seeking. My heart sickens,
+And weighs a fix'd foreboding on my soul;
+But it is calm--calm as a sullen sea
+After the hurricane; the winds are still,
+But the cold waves swell high and heavily,
+And there is danger in them. Such a rest
+Is no repose. My life hath been a combat.
+And every thought a wound, till I am scarr'd
+In the immortal part of me--What now?
+
+ _Re-enter_ HERMAN.
+
+_Her._ My lord, you bade me wait on you at sunset:
+He sinks behind the mountain.
+
+_Man._ Doth he so?
+I will look on him.
+
+ [MANFRED _advances to the window of the hall._
+
+ Glorious orb![3] the idol
+Of early nature, and the vigorous race
+Of undiseased mankind, the giant sons
+Of the embrace of angels, with a sex
+More beautiful than they, which did draw down
+The erring spirits who can ne'er return.--
+Most glorious orb! that wert a worship, ere
+The mystery of thy making was reveal'd!
+Thou earliest minister of the Almighty,
+Which gladden'd, on their mountain tops, the hearts
+Of the Chaldean shepherds, till they pour'd
+Themselves in orisons! Thou material God!
+And representative of the Unknown--
+Who chose thee for his shadow! Thou chief star!
+Centre of many stars! which mak'st our earth
+Endurable, and temperest the hues
+And hearts of all who walk within thy rays!
+Sire of the seasons! Monarch of the climes,
+And those who dwell in them! for, near or far,
+Our inborn spirits have a tint of thee,
+Even as our outward aspects;--thou dost rise,
+And shine, and set in glory. Fare thee well!
+I ne'er shall see thee more. As my first glance
+Of love and wonder was for thee, then take
+My latest look: thou wilt not beam on one
+To whom the gifts of life and warmth have been
+Of a more fatal nature. He is gone:
+I follow. [_Exit_ MANFRED.
+
+
+SCENE II.
+
+_The Mountains--The Castle of Manfred at some distance--A Terrace before
+a Tower--Time, Twilight._
+
+ HERMAN, MANUEL, _and other dependants of_ MANFRED.
+
+_Her._ 'Tis strange enough; night after night, for years,
+He hath pursued long vigils in this tower,
+Without a witness. I have been within it,--
+So have we all been oft-times; but from it,
+Or its contents, it were impossible
+To draw conclusions absolute of aught
+His studies tend to. To be sure, there is
+One chamber where none enter; I would give
+The fee of what I have to come these three years,
+To pore upon its mysteries.
+
+_Manuel._ 'Twere dangerous;
+Content thyself with what thou know'st already.
+
+_Her._ Ah! Manuel! thou art elderly and wise,
+And couldst say much; thou hast dwelt within the castle--
+How many years is't?
+
+_Manuel._ Ere Count Manfred's birth,
+I served his father, whom he nought resembles.
+
+_Her._ There be more sons in like predicament.
+But wherein do they differ?
+
+_Manuel._ I speak not
+Of features or of form, but mind and habits:
+Count Sigismund was proud,--but gay and free,--
+A warrior and a reveller; he dwelt not
+With books and solitude, nor made the night
+A gloomy vigil, but a festal time,
+Merrier than day; he did not walk the rocks
+And forests like a wolf, nor turn aside
+From men and their delights.
+
+_Her._ Beshrew the hour,
+But those were jocund times! I would that such
+Would visit the old walls again; they look
+As if they had forgotten them.
+
+_Manuel._ These walls
+Must change their chieftain first. Oh! I have seen
+Some strange things in these few years.[4]
+
+_Her._ Come, be friendly;
+Relate me some, to while away our watch:
+I've heard thee darkly speak of an event
+Which happened hereabouts, by this same tower.
+
+_Manuel._ That was a night indeed! I do remember
+'Twas twilight, as it may be now, and such
+Another evening;--yon red cloud, which rests
+On Eigher's pinnacle, so rested then,--
+So like that it might be the same; the wind
+Was faint and gusty, and the mountain snows
+Began to glitter with the climbing moon;
+Count Manfred was, as now, within his tower,--
+How occupied, we knew not, but with him
+The sole companion of his wanderings
+And watchings--her, whom of all earthly things
+That lived, the only thing he seemed to love,--
+As he, indeed, by blood was bound to do,
+The lady Astarte, his--
+
+_Her._ Look--look--the tower--
+The tower's on fire. Oh, heavens and earth! what sound,
+What dreadful sound is that? [_A crash like thunder._
+
+_Manuel._ Help, help, there!--to the rescue of the Count,--
+The Count's in danger,--what ho! there! approach!
+
+ _The Servants, Vassals, and Peasantry approach, stupified with
+ terror._
+
+If there be any of you who have heart
+And love of human kind, and will to aid
+Those in distress--pause not--but follow me--
+The portal's open, follow. [MANUEL _goes in._
+
+_Her._ Come--who follows?
+What, none of ye?--ye recreants! shiver then
+Without. I will not see old Manuel risk
+His few remaining years unaided. [HERMAN _goes in._
+
+_Vassal._ Hark!--
+No--all is silent--not a breath--the flame
+Which shot forth such a blaze is also gone;
+What may this mean? Let's enter!
+
+_Peasant._ Faith, not I,--
+Not that, if one, or two, or more, will join,
+I then will stay behind; but, for my part,
+I do not see precisely to what end.
+
+_Vassal._ Cease your vain prating--come.
+
+_Manuel._ (_speaking within._) 'Tis all in vain--
+He's dead.
+
+_Her._ (_within._) Not so--even now methought he moved;
+But it is dark--so bear him gently out--
+Softly--how cold he is! take care of his temples
+In winding down the staircase.
+
+ _Re-enter_ MANUEL _and_ HERMAN, _bearing_ MANFRED _in their arms._
+
+_Manuel._ Hie to the castle, some of ye, and bring
+What aid you can. Saddle the barb, and speed
+For the leech to the city--quick! some water there!
+
+_Her._ His cheek is black--but there is a faint beat
+Still lingering about the heart. Some water.
+
+ [_They sprinkle_ MANFRED _with water; after a pause, he gives
+ some signs of life._
+
+_Manuel._ He seems to strive to speak--come--cheerly, Count!
+He moves his lips--canst hear him? I am old,
+And cannot catch faint sounds.
+
+ [HERMAN _inclining his head and listening._
+
+_Her._ I hear a word
+Or two--but indistinctly--what is next?
+What's to be done? let's bear him to the castle.
+
+ [MANFRED _motions with his hand not to remove him._
+
+_Manuel._ He disapproves--and 'twere of no avail--
+He changes rapidly.
+
+_Her._ 'Twill soon be over.
+
+_Manuel._ Oh! what a death is this! that I should live
+To shake my gray hairs over the last chief
+Of the house of Sigismund.--And such a death!
+Alone--we know not how--unshrived--untended--
+With strange accompaniments and fearful signs--
+I shudder at the sight--but must not leave him.
+
+_Manfred._ (_speaking faintly and slowly._) Old man! 'tis not so difficult
+ to die. [MANFRED _having said this expires._
+
+_Her._ His eyes are fixed and lifeless.--He is gone.--
+
+_Manuel._ Close them.--My old hand quivers.--He departs--
+Whither? I dread to think--but he is gone!
+
+
+[Footnote 1: It will be perceived that, as far as this, the original
+matter of the third Act has been retained.]
+
+[Footnote 2: "Raven-stone (Rabenstein), a translation of the German word
+for the gibbet, which in Germany and Switzerland is permanent, and made
+of stone."]
+
+[Footnote 3: This fine soliloquy, and a great part of the subsequent
+scene, have, it is hardly necessary to remark been retained in the
+present form of the Drama.]
+
+[Footnote 4: Altered in the present form, to "some strange things in
+them, Herman."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 278. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Rome, May 9. 1817.
+
+ "Address all answers to Venice; for there I shall return in fifteen
+ days, God willing.
+
+ "I sent you from Florence 'The Lament of Tasso,' and from Rome the
+ third Act of Manfred, both of which, I trust, will duly arrive. The
+ terms of these two I mentioned in my last, and will repeat in this,
+ it is three hundred for each, or _six_ hundred guineas for the
+ two--that is, if you like, and they are good for any thing.
+
+ "At last one of the parcels is arrived. In the notes to Childe
+ Harold there is a blunder of yours or mine: you talk of arrival at
+ _St. Gingo_, and, immediately after, add--'on the height is the
+ Chateau of Clarens.' This is sad work: Clarens is on the _other_
+ side of the Lake, and it is quite impossible that I should have so
+ bungled. Look at the MS.; and at any rate rectify it.
+
+ "The 'Tales of my Landlord' I have read with great pleasure, and
+ perfectly understand now why my sister and aunt are so very
+ positive in the very erroneous persuasion that they must have been
+ written by me. If you knew me as well as they do, you would have
+ fallen, perhaps, into the same mistake. Some day or other, I will
+ explain to you _why_--when I have time; at present, it does not
+ much matter; but you must have thought this blunder of theirs very
+ odd, and so did I, till I had read the book. Croker's letter to you
+ is a very great compliment; I shall return it to you in my next.
+
+ "I perceive you are publishing a Life of Raffael d'Urbino: it may
+ perhaps interest you to hear that a set of German artists here
+ allow their _hair_ to grow, and trim it into _his fashion_, thereby
+ drinking the cummin of the disciples of the old philosopher; if
+ they would cut their hair, convert it into brushes, and paint like
+ him, it would be more '_German_ to the matter.'
+
+ "I'll tell you a story: the other day, a man here--an
+ English--mistaking the statues of Charlemagne and Constantine,
+ which are _equestrian_, for those of Peter and Paul, asked another
+ _which_ was Paul of these same horsemen?--to which the reply
+ was,--'I thought, sir, that St. Paul had never got on _horseback_
+ since his _accident_?'
+
+ "I'll tell you another: Henry Fox, writing to some one from Naples
+ the other day, after an illness, adds--'and I am so changed, that
+ my _oldest creditors_ would hardly know me.'
+
+ "I am delighted with Rome--as I would be with a bandbox, that is,
+ it is a fine thing to see, finer than Greece; but I have not been
+ here long enough to affect it as a residence, and I must go back to
+ Lombardy, because I am wretched at being away from Marianna. I have
+ been riding my saddle-horses every day, and been to Albano, its
+ Lakes, and to the top of the Alban Mount, and to Frescati, Aricia,
+ &c. &c. with an &c. &c. &c. about the city, and in the city: for
+ all which--vide Guide-book. As a whole, ancient and modern, it
+ beats Greece, Constantinople, every thing--at least that I have
+ ever seen. But I can't describe, because my first impressions are
+ always strong and confused, and my memory _selects_ and reduces
+ them to order, like distance in the landscape, and blends them
+ better, although they may be less distinct. There must be a sense
+ or two more than we have, us mortals; for * * * * * where there is
+ much to be grasped we are always at a loss, and yet feel that we
+ ought to have a higher and more extended comprehension.
+
+ "I have had a letter from Moore, who is in some alarm about his
+ poem. I don't see why.
+
+ "I have had another from my poor dear Augusta, who is in a sad fuss
+ about my late illness; do, pray, tell her (the truth) that I am
+ better than ever, and in importunate health, growing (if not grown)
+ large and ruddy, and congratulated by impertinent persons on my
+ robustious appearance, when I ought to be pale and interesting.
+
+ "You tell me that George Byron has got a son, and Augusta says, a
+ daughter; which is it?--it is no great matter: the father is a good
+ man, an excellent officer, and has married a very nice little
+ woman, who will bring him more babes than income; howbeit she had a
+ handsome dowry, and is a very charming girl;--but he may as well
+ get a ship.
+
+ "I have no thoughts of coming amongst you yet awhile, so that I can
+ fight off business. If I could but make a tolerable sale of
+ Newstead, there would be no occasion for my return; and I can
+ assure you very sincerely, that I am much happier (or, at least,
+ have been so) out of your island than in it.
+
+ "Yours ever.
+
+ "P.S. There are few English here, but several of my acquaintance;
+ amongst others, the Marquis of Lansdowne, with whom I dine
+ to-morrow. I met the Jerseys on the road at Foligno--all well.
+
+ "Oh--I forgot--the Italians have printed Chillon, &c. a
+ _piracy_,--a pretty little edition, prettier than yours--and
+ published, as I found to my great astonishment on arriving here;
+ and what is odd, is, that the English is quite correctly printed.
+ Why they did it, or who did it, I know not; but so it is;--I
+ suppose, for the English people. I will send you a copy."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 279. TO MR. MOORE.
+
+ "Rome, May 12. 1817.
+
+ "I have received your letter here, where I have taken a cruise
+ lately; but I shall return back to Venice in a few days, so that if
+ you write again, address there, as usual. I am not for returning
+ to England so soon as you imagine; and by no means at all as a
+ residence. If you cross the Alps in your projected expedition, you
+ will find me somewhere in Lombardy, and very glad to see you. Only
+ give me a word or two beforehand, for I would readily diverge some
+ leagues to meet you.
+
+ "Of Rome I say nothing; it is quite indescribable, and the
+ Guide-book is as good as any other. I dined yesterday with Lord
+ Lansdowne, who is on his return. But there are few English here at
+ present; the winter is _their_ time. I have been on horseback most
+ of the day, all days since my arrival, and have taken it as I did
+ Constantinople. But Rome is the elder sister, and the finer. I went
+ some days ago to the top of the Alban Mount, which is superb. As
+ for the Coliseum, Pantheon, St. Peter's, the Vatican, Palatine, &c.
+ &c.--as I said, vide Guide-book. They are quite inconceivable, and
+ must _be seen_. The Apollo Belvidere is the image of Lady Adelaide
+ Forbes--I think I never saw such a likeness.
+
+ "I have seen the Pope alive, and a cardinal dead,--both of whom
+ looked very well indeed. The latter was in state in the Chiesa
+ Nuova, previous to his interment.
+
+ "Your poetical alarms are groundless; go on and prosper. Here is
+ Hobhouse just come in, and my horses at the door, so that I must
+ mount and take the field in the Campus Martius, which, by the way,
+ is all built over by modern Rome.
+
+ "Yours very and ever, &c.
+
+ "P.S. Hobhouse presents his remembrances, and is eager, with all
+ the world, for your new poem."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 280. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, May 30. 1817.
+
+ "I returned from Rome two days ago, and have received your letter;
+ but no sign nor tidings of the parcel sent through Sir C. Stuart,
+ which you mention. After an interval of months, a packet of
+ 'Tales,' &c. found me at Rome; but this is all, and may be all that
+ ever will find me. The post seems to be the only sure conveyance;
+ and _that only for letters_. From Florence I sent you a poem on
+ Tasso, and from Rome the new third Act of 'Manfred,' and by Dr.
+ Polidori two portraits for my sister. I left Rome and made a rapid
+ journey home. You will continue to direct here as usual. Mr.
+ Hobhouse is gone to Naples: I should have run down there too for a
+ week, but for the quantity of English whom I heard of there. I
+ prefer hating them at a distance; unless an earthquake, or a good
+ real irruption of Vesuvius, were ensured to reconcile me to their
+ vicinity.
+
+ "The day before I left Rome I saw three robbers guillotined. The
+ ceremony--including the _masqued_ priests; the half-naked
+ executioners; the bandaged criminals; the black Christ and his
+ banner; the scaffold; the soldiery; the slow procession, and the
+ quick rattle and heavy fall of the axe; the splash of the blood,
+ and the ghastliness of the exposed heads--is altogether more
+ impressive than the vulgar and ungentlemanly dirty 'new drop,' and
+ dog-like agony of infliction upon the sufferers of the English
+ sentence. Two of these men behaved calmly enough, but the first of
+ the three died with great terror and reluctance. What was very
+ horrible, he would not lie down; then his neck was too large for
+ the aperture, and the priest was obliged to drown his exclamations
+ by still louder exhortations. The head was off before the eye could
+ trace the blow; but from an attempt to draw back the head,
+ notwithstanding it was held forward by the hair, the first head was
+ cut off close to the ears: the other two were taken off more
+ cleanly. It is better than the oriental way, and (I should think)
+ than the axe of our ancestors. The pain seems little, and yet the
+ effect to the spectator, and the preparation to the criminal, is
+ very striking and chilling. The first turned me quite hot and
+ thirsty, and made me shake so that I could hardly hold the
+ opera-glass (I was close, but was determined to see, as one should
+ see every thing, once, with attention); the second and third (which
+ shows how dreadfully soon things grow indifferent), I am ashamed to
+ say, had no effect on me as a horror, though I would have saved
+ them if I could. Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 281. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, June 4. 1817.
+
+ "I have received the proofs of the 'Lament of Tasso,' which makes
+ me hope that you have also received the reformed third Act of
+ Manfred, from Rome, which I sent soon after my arrival there. My
+ date will apprise you of my return home within these few days. For
+ me, I have received _none_ of your packets, except, after long
+ delay, the 'Tales of my Landlord,' which I before acknowledged. I
+ do not at all understand the _why nots_, but so it is; no Manuel,
+ no letters, no tooth-powder, no _extract_ from Moore's Italy
+ concerning Marino Faliero, no NOTHING--as a man hallooed out at one
+ of Burdett's elections, after a long ululatus of 'No Bastille! No
+ governor-ities! No--'God knows who or what;--but his _ne plus
+ ultra_ was, 'No nothing!'--and my receipts of your packages amount
+ to about his meaning. I want the extract from _Moore's_ Italy very
+ much, and the tooth-powder, and the magnesia; I don't care so much
+ about the poetry, or the letters, or Mr. Maturin's by-Jasus
+ tragedy. Most of the things sent by the post have come--I mean
+ proofs and letters; therefore send me Marino Faliero by the post,
+ in a letter.
+
+ "I was delighted with Rome, and was on horseback all round it many
+ hours daily, besides in it the rest of my time, bothering over its
+ marvels. I excursed and skirred the country round to Alba, Tivoli,
+ Frescati, Licenza, &c. &c.; besides, I visited twice the Fall of
+ Terni, which beats every thing. On my way back, close to the temple
+ by its banks, I got some famous trout out of the river
+ Clitumnus--the prettiest little stream in all poesy, near the first
+ post from Foligno and Spoletto.--I did not stay at Florence, being
+ anxious to get home to Venice, and having already seen the
+ galleries and other sights. I left my commendatory letters the
+ evening before I went, so I saw nobody.
+
+ "To-day, Pindemonte, the celebrated poet of Verona, called on me;
+ he is a little thin man, with acute and pleasing features; his
+ address good and gentle; his appearance altogether very
+ philosophical; his age about sixty, or more. He is one of their
+ best going. I gave him _Forsyth_, as he speaks, or reads rather, a
+ little English, and will find there a favourable account of
+ himself. He enquired after his old Cruscan friends, Parsons,
+ Greathead, Mrs. Piozzi, and Merry, all of whom he had known in his
+ youth. I gave him as bad an account of them as I could, answering,
+ as the false 'Solomon Lob' does to 'Totterton' in the farce, 'all
+ gone dead,' and damned by a satire more than twenty years ago; that
+ the name of their extinguisher was Gifford; that they were but a
+ sad set of scribes after all, and no great things in any other way.
+ He seemed, as was natural, very much pleased with this account of
+ his old acquaintances, and went away greatly gratified with that
+ and Mr. Forsyth's sententious paragraph of applause in his own
+ (Pindemonte's) favour. After having been a little libertine in his
+ youth, he is grown devout, and takes prayers, and talks to himself,
+ to keep off the devil; but for all that, he is a very nice little
+ old gentleman.
+
+ "I forgot to tell you that at Bologna (which is celebrated for
+ producing popes, painters, and sausages) I saw an anatomical
+ gallery, where there is a deal of waxwork, in which * *.
+
+ "I am sorry to hear of your row with Hunt; but suppose him to be
+ exasperated by the Quarterly and your refusal to _deal_; and when
+ one is angry and edites a paper, I should think the temptation too
+ strong for literary nature, which is not always human. I can't
+ conceive in what, and for what, he abuses you: what have you done?
+ you are not an author, nor a politician, nor a public character; I
+ know no scrape you have tumbled into. I am the more sorry for this
+ because I introduced you to Hunt, and because I believe him to be a
+ good man; but till I know the particulars, I can give no opinion.
+
+ "Let me know about Lalla Rookh, which must be out by this time.
+
+ "I restore the proofs, but the _punctuation_ should be corrected. I
+ feel too lazy to have at it myself; so beg and pray Mr. Gifford for
+ me.--Address to Venice. In a few days I go to my _villeggiatura_,
+ in a cassino near the Brenta, a few miles only on the main land. I
+ have determined on another year, and _many years_ of residence if I
+ can compass them. Marianna is with me, hardly recovered of the
+ fever, which has been attacking all Italy last winter. I am afraid
+ she is a little hectic; but I hope the best.
+
+ "Ever, &c.
+
+ "P.S. Torwaltzen has done a bust of me at Rome for Mr. Hobhouse,
+ which is reckoned very good. He is their best after Canova, and by
+ some preferred to him.
+
+ "I have had a letter from Mr. Hodgson. He is very happy, has got a
+ living, but not a child: if he had stuck to a curacy, babes would
+ have come of course, because he could not have maintained them.
+
+ "Remember me to all friends, &c. &c.
+
+ "An Austrian officer, the other day, being in love with a Venetian,
+ was ordered, with his regiment, into Hungary. Distracted between
+ love and duty, he purchased a deadly drug, which dividing with his
+ mistress, both swallowed. The ensuing pains were terrific, but the
+ pills were purgative, and not poisonous, by the contrivance of the
+ unsentimental apothecary; so that so much suicide was all thrown
+ away. You may conceive the previous confusion and the final
+ laughter; but the intention was good on all sides."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 282. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, June 8. 1817.
+
+ "The present letter will be delivered to you by two Armenian
+ friars, on their way, by England, to Madras. They will also convey
+ some copies of the grammar, which I think you agreed to take. If
+ you can be of any use to them, either amongst your naval or East
+ Indian acquaintances, I hope you will so far oblige me, as they and
+ their order have been remarkably attentive and friendly towards me
+ since my arrival at Venice. Their names are Father Sukias Somalian
+ and Father Sarkis Theodorosian. They speak Italian, and probably
+ French, or a little English. Repeating earnestly my recommendatory
+ request, believe me, very truly, yours,
+
+ "BYRON.
+
+ "Perhaps you can help them to their passage, or give or get them
+ letters for India."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 283. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "La Mira, near Venice, June 14. 1817.
+
+ "I write to you from the banks of the Brenta, a few miles from
+ Venice, where I have colonised for six months to come. Address, as
+ usual, to Venice.
+
+ "Three months after date (17th March),--like the unnegotiable bill
+ despondingly received by the reluctant tailor,--your despatch has
+ arrived, containing the extract from Moore's Italy and Mr.
+ Maturin's bankrupt tragedy. It is the absurd work of a clever man.
+ I think it might have done upon the stage, if he had made Manuel
+ (by some trickery, in a masque or vizor) fight his own battle,
+ instead of employing Molineux as his champion; and, after the
+ defeat of Torismond, have made him spare the son of his enemy, by
+ some revulsion of feeling, not incompatible with a character of
+ extravagant and distempered emotions. But as it is, what with the
+ Justiza, and the ridiculous conduct of the whole _dram. pers._ (for
+ they are all as mad as Manuel, who surely must have had more
+ interest with a corrupt bench than a distant relation and heir
+ presumptive, somewhat suspect of homicide,) I do not wonder at its
+ failure. As a play, it is impracticable; as a poem, no great
+ things. Who was the 'Greek that grappled with glory naked?' the
+ Olympic wrestlers? or Alexander the Great, when he ran stark round
+ the tomb of t'other fellow? or the Spartan who was fined by the
+ Ephori for fighting without his armour? or who? And as to 'flaying
+ off life like a garment,' helas! that's in Tom Thumb--see king
+ Arthur's soliloquy:
+
+ "'Life's a mere rag, not worth a prince's wearing;
+ I'll cast it off.'
+
+ And the stage-directions--'Staggers among the bodies;'--the slain
+ are too numerous, as well as the blackamoor knights-penitent being
+ one too many: and De Zelos is such a shabby Monmouth Street
+ villain, without any redeeming quality--Stap my vitals! Maturin
+ seems to be declining into Nat. Lee. But let him try again; he has
+ talent, but not much taste. I 'gin to fear, or to hope, that
+ Sotheby, after all, is to be the Eschylus of the age, unless Mr.
+ Shiel be really worthy his success. The more I see of the stage,
+ the less I would wish to have any thing to do with it; as a proof
+ of which, I hope you have received the third Act of Manfred, which
+ will at least prove that I wish to steer very clear of the
+ possibility of being put into scenery. I sent it from _Rome_.
+
+ "I returned the proof of Tasso. By the way, have you never received
+ a translation of St. Paul which I sent you, _not_ for publication,
+ before I went to Rome?
+
+ "I am at present on the Brenta. Opposite is a Spanish marquis,
+ ninety years old; next his casino is a Frenchman's,--besides the
+ natives; so that, as somebody said the other day, we are exactly
+ one of Goldoni's comedies (La Vedova Scaltra), where a Spaniard,
+ English, and Frenchman are introduced: but we are all very good
+ neighbours, Venetians, &c. &c. &c.
+
+ "I am just getting on horseback for my evening ride, and a visit to
+ a physician, who has an agreeable family, of a wife and four
+ unmarried daughters, all under eighteen, who are friends of Signora
+ S * *, and enemies to nobody. There are, and are to be, besides,
+ conversaziones and I know not what, a Countess Labbia's and I know
+ not whom. The weather is mild; the thermometer 110 in the _sun_
+ this day, and 80 odd in the shade. Yours, &c.
+
+ "N."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 284. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "La Mira, near Venice, June 17. 1817.
+
+ "It gives me great pleasure to hear of Moore's success, and the
+ more so that I never doubted that it would be complete. Whatever
+ good you can tell me of him and his poem will be most acceptable: I
+ feel very anxious indeed to receive it. I hope that he is as happy
+ in his fame and reward as I wish him to be; for I know no one who
+ deserves both more--if any so much.
+
+ "Now to business; * * * * * * I say unto you, verily, it is not so;
+ or, as the foreigner said to the waiter, after asking him to bring
+ a glass of water, to which the man answered, 'I will, sir,'--'You
+ will!--G----d d----n,--I say, you _mush_!' And I will submit this
+ to the decision of any person or persons to be appointed by both,
+ on a fair examination of the circumstances of this as compared
+ with the preceding publications. So there's for you. There is
+ always some row or other previously to all our publications: it
+ should seem that, on approximating, we can never quite get over the
+ natural antipathy of author and bookseller, and that more
+ particularly the ferine nature of the latter must break forth.
+
+ "You are out about the third Canto: I have not done, nor designed,
+ a line of continuation to that poem. I was too short a time at Rome
+ for it, and have no thought of recommencing.
+
+ "I cannot well explain to you by letter what I conceive to be the
+ origin of Mrs. Leigh's notion about 'Tales of my Landlord;' but it
+ is some points of the characters of Sir E. Manley and Burley, as
+ well as one or two of the jocular portions, on which it is founded,
+ probably.
+
+ "If you have received Dr. Polidori as well as a parcel of books,
+ and you can be of use to him, be so. I never was much more
+ disgusted with any human production than with the eternal nonsense,
+ and tracasseries, and emptiness, and ill humour, and vanity of that
+ young person; but he has some talent, and is a man of honour, and
+ has dispositions of amendment, in which he has been aided by a
+ little subsequent experience, and may turn out well. Therefore, use
+ your government interest for him, for he is improved and
+ improvable.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 285. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "La Mira, near Venice, June 18. 1817.
+
+ "Enclosed is a letter to _Dr._ Holland from Pindemonte. Not knowing
+ the Doctor's address, I am desired to enquire, and, perhaps, being
+ a literary man, you will know or discover his haunt near some
+ populous churchyard. I have written to you a scolding letter--I
+ believe, upon a misapprehended passage in your letter--but never
+ mind: it will do for next time, and you will surely deserve it.
+ Talking of doctors reminds me once more to recommend to you one who
+ will not recommend himself,--the Doctor Polidori. If you can help
+ him to a publisher, do; or, if you have any sick relation, I would
+ advise his advice: all the patients he had in Italy are dead--Mr. *
+ *'s son, Mr. Horner, and Lord G * *, whom he embowelled with great
+ success at Pisa.
+
+ "Remember me to Moore, whom I congratulate. How is Rogers? and what
+ is become of Campbell and all t'other fellows of the Druid order? I
+ got Maturin's Bedlam at last, but no other parcel; I am in fits for
+ the tooth-powder, and the magnesia. I want some of Burkitt's
+ _soda_-powders. Will you tell Mr. Kinnaird that I have written him
+ two letters on pressing business, (about Newstead, &c.) to which I
+ humbly solicit his attendance. I am just returned from a gallop
+ along the banks of the Brenta--time, sunset. Yours,
+
+ "B."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 286. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "La Mira, near Venice, July 1. 1817.
+
+ "Since my former letter, I have been working up my impressions into
+ a _fourth_ Canto of Childe Harold, of which I have roughened off
+ about rather better than thirty stanzas, and mean to go on; and
+ probably to make this 'Fytte' the concluding one of the poem, so
+ that you may propose against the autumn to draw out the
+ conscription for 1818. You must provide moneys, as this new
+ resumption bodes you certain disbursements. Somewhere about the end
+ of September or October, I propose to be under way (_i.e._ in the
+ press); but I have no idea yet of the probable length or calibre of
+ the Canto, or what it will be good for; but I mean to be as
+ mercenary as possible, an example (I do not mean of any individual
+ in particular, and least of all, any person or persons of our
+ mutual acquaintance) which I should have followed in my youth, and
+ I might still have been a prosperous gentleman.
+
+ "No tooth-powder, no letters, no recent tidings of you.
+
+ "Mr. Lewis is at Venice, and I am going up to stay a week with him
+ there--as it is one of his enthusiasms also to like the city.
+
+ "I stood in Venice on the 'Bridge of Sighs,' &c. &c.
+
+ "The 'Bridge of Sighs' (_i.e._ Ponte de'i Sospiri) is that which
+ divides, or rather joins, the palace of the Doge to the prison of
+ the state. It has two passages: the criminal went by the one to
+ judgment, and returned by the other to death, being strangled in a
+ chamber adjoining, where there was a mechanical process for the
+ purpose.
+
+ "This is the first stanza of our new Canto; and now for a line of
+ the second:--
+
+ "In Venice, Tasso's echoes are no more,
+ And silent rows the songless gondolier,
+ Her palaces, &c. &c.
+
+ "You know that formerly the gondoliers sung always, and Tasso's
+ Gierusalemme was their ballad. Venice is built on seventy-two
+ islands.
+
+ "There! there's a brick of your new Babel! and now, sirrah! what
+ say you to the sample?
+
+ "Yours, &c.
+
+ "P.S. I shall write again by and by."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 287. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "La Mira, near Venice, July 8. 1817
+
+ "If you can convey the enclosed letter to its address, or discover
+ the person to whom it is directed, you will confer a favour upon
+ the Venetian creditor of a deceased Englishman. This epistle is a
+ dun to his executor, for house-rent. The name of the insolvent
+ defunct is, or was, _Porter Valter_, according to the account of
+ the plaintiff, which I rather suspect ought to be _Walter Porter_,
+ according to our mode of collocation. If you are acquainted with
+ any dead man of the like name a good deal in debt, pray dig him up,
+ and tell him that 'a pound of his fair flesh' or the ducats are
+ required, and that 'if you deny them, fie upon your law!'
+
+ "I hear nothing more from you about Moore's poem, Rogers, or other
+ literary phenomena; but to-morrow, being post-day, will bring
+ perhaps some tidings. I write to you with people talking Venetian
+ all about, so that you must not expect this letter to be all
+ English.
+
+ "The other day, I had a squabble on the highway, as follows: I was
+ riding pretty quickly from Dolo home about eight in the evening,
+ when I passed a party of people in a hired carriage, one of whom,
+ poking his head out of the window, began bawling to me in an
+ inarticulate but insolent manner. I wheeled my horse round, and
+ overtaking, stopped the coach, and said, 'Signor, have you any
+ commands for me?' He replied, impudently as to manner, 'No.' I then
+ asked him what he meant by that unseemly noise, to the discomfiture
+ of the passers-by. He replied by some piece of impertinence, to
+ which I answered by giving him a violent slap in the face. I then
+ dismounted, (for this passed at the window, I being on horseback
+ still,) and opening the door desired him to walk out, or I would
+ give him another. But the first had settled him except as to words,
+ of which he poured forth a profusion in blasphemies, swearing that
+ he would go to the police and avouch a battery sans provocation. I
+ said he lied, and was a * *, and if he did not hold his tongue,
+ should be dragged out and beaten anew. He then held his tongue. I
+ of course told him my name and residence, and defied him to the
+ death, if he were a gentleman, or not a gentleman, and had the
+ inclination to be genteel in the way of combat. He went to the
+ police, but there having been bystanders in the
+ road,--particularly a soldier, who had seen the business,--as well
+ as my servant, notwithstanding the oaths of the coachman and five
+ insides besides the plaintiff, and a good deal of paying on all
+ sides, his complaint was dismissed, he having been the
+ aggressor;--and I was subsequently informed that, had I not given
+ him a blow, he might have been had into durance.
+
+ "So set down this,--'that in Aleppo once' I 'beat a Venetian;' but
+ I assure you that he deserved it, for I am a quiet man, like
+ Candide, though with somewhat of his fortune in being forced to
+ forego my natural meekness every now and then.
+
+ "Yours, &c. B."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 288. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, July 9, 1817.
+
+ "I have got the sketch and extracts from Lalla Rookh. The plan, as
+ well as the extracts, I have seen, please me very much indeed, and
+ I feel impatient for the whole.
+
+ "With regard to the critique on 'Manfred,' you have been in such a
+ devil of a hurry, that you have only sent me the half: it breaks
+ off at page 294. Send me the rest; and also page 270., where there
+ is 'an account of the supposed origin of this dreadful story,'--in
+ which, by the way, whatever it may be, the conjecturer is out, and
+ knows nothing of the matter. I had a better origin than he can
+ devise or divine, for the soul of him.
+
+ "You say nothing of Manfred's luck in the world; and I care not.
+ He is one of the best of my misbegotten, say what they will.
+
+ "I got at last an extract, but _no parcels_. They will come, I
+ suppose, some time or other. I am come up to Venice for a day or
+ two to bathe, and am just going to take a swim in the Adriatic; so,
+ good evening--the post waits. Yours, &c.
+
+ "B.
+
+ "P.S. Pray, was Manfred's speech to _the Sun_ still retained in Act
+ third? I hope so: it was one of the best in the thing, and better
+ than the Colosseum. I have done _fifty-six_ of Canto fourth, Childe
+ Harold; so down with your ducats."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 289. TO MR. MOORE.
+
+ "La Mira, Venice, July 10. 1817.
+
+ "Murray, the Mokanna of booksellers, has contrived to send me
+ extracts from Lalla Rookh by the post. They are taken from some
+ magazine, and contain a short outline and quotations from the two
+ first Poems. I am very much delighted with what is before me, and
+ very thirsty for the rest. You have caught the colours as if you
+ had been in the rainbow, and the tone of the East is perfectly
+ preserved. I am glad you have changed the title from 'Persian
+ Tale.'
+
+ "I suspect you have written a devilish fine composition, and I
+ rejoice in it from my heart; because 'the Douglas and the Percy
+ both together are confident against a world in arms.' I hope you
+ won't be affronted at my looking on us as 'birds of a feather;'
+ though on whatever subject you had written, I should have been very
+ happy in your success.
+
+ "There is a simile of an orange-tree's 'flowers and fruits,' which
+ I should have liked better if I did not believe it to be a
+ reflection on * * *.
+
+ "Do you remember Thurlow's poem to Sam--'_When_ Rogers;' and that
+ d----d supper of Rancliffe's that ought to have been a _dinner_?
+ 'Ah, Master Shallow, we have heard the chimes at midnight.' But
+
+ "My boat is on the shore,
+ And my bark is on the sea;
+ But, before I go, Tom Moore,
+ Here's a double health to thee!
+
+ "Here's a sigh to those who love me,
+ And a smile to those who hate;
+ And whatever sky's above me,
+ Here's a heart for every fate.
+
+ "Though the ocean roar around me,
+ Yet it still shall bear me on;
+ Though a desert should surround me,
+ It hath springs that may be won.
+
+ "Were't the last drop in the well,
+ As I gasp'd upon the brink,
+ Ere my fainting spirit fell,
+ 'Tis to thee that I would drink.
+
+ "With that water, as this wine,
+ The libation I would pour,
+ Should be--peace with thine and mine,
+ And a health to thee, Tom Moore.
+
+ "This should have been written fifteen moons ago--the first stanza
+ was. I am just come out from an hour's swim in the Adriatic; and I
+ write to you with a black-eyed Venetian girl before me, reading
+ Boccacio.
+
+ "Last week I had a row on the road (I came up to Venice from my
+ casino, a few miles on the Paduan road, this blessed day, to bathe)
+ with a fellow in a carriage, who was impudent to my horse. I gave
+ him a swingeing box on the ear, which sent him to the police, who
+ dismissed his complaint. Witnesses had seen the transaction. He
+ first shouted, in an unseemly way, to frighten my palfry. I wheeled
+ round, rode up to the window, and asked him what he meant. He
+ grinned, and said some foolery, which produced him an immediate
+ slap in the face, to his utter discomfiture. Much blasphemy ensued,
+ and some menace, which I stopped by dismounting and opening the
+ carriage door, and intimating an intention of mending the road with
+ his immediate remains, if he did not hold his tongue. He held it.
+
+ "Monk Lewis is here--'how pleasant!'[5] He is a very good fellow,
+ and very much yours. So is Sam--so is every body--and amongst the
+ number,
+
+ "Yours ever,
+
+ "B.
+
+ "P.S. What think you of Manfred?"
+
+[Footnote 5: An allusion (such as often occurs in these letters) to an
+anecdote with which he had been amused.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 290. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "La Mira, near Venice, July 15. 1817.
+
+ "I have finished (that is, written--the file comes afterwards)
+ ninety and eight stanzas of the fourth Canto, which I mean to be
+ the concluding one. It will probably be about the same length as
+ the _third_, being already of the dimensions of the first or second
+ Cantos. I look upon parts of it as very good, that is, if the three
+ former are good, but this we shall see; and at any rate, good or
+ not, it is rather a different style from the last--less
+ metaphysical--which, at any rate, will be a variety. I sent you the
+ shaft of the column as a specimen the other day, _i.e._ the first
+ stanza. So you may be thinking of its arrival towards autumn, whose
+ winds will not be the only ones to be raised, _if so be as how
+ that_ it is ready by that time.
+
+ "I lent Lewis, who is at Venice, (in or on the Canalaccio, the
+ Grand Canal,) your extracts from Lalla Rookh and Manuel[6], and,
+ out of contradiction, it may be, he likes the last, and is not much
+ taken with the first, of these performances. Of Manuel, I think,
+ with the exception of a few capers, it is as heavy a nightmare as
+ was ever bestrode by indigestion.
+
+ "Of the extracts I can but judge as extracts, and I prefer the
+ 'Peri' to the 'Silver Veil.' He seems not so much at home in his
+ versification of the 'Silver Veil,' and a little embarrassed with
+ his horrors; but the conception of the character of the impostor
+ is fine, and the plan of great scope for his genius,--and I doubt
+ not that, as a whole, it will be very Arabesque and beautiful.
+
+ "Your late epistle is not the most abundant in information, and has
+ not yet been succeeded by any other; so that I know nothing of your
+ own concerns, or of any concerns, and as I never hear from any body
+ but yourself who does not tell me something as disagreeable as
+ possible, I should not be sorry to hear from you: and as it is not
+ very probable,--if I can, by any device or possible arrangement
+ with regard to my personal affairs, so arrange it,--that I shall
+ return soon, or reside ever in England, all that you tell me will
+ be all I shall know or enquire after, as to our beloved realm of
+ Grub Street, and the black brethren and blue sisterhood of that
+ extensive suburb of Babylon. Have you had no new babe of literature
+ sprung up to replace the dead, the distant, the tired, and the
+ _re_tired? no prose, no verse, no _nothing_?"
+
+[Footnote 6: A tragedy, by the Rev. Mr. Maturin.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 291. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, July 20. 1817.
+
+ "I write to give you notice that I have completed the _fourth_ and
+ _ultimate_ Canto of Childe Harold. It consists of 126 stanzas, and
+ is consequently the longest of the four. It is yet to be copied and
+ polished; and the notes are to come, of which it will require more
+ than the _third_ Canto, as it necessarily treats more of works of
+ art than of nature. It shall be sent towards autumn;--and now for
+ our barter. What do you bid? eh? you shall have samples, an' it so
+ please you: but I wish to know what I am to expect (as the saying
+ is) in these hard times, when poetry does not let for half its
+ value. If you are disposed to do what Mrs. Winifred Jenkins calls
+ 'the handsome thing,' I may perhaps throw you some odd matters to
+ the lot,--translations, or slight originals; there is no saying
+ what may be on the anvil between this and the booking season.
+ Recollect that it is the _last_ Canto, and completes the work;
+ whether as good as the others, I cannot judge, in course--least of
+ all as yet,--but it shall be as little worse as I can help. I may,
+ perhaps, give some little gossip in the notes as to the present
+ state of Italian literati and literature, being acquainted with
+ some of their _capi_--men as well as books;--but this depends upon
+ my humour at the time. So, now, pronounce: I say nothing.
+
+ "When you have got the whole _four_ Cantos, I think you might
+ venture on an edition of the whole poem in quarto, with spare
+ copies of the two last for the purchasers of the old edition of the
+ first two. There is a hint for you, worthy of the Row; and now,
+ perpend--pronounce.
+
+ "I have not received a word from you of the fate of 'Manfred' or
+ 'Tasso,' which seems to me odd, whether they have failed or
+ succeeded.
+
+ "As this is a scrawl of business, and I have lately written at
+ length and often on other subjects, I will only add that I am,"
+ &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 292. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "La Mira, near Venice, August 7, 1817
+
+ "Your letter of the 18th, and, what will please you, as it did me,
+ the parcel sent by the good-natured aid and abetment of Mr. Croker,
+ are arrived.--Messrs. Lewis and Hobhouse are here: the former in
+ the same house, the latter a few hundred yards distant.
+
+ "You say nothing of Manfred, from which its failure may be
+ inferred; but I think it odd you should not say so at once. I know
+ nothing, and hear absolutely nothing, of any body or any thing in
+ England; and there are no English papers, so that all you say will
+ be news--of any person, or thing, or things. I am at present very
+ anxious about Newstead, and sorry that Kinnaird is leaving England
+ at this minute, though I do not tell him so, and would rather he
+ should have _his_ pleasure, although it may not in this instance
+ tend to my profit.
+
+ "If I understand rightly, you have paid into Morland's 1500
+ _pounds_: as the agreement in the paper is two thousand _guineas_,
+ there will remain therefore _six_ hundred _pounds_, and not five
+ hundred, the odd hundred being the extra to make up the specie. Six
+ hundred and thirty pounds will bring it to the like for Manfred and
+ Tasso, making a total of twelve hundred and thirty, I believe, for
+ I am not a good calculator. I do not wish to press you, but I tell
+ you fairly that it will be a convenience to me to have it paid as
+ soon as it can be made convenient to yourself.
+
+ "The new and last Canto is 130 stanzas in length; and may be made
+ more or less. I have fixed no price, even in idea, and have no
+ notion of what it may be good for. There are no metaphysics in it;
+ at least, I think not. Mr. Hobhouse has promised me a copy of
+ Tasso's Will, for notes; and I have some curious things to say
+ about Ferrara, and Parisina's story, and perhaps a farthing
+ candle's worth of light upon the present state of Italian
+ literature. I shall hardly be ready by October; but that don't
+ matter. I have all to copy and correct, and the notes to write.
+
+ "I do not know whether Scott will like it; but I have called him
+ the '_Ariosto_ of the North' in my _text_. _If he should not, say
+ so in time._
+
+ "An Italian translation of 'Glenarvon' came lately to be printed at
+ Venice. The censor (Sr. Petrotini) refused to sanction the
+ publication till he had seen me on the subject. I told him that I
+ did not recognise the slightest relation between that book and
+ myself; but that, whatever opinions might be upon that subject, _I_
+ would never prevent or oppose the publication of _any_ book, in
+ _any_ language, on my own private account; and desired him (against
+ his inclination) to permit the poor translator to publish his
+ labours. It is going forwards in consequence. You may say this,
+ with my compliments, to the author.
+
+ "Yours."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 293. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, August 12. 1817.
+
+ "I have been very sorry to hear of the death of Madame de Stael,
+ not only because she had been very kind to me at Copet, but because
+ now I can never requite her. In a general point of view, she will
+ leave a great gap in society and literature.
+
+ "With regard to death, I doubt that we have any right to pity the
+ dead for their own sakes.
+
+ "The copies of Manfred and Tasso are arrived, thanks to Mr.
+ Croker's cover. You have destroyed the whole effect and moral of
+ the poem by omitting the last line of Manfred's speaking; and why
+ this was done, I know not. Why you persist in saying nothing of the
+ thing itself, I am equally at a loss to conjecture. If it is for
+ fear of telling me something disagreeable, you are wrong; because
+ sooner or later I must know it, and I am not so new, nor so raw,
+ nor so inexperienced, as not to be able to bear, not the mere
+ paltry, petty disappointments of authorship, but things more
+ serious,--at least I hope so, and that what you may think
+ irritability is merely mechanical, and only acts like galvanism on
+ a dead body, or the muscular motion which survives sensation.
+
+ "If it is that you are out of humour, because I wrote to you a
+ sharp letter, recollect that it was partly from a misconception of
+ your letter, and partly because you did a thing you had no right to
+ do without consulting me.
+
+ "I have, however, heard good of Manfred from two other quarters,
+ and from men who would not be scrupulous in saying what they
+ thought, or what was said; and so 'good morrow to you, good Master
+ Lieutenant.'
+
+ "I wrote to you twice about the fourth Canto, which you will answer
+ at your pleasure. Mr. Hobhouse and I have come up for a day to the
+ city; Mr. Lewis is gone to England; and I am
+
+ "Yours."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 294. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "La Mira, near Venice, August 21. 1817.
+
+ "I take you at your word about Mr. Hanson, and will feel obliged if
+ you will _go_ to him, and request Mr. Davies also to visit him by
+ my desire, and repeat that I trust that neither Mr. Kinnaird's
+ absence nor mine will prevent his taking all proper steps to
+ accelerate and promote the sale of Newstead and Rochdale, upon
+ which the whole of my future personal comfort depends. It is
+ impossible for me to express how much any delays upon these points
+ would inconvenience me; and I do not know a greater obligation that
+ can be conferred upon me than the pressing these things upon
+ Hanson, and making him act according to my wishes. I wish you would
+ _speak out_, at least to _me_, and tell me what you allude to by
+ your cold way of mentioning him. All mysteries at such a distance
+ are not merely tormenting but mischievous, and may be prejudicial
+ to my interests; so, pray expound, that I may consult with Mr.
+ Kinnaird when he arrives; and remember that I prefer the most
+ disagreeable certainties to hints and innuendoes. The devil take
+ every body: I never can get any person to be explicit about any
+ thing or any body, and my whole life is passed in conjectures of
+ what people mean: you all talk in the style of C * * L * *'s
+ novels.
+
+ "It is not Mr. St. John, but _Mr. St. Aubyn_, son of Sir John St.
+ Aubyn. _Polidori_ knows him, and introduced him to me. He is of
+ Oxford, and has got my parcel. The Doctor will ferret him out, or
+ ought. The parcel contains many letters, some of Madame de Stael's,
+ and other people's, besides MSS., &c. By ----, if I find the
+ gentleman, and he don't find the parcel, I will say something he
+ won't like to hear.
+
+ "You want a 'civil and delicate declension' for the medical
+ tragedy? Take it--
+
+ "Dear Doctor, I have read your play,
+ Which is a good one in its way,--
+ Purges the eyes and moves the bowels,
+ And drenches handkerchiefs like towels
+ With tears, that, in a flux of grief,
+ Afford hysterical relief
+ To shatter'd nerves and quicken'd pulses,
+ Which your catastrophe convulses.
+ "I like your moral and machinery;
+ Your plot, too, has such scope for scenery!
+ Your dialogue is apt and smart;
+ The play's concoction full of art;
+ Your hero raves, your heroine cries,
+ All stab, and every body dies.
+ In short, your tragedy would be
+ The very thing to hear and see:
+ And for a piece of publication,
+ If I decline on this occasion,
+ It is not that I am not sensible
+ To merits in themselves ostensible,
+ But--and I grieve to speak it--plays
+ Are drugs, mere drugs, sir--now-a-days.
+ I had a heavy loss by 'Manuel,'--
+ Too lucky if it prove not annual,--
+ And S * *, with his 'Orestes,'
+ (Which, by the by, the author's best is,)
+ Has lain so very long on hand
+ That I despair of all demand.
+ I've advertised, but see my books,
+ Or only watch my shopman's looks;--
+ Still Ivan, Ina, and such lumber,
+ My back-shop glut, my shelves encumber.
+ "There's Byron too, who once did better,
+ Has sent me, folded in a letter,
+ A sort of--it's no more a drama
+ Than Darnley, Ivan, or Kehama;
+ So alter'd since last year his pen is,
+ I think he's lost his wits at Venice.
+ In short, sir, what with one and t'other,
+ I dare not venture on another.
+ I write in haste; excuse each blunder;
+ The coaches through the street so thunder!
+ My room's so full--we've Gifford here
+ Reading MS., with Hookham Frere,
+ Pronouncing on the nouns and particles
+ Of some of our forthcoming Articles.
+ "The Quarterly--Ah, sir, if you
+ Had but the genius to review!--
+ A smart critique upon St. Helena,
+ Or if you only would but tell in a
+ Short compass what--but, to resume:
+ As I was saying, sir, the room--
+ The room's so full of wits and bards,
+ Crabbes, Campbells, Crokers, Freres, and Wards,
+ And others, neither bards nor wits:--
+ My humble tenement admits
+ All persons in the dress of gent.,
+ From Mr. Hammond to Dog Dent.
+ "A party dines with me to-day,
+ All clever men, who make their way;
+ They're at this moment in discussion
+ On poor De Stael's late dissolution.
+ Her book, they say, was in advance--
+ Pray Heaven, she tell the truth of France!
+ "Thus run our time and tongues away.--
+ But, to return, sir, to your play:
+ Sorry, sir, but I cannot deal,
+ Unless 'twere acted by O'Neill.
+ My hands so full, my head so busy,
+ I'm almost dead, and always dizzy;
+ And so, with endless truth and hurry,
+ Dear Doctor, I am yours,
+
+ "JOHN MURRAY.
+
+ "P.S. I've done the fourth and last Canto, which amounts to 133
+ stanzas. I desire you to name a price; if you don't, _I_ will; so I
+ advise you in time.
+
+ "Yours, &c.
+
+ "There will be a good many notes."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Among those minor misrepresentations of which it was Lord Byron's fate
+to be the victim, advantage was, at this time, taken of his professed
+distaste to the English, to accuse him of acts of inhospitality, and
+even rudeness, towards some of his fellow-countrymen. How far different
+was his treatment of all who ever visited him, many grateful
+testimonies might be collected to prove; but I shall here content
+myself with selecting a few extracts from an account given me by Mr.
+Henry Joy of a visit which, in company with another English gentleman,
+he paid to the noble poet this summer, at his villa on the banks of the
+Brenta. After mentioning the various civilities they had experienced
+from Lord Byron; and, among others, his having requested them to name
+their own day for dining with him,--"We availed ourselves," says Mr.
+Joy, "of this considerate courtesy by naming the day fixed for our
+return to Padua, when our route would lead us to his door; and we were
+welcomed with all the cordiality which was to be expected from so
+friendly a bidding. Such traits of kindness in such a man deserve to be
+recorded on account of the numerous slanders thrown upon him by some of
+the tribes of tourists, who resented, as a personal affront, his
+resolution to avoid their impertinent inroads upon his retirement. So
+far from any appearance of indiscriminate aversion to his countrymen,
+his enquiries about his friends in England (_quorum pars magna fuisti_)
+were most anxious and particular.
+
+"He expressed some opinions," continues my informant, "on matters of
+taste, which cannot fail to interest his biographer. He contended that
+Sculpture, as an art, was vastly superior to Painting;--a preference
+which is strikingly illustrated by the fact that, in the fourth Canto of
+Childe Harold, he gives the most elaborate and splendid account of
+several statues, and none of any pictures; although Italy is,
+emphatically, the land of painting, and her best statues are derived
+from Greece. By the way, he told us that there were more objects of
+interest in Rome alone than in all Greece from one extremity to the
+other. After regaling us with an excellent dinner, (in which, by the by,
+a very English joint of roast beef showed that he did not extend his
+antipathies to all John-Bullisms,) he took me in his carriage some miles
+of our route towards Padua, after apologising to my fellow-traveller for
+the separation, on the score of his anxiety to hear all he could of his
+friends in England; and I quitted him with a confirmed impression of the
+strong ardour and sincerity of his attachment to those by whom he did
+not fancy himself slighted or ill treated."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 295. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Sept. 4. 1817.
+
+ "Your letter of the 15th has conveyed with its contents the
+ impression of a seal, to which the 'Saracen's Head' is a seraph,
+ and the 'Bull and Mouth' a delicate device. I knew that calumny had
+ sufficiently _blackened_ me of later days, but not that it had
+ given the features as well as complexion of a negro. Poor Augusta
+ is not less, but rather more, shocked than myself, and says 'people
+ seem to have lost their recollection strangely' when they engraved
+ such a 'blackamoor.' Pray don't seal (at least to me) with such a
+ caricature of the human numskull altogether; and if you don't break
+ the seal-cutter's head, at least crack his libel (or likeness, if
+ it should be a likeness) of mine.
+
+ "Mr. Kinnaird is not yet arrived, but expected. He has lost by the
+ way all the tooth-powder, as a letter from Spa informs me.
+
+ "By Mr. Rose I received safely, though tardily, magnesia and
+ tooth-powder, and * * * *. Why do you send me such trash--worse
+ than trash, the Sublime of Mediocrity? Thanks for Lalla, however,
+ which is good; and thanks for the Edinburgh and Quarterly, both
+ very amusing and well-written. Paris in 1815, &c.--good. Modern
+ Greece--good for nothing; written by some one who has never been
+ there, and not being able to manage the Spenser stanza, has
+ invented a thing of his own, consisting of two elegiac stanzas, an
+ heroic line, and an Alexandrine, twisted on a string. Besides, why
+ '_modern_?' You may say _modern Greeks_, but surely _Greece_ itself
+ is rather more ancient than ever it was. Now for business.
+
+ "You offer 1500 guineas for the new Canto: I won't take it. I ask
+ two thousand five hundred guineas for it, which you will either
+ give or not, as you think proper. It concludes the poem, and
+ consists of 144 stanzas. The notes are numerous, and chiefly
+ written by Mr. Hobhouse, whose researches have been indefatigable;
+ and who, I will venture to say, has more real knowledge of Rome and
+ its environs than any Englishman who has been there since Gibbon.
+ By the way, to prevent any mistakes, I think it necessary to state
+ the fact that _he_, Mr. Hobhouse, has no interest whatever in the
+ price or profit to be derived from the copyright of either poem or
+ notes directly or indirectly; so that you are not to suppose that
+ it is by, for, or through him, that I require more for this Canto
+ than the preceding.--No: but if Mr. Eustace was to have had two
+ thousand for a poem on Education; if Mr. Moore is to have three
+ thousand for Lalla, &c.; if Mr. Campbell is to have three thousand
+ for his prose on poetry--I don't mean to disparage these gentlemen
+ in their labours--but I ask the aforesaid price for mine. You will
+ tell me that their productions are considerably _longer_: very
+ true, and when they shorten them, I will lengthen mine, and ask
+ less. You shall submit the MS. to Mr. Gifford, and any other two
+ gentlemen to be named by you, (Mr. Frere, or Mr. Croker, or
+ whomever you please, except such fellows as your * *s and * *s,)
+ and if they pronounce this Canto to be inferior as a _whole_ to the
+ preceding, I will not appeal from their award, but burn the
+ manuscript, and leave things as they are.
+
+ "Yours very truly.
+
+ "P.S. In answer to a former letter, I sent you a short statement of
+ what I thought the state of our present copyright account, viz. six
+ hundred _pounds_ still (or lately) due on Childe Harold, and six
+ hundred _guineas_, Manfred and Tasso, making a total of twelve
+ hundred and thirty pounds. If we agree about the new poem, I shall
+ take the liberty to reserve the choice of the manner in which it
+ should be published, viz. a quarto, certes."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 296. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "La Mira, Sept. 12. 1817.
+
+ "I set out yesterday morning with the intention of paying my
+ respects, and availing myself of your permission to walk over the
+ premises.[7] On arriving at Padua, I found that the march of the
+ Austrian troops had engrossed so many horses[8], that those I could
+ procure were hardly able to crawl; and their weakness, together
+ with the prospect of finding none at all at the post-house of
+ Monselice, and consequently either not arriving that day at Este,
+ or so late as to be unable to return home the same evening, induced
+ me to turn aside in a second visit to Arqua, instead of proceeding
+ onwards; and even thus I hardly got back in time.
+
+ "Next week I shall be obliged to be in Venice to meet Lord Kinnaird
+ and his brother, who are expected in a few days. And this
+ interruption, together with that occasioned by the continued march
+ of the Austrians for the next few days, will not allow me to fix
+ any precise period for availing myself of your kindness, though I
+ should wish to take the earliest opportunity. Perhaps, if absent,
+ you will have the goodness to permit one of your servants to show
+ me the grounds and house, or as much of either as may be
+ convenient; at any rate, I shall take the first occasion possible
+ to go over, and regret very much that I was yesterday prevented.
+
+ "I have the honour to be your obliged," &c.
+
+[Footnote 7: A country-house on the Euganean hills, near Este, which Mr.
+Hoppner, who was then the English Consul-General at Venice, had for some
+time occupied, and which Lord Byron afterwards rented of him, but never
+resided in it.]
+
+[Footnote 8: So great was the demand for horses, on the line of march of
+the Austrians, that all those belonging to private individuals were put
+in requisition for their use, and Lord Byron himself received an order
+to send his for the same purpose. This, however, he positively refused
+to do, adding, that if an attempt were made to take them by force, he
+would shoot them through the head in the middle of the road, rather than
+submit to such an act of tyranny upon a foreigner who was merely a
+temporary resident in the country. Whether his answer was ever reported
+to the higher authorities I know not; but his horses were suffered to
+remain unmolested in his stables.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 297. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "September 15. 1817.
+
+ "I enclose a sheet for correction, if ever you get to another
+ edition. You will observe that the blunder in printing makes it
+ appear as if the Chateau was _over_ St. Gingo, instead of being on
+ the opposite shore of the Lake, over Clarens. So, separate the
+ paragraphs, otherwise my _to_pography will seem as inaccurate as
+ your _ty_pography on this occasion.
+
+ "The other day I wrote to convey my proposition with regard to the
+ fourth and concluding Canto. I have gone over and extended it to
+ one hundred and fifty stanzas, which is almost as long as the two
+ first were originally, and longer by itself than any of the smaller
+ poems except 'The Corsair.' Mr. Hobhouse has made some very
+ valuable and accurate notes of considerable length, and you may be
+ sure that I will do for the text all that I can to finish with
+ decency. I look upon Childe Harold as my best; and as I begun, I
+ think of concluding with it. But I make no resolutions on that
+ head, as I broke my former intention with regard to 'The Corsair.'
+ However, I fear that I shall never do better; and yet, not being
+ thirty years of age, for some moons to come, one ought to be
+ progressive as far as intellect goes for many a good year. But I
+ have had a devilish deal of tear and wear of mind and body in my
+ time, besides having published too often and much already. God
+ grant me some judgment to do what may be most fitting in that and
+ every thing else, for I doubt my own exceedingly.
+
+ "I have read 'Lalla Rookh,' but not with sufficient attention yet,
+ for I ride about, and lounge, and ponder, and--two or three other
+ things; so that my reading is very desultory, and not so attentive
+ as it used to be. I am very glad to hear of its popularity, for
+ Moore is a very noble fellow in all respects, and will enjoy it
+ without any of the bad feelings which success--good or
+ evil--sometimes engenders in the men of rhyme. Of the poem, itself,
+ I will tell you my opinion when I have mastered it: I say of the
+ _poem_, for I don't like the _prose_ at all; and in the mean time,
+ the 'Fire-worshippers' is the best, and the 'Veiled Prophet' the
+ worst, of the volume.
+
+ "With regard to poetry in general[9], I am convinced, the more I
+ think of it, that he and _all_ of us--Scott, Southey, Wordsworth,
+ Moore, Campbell, I,--are all in the wrong, one as much as another;
+ that we are upon a wrong revolutionary poetical system, or systems,
+ not worth a damn in itself, and from which none but Rogers and
+ Crabbe are free; and that the present and next generations will
+ finally be of this opinion. I am the more confirmed in this by
+ having lately gone over some of our classics, particularly _Pope_,
+ whom I tried in this way,--I took Moore's poems and my own and some
+ others, and went over them side by side with Pope's, and I was
+ really astonished (I ought not to have been so) and mortified at
+ the ineffable distance in point of sense, learning, effect, and
+ even _imagination_, passion, and _invention_, between the little
+ Queen Anne's man, and us of the Lower Empire. Depend upon it, it is
+ all Horace then, and Claudian now, among us; and if I had to begin
+ again, I would mould myself accordingly. Crabbe's the man, but he
+ has got a coarse and impracticable subject, and * * * is retired
+ upon half-pay, and has done enough, unless he were to do as he did
+ formerly."
+
+[Footnote 9: On this paragraph, in the MS. copy of the above letter, I
+find the following note, in the handwriting of Mr. Gifford:--
+
+"There is more good sense, and feeling, and judgment in this passage,
+than in any other I ever read, or Lord Byron wrote."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 298. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "September 17. 1817.
+
+ "Mr. Hobhouse purposes being in England in November; he will bring
+ the fourth Canto with him, notes and all; the text contains one
+ hundred and fifty stanzas, which is long for that measure.
+
+ "With regard to the 'Ariosto of the North,' surely their themes,
+ chivalry, war, and love, were as like as can be; and as to the
+ compliment, if you knew what the Italians think of Ariosto, you
+ would not hesitate about that. But as to their 'measures,' you
+ forget that Ariosto's is an octave stanza, and Scott's any thing
+ but a stanza. If you think Scott will dislike it, say so, and I
+ will expunge. I do not call him the '_Scotch_ Ariosto,' which would
+ be sad _provincial_ eulogy, but the 'Ariosto of the _North_,
+ meaning of all _countries_ that are _not_ the _South_. * *
+
+ "As I have recently troubled you rather frequently, I will
+ conclude, repeating that I am
+
+ "Yours ever," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 299. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "October 12. 1817.
+
+ "Mr. Kinnaird and his brother, Lord Kinnaird, have been here, and
+ are now gone again. All your missives came, except the
+ tooth-powder, of which I request further supplies, at all
+ convenient opportunities; as also of magnesia and soda-powders,
+ both great luxuries here, and neither to be had good, or indeed
+ hardly at all, of the natives. * * *
+
+ "In * *'s Life, I perceive an attack upon the then Committee of
+ D.L. Theatre for acting Bertram, and an attack upon Maturin's
+ Bertram for being acted. Considering all things, this is not very
+ grateful nor graceful on the part of the worthy autobiographer;
+ and I would answer, if I had _not_ obliged him. Putting my own
+ pains to forward the views of * * out of the question, I know that
+ there was every disposition, on the part of the Sub-Committee, to
+ bring forward any production of his, were it feasible. The play he
+ offered, though poetical, did not appear at all practicable, and
+ Bertram did;--and hence this long tirade, which is the last chapter
+ of his vagabond life.
+
+ "As for Bertram, Maturin may defend his own begotten, if he likes
+ it well enough; I leave the Irish clergyman and the new Orator
+ Henley to battle it out between them, satisfied to have done the
+ best I could for _both_. I may say this to _you_, who know it.
+
+ "Mr. * * may console himself with the fervour,--the almost
+ religious fervour of his and W * *'s disciples, as he calls it. If
+ he means that as any proof of their merits, I will find him as much
+ 'fervour' in behalf of Richard Brothers and Joanna Southcote as
+ ever gathered over his pages or round his fire-side.
+
+ "My answer to your proposition about the fourth Canto you will have
+ received, and I await yours;--perhaps we may not agree. I have
+ since written a poem (of 84 octave stanzas), humorous, in or after
+ the excellent manner of Mr. Whistlecraft (whom I take to be Frere),
+ on a Venetian anecdote which amused me:--but till I have your
+ answer, I can say nothing more about it.
+
+ "Mr. Hobhouse does not return to England in November, as he
+ intended, but will winter here and as he is to convey the poem, or
+ poems,--for there may perhaps be more than the two mentioned,
+ (which, by the way, I shall not perhaps include in the same
+ publication or agreement,) I shall not be able to publish so soon
+ as expected; but I suppose there is no harm in the delay.
+
+ "I have _signed_ and sent your former _copyrights_ by Mr. Kinnaird,
+ but _not_ the _receipt_, because the money is not yet paid. Mr.
+ Kinnaird has a power of attorney to sign for me, and will, when
+ necessary.
+
+ "Many thanks for the Edinburgh Review, which is very kind about
+ Manfred, and defends its originality, which I did not know that any
+ body had attacked. I _never read_, and do not know that I ever saw,
+ the 'Faustus of Marlow,' and had, and have, no dramatic works by me
+ in English, except the recent things you sent me; but I heard Mr.
+ Lewis translate verbally some scenes of _Goethe's Faust_ (which
+ were, some good, and some bad) last summer;--which is all I know of
+ the history of that magical personage; and as to the germs of
+ Manfred, they may be found in the Journal which I sent to Mrs.
+ Leigh (part of which you saw) when I went over first the Dent de
+ Jaman, and then the Wengen or Wengeberg Alp and Sheideck, and made
+ the giro of the Jungfrau, Shreckhorn, &c. &c. shortly before I left
+ Switzerland. I have the whole scene of Manfred before me as if it
+ was but yesterday, and could point it out, spot by spot, torrent
+ and all.
+
+ "Of the Prometheus of AEschylus I was passionately fond as a boy (it
+ was one of the Greek plays we read thrice a year at
+ Harrow);--indeed that and the 'Medea' were the only ones, except
+ the 'Seven before Thebes,' which ever much pleased me. As to the
+ 'Faustus of Marlow,' I never read, never saw, nor heard of it--at
+ least, thought of it, except that I think Mr. Gifford mentioned, in
+ a note of his which you sent me, something about the catastrophe;
+ but not as having any thing to do with mine, which may or may not
+ resemble it, for any thing I know.
+
+ "The Prometheus, if not exactly in my plan, has always been so much
+ in my head, that I can easily conceive its influence over all or
+ any thing that I have written;--but I deny Marlow and his progeny,
+ and beg that you will do the same.
+
+ "If you can send me the paper in question[10], which the Edinburgh
+ Review mentions, _do_. The review in the magazine you say was
+ written by Wilson? it had all the air of being a poet's, and was a
+ very good one. The Edinburgh Review I take to be Jeffrey's own by
+ its friendliness. I wonder they thought it worth while to do so, so
+ soon after the former; but it was evidently with a good motive.
+
+ "I saw Hoppner the other day, whose country-house at Este I have
+ taken for two years. If you come out next summer, let me know in
+ time. Love to Gifford.
+
+ "Yours ever truly.
+
+ "Crabbe, Malcolm, Hamilton, and Chantrey,
+ Are all partakers of my pantry.
+
+ These two lines are omitted in your letter to the doctor, after--
+
+ "All clever men who make their way."
+
+[Footnote 10: A paper in the Edinburgh Magazine, in which it was
+suggested that the general conception of Manfred, and much of what is
+excellent in the manner of its execution, had been borrowed from "The
+Tragical History of Dr. Faustus," of Marlow.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 300. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, October 23. 1817.
+
+ "Your two letters are before me, and our bargain is so far
+ concluded. How sorry I am to hear that Gifford is unwell! Pray tell
+ me he is better: I hope it is nothing but _cold_. As you say his
+ illness originates in cold, I trust it will get no further.
+
+ "Mr. Whistlecraft has no greater admirer than myself: I have
+ written a story in 89 stanzas, in imitation of him, called _Beppo_,
+ (the short name for Giuseppe, that is, the _Joe_ of the Italian
+ Joseph,) which I shall throw you into the balance of the fourth
+ Canto, to help you round to your money; but you perhaps had better
+ publish it anonymously; but this we will see to by and by.
+
+ "In the Notes to Canto fourth, Mr. Hobhouse has pointed out
+ _several errors_ of _Gibbon_. You may depend upon H.'s research and
+ accuracy. You may print it in what shape you please.
+
+ "With regard to a future large edition, you may print all, or any
+ thing, except 'English Bards,' to the republication of which at
+ _no_ time will I consent. I would not reprint them on any
+ consideration. I don't think them good for much, even in point of
+ poetry; and, as to other things, you are to recollect that I gave
+ up the publication on account of the _Hollands_, and I do not think
+ that any time or circumstances can neutralise the suppression. Add
+ to which, that, after being on terms with almost all the bards and
+ critics of the day, it would be savage at any time, but worst of
+ all _now_, to revive this foolish lampoon.
+
+ "The review of Manfred came very safely, and I am much pleased with
+ it. It is odd that they should say (that is somebody in a magazine
+ whom the Edinburgh controverts) that it was taken from Marlow's
+ Faust, which I never read nor saw. An American, who came the other
+ day from Germany, told Mr. Hobhouse that Manfred was taken from
+ Goethe's Faust. The devil may take both the Faustuses, German and
+ English--I have taken neither.
+
+ "Will you send to _Hanson_, and say that he has not written since
+ 9th September?--at least I have had no letter since, to my great
+ surprise.
+
+ "Will you desire Messrs. Morland to send out whatever additional
+ sums have or may be paid in credit immediately, and always to their
+ Venice correspondents? It is two months ago that they sent me out
+ an additional credit for _one thousand pounds_. I was very glad of
+ it, but I don't know how the devil it came; for I can only make out
+ 500 of Hanson's payment, and I had thought the other 500 came from
+ you; but it did not, it seems, as, by yours of the 7th instant,
+ you have only just paid the 1230_l._ balance.
+
+ "Mr. Kinnaird is on his way home with the assignments. I can fix no
+ time for the arrival of Canto fourth, which depends on the journey
+ of Mr. Hobhouse home; and I do not think that this will be
+ immediate.
+
+ "Yours in great haste and very truly,
+
+ "B.
+
+ "P.S. Morlands have not yet written to my bankers apprising the
+ payment of your balances: pray desire them to do so.
+
+ "Ask them about the _previous_ thousand--of which I know 500 came
+ from Hanson's--and make out the other 500--that is, whence it
+ came."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 301. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, November 15. 1817.
+
+ "Mr. Kinnaird has probably returned to England by this time, and
+ will have conveyed to you any tidings you may wish to have of us
+ and ours. I have come back to Venice for the winter. Mr. Hobhouse
+ will probably set off in December, but what day or week I know not.
+ He is my opposite neighbour at present.
+
+ "I wrote yesterday in some perplexity, and no very good humour, to
+ Mr. Kinnaird, to inform me about Newstead and the Hansons, of which
+ and whom I hear nothing since his departure from this place, except
+ in a few unintelligible words from an unintelligible woman.
+
+ "I am as sorry to hear of Dr. Polidori's accident as one can be
+ for a person for whom one has a dislike, and something of contempt.
+ When he gets well, tell me, and how he gets on in the sick line.
+ Poor fellow! how came he to fix there?
+
+ "I fear the Doctor's skill at Norwich
+ Will hardly salt the Doctor's porridge.
+
+ Methought he was going to the Brazils to give the Portuguese physic
+ (of which they are fond to desperation) with the Danish consul.
+
+ "Your new Canto has expanded to one hundred and sixty-seven
+ stanzas. It will be long, you see; and as for the notes by
+ Hobhouse, I suspect they will be of the heroic size. You must keep
+ Mr. * * in good humour, for he is devilish touchy yet about your
+ Review and all which it inherits, including the editor, the
+ Admiralty, and its bookseller. I used to think that _I_ was a good
+ deal of an author in _amour propre_ and _noli me tangere_; but
+ these prose fellows are worst, after all, about their little
+ comforts.
+
+ "Do you remember my mentioning, some months ago, the Marquis
+ Moncada--a Spaniard of distinction and fourscore years, my summer
+ neighbour at La Mira? Well, about six weeks ago, he fell in love
+ with a Venetian girl of family, and no fortune or character; took
+ her into his mansion; quarrelled with all his former friends for
+ giving him advice (except me who gave him none), and installed her
+ present concubine and future wife and mistress of himself and
+ furniture. At the end of a month, in which she demeaned herself as
+ ill as possible, he found out a correspondence between her and
+ some former keeper, and after nearly strangling, turned her out of
+ the house, to the great scandal of the keeping part of the town,
+ and with a prodigious eclat, which has occupied all the canals and
+ coffee-houses in Venice. He said she wanted to poison him; and she
+ says--God knows what; but between them they have made a great deal
+ of noise. I know a little of both the parties: Moncada seemed a
+ very sensible old man, a character which he has not quite kept up
+ on this occasion; and the woman is rather showy than pretty. For
+ the honour of religion, she was bred in a convent, and for the
+ credit of Great Britain, taught by an Englishwoman.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 302. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, December 3. 1817.
+
+ "A Venetian lady, learned and somewhat stricken in years, having,
+ in her intervals of love and devotion, taken upon her to translate
+ the Letters and write the Life of Lady Mary Wortley Montague,--to
+ which undertaking there are two obstacles, firstly, ignorance of
+ English, and, secondly, a total dearth of information on the
+ subject of her projected biography, has applied to me for facts or
+ falsities upon this promising project. Lady Montague lived the last
+ twenty or more years of her life in or near Venice, I believe; but
+ here they know nothing, and remember nothing, for the story of
+ to-day is succeeded by the scandal of to-morrow; and the wit, and
+ beauty, and gallantry, which might render your countrywoman
+ notorious in her own country, must have been _here_ no great
+ distinction--because the first is in no request, and the two latter
+ are common to all women, or at least the last of them. If you can
+ therefore tell me any thing, or get any thing told, of Lady Wortley
+ Montague, I shall take it as a favour, and will transfer and
+ translate it to the 'Dama' in question. And I pray you besides to
+ send me, by some quick and safe voyager, the edition of her
+ Letters, and the stupid Life, by _Dr. Dallaway_, published by her
+ proud and foolish family.
+
+ "The death of the Princess Charlotte has been a shock even here,
+ and must have been an earthquake at home. The Courier's list of
+ some three hundred heirs to the crown (including the house of
+ Wirtemberg, with that * * *, P----, of disreputable memory, whom I
+ remember seeing at various balls during the visit of the
+ Muscovites, &c. in 1814) must be very consolatory to all true
+ lieges, as well as foreigners, except Signor Travis, a rich Jew
+ merchant of this city, who complains grievously of the length of
+ British mourning, which has countermanded all the silks which he
+ was on the point of transmitting, for a year to come. The death of
+ this poor girl is melancholy in every respect, dying at twenty or
+ so, in childbed--of a _boy_ too, a present princess and future
+ queen, and just as she began to be happy, and to enjoy herself, and
+ the hopes which she inspired.
+
+ "I think, as far as I can recollect, she is the first royal defunct
+ in childbed upon record in _our_ history. I feel sorry in every
+ respect--for the loss of a female reign, and a woman hitherto
+ harmless; and all the lost rejoicings, and addresses, and
+ drunkenness, and disbursements, of John Bull on the occasion.
+
+ "The Prince will marry again, after divorcing his wife, and Mr.
+ Southey will write an elegy now, and an ode then; the Quarterly
+ will have an article against the press, and the Edinburgh an
+ article, _half_ and _half_, about reform and right of divorce; the
+ British will give you Dr. Chalmers's funeral sermon much commended,
+ with a place in the stars for deceased royalty; and the Morning
+ Post will have already yelled forth its 'syllables of dolour.'
+
+ "Woe, woe, Nealliny!--the young Nealliny!
+
+ "It is some time since I have heard from you: are you in bad
+ humour? I suppose so. I have been so myself, and it is your turn
+ now, and by and by mine will come round again. Yours truly,
+
+ "B.
+
+ "P.S. Countess Albrizzi, come back from Paris, has brought me a
+ medal of himself, a present from Denon to me, and a likeness of Mr.
+ Rogers (belonging to her), by Denon also."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 303. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "Venice, December 15. 1817.
+
+ "I should have thanked you before, for your favour a few days ago,
+ had I not been in the intention of paying my respects, personally,
+ this evening, from which I am deterred by the recollection that you
+ will probably be at the Count Goess's this evening, which has made
+ me postpone my intrusion.
+
+ "I think your Elegy a remarkably good one, not only as a
+ composition, but both the politics and poetry contain a far greater
+ portion of truth and generosity than belongs to the times, or to
+ the professors of these opposite pursuits, which usually agree only
+ in one point, as extremes meet. I do not know whether you wished me
+ to retain the copy, but I shall retain it till you tell me
+ otherwise; and am very much obliged by the perusal.
+
+ "My own sentiments on Venice, &c., such as they are, I had already
+ thrown into verse last summer, in the fourth Canto of Childe
+ Harold, now in preparation for the press; and I think much more
+ highly of them, for being in coincidence with yours.
+
+ "Believe me yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 304. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, January 8. 1818.
+
+ "My dear Mr. Murray,
+ You're in a damn'd hurry
+ To set up this ultimate Canto;
+ But (if they don't rob us)
+ You'll see Mr. Hobhouse
+ Will bring it safe in his portmanteau.
+
+ "For the Journal you hint of,
+ As ready to print off,
+ No doubt you do right to commend it;
+ But as yet I have writ off
+ The devil a bit of
+ Our 'Beppo;'--when copied, I'll send it.
+
+ "Then you've * * * Tour,--
+ No great things, so be sure,
+ You could hardly begin with a less work;
+ For the pompous rascallion,
+ Who don't speak Italian
+ Nor French, must have scribbled by guess-work.
+
+ "You can make any loss up
+ With 'Spence' and his gossip,
+ A work which must surely succeed;
+ Then Queen Mary's Epistle-craft,
+ With the new 'Fytte' of 'Whistlecraft,'
+ Must make people purchase and read.
+
+ "Then you've General Gordon,
+ Who girded his sword on,
+ To serve with a Muscovite master,
+ And help him to polish
+ A nation so owlish,
+ They thought shaving their beards a disaster.
+
+ "For the man, '_poor and shrewd_[11],'
+ With whom you'd conclude
+ A compact without more delay,
+ Perhaps some such pen is
+ Still extant in Venice;
+ But please, sir, to mention _your pay_."
+
+
+[Footnote 11: "Vide your letter."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 305. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, January 19. 1818.
+
+ "I send you the Story[12] in three other separate covers. It won't
+ do for your Journal, being full of political allusions. _Print
+ alone, without name_; alter nothing; get a scholar to see that the
+ _Italian phrases_ are correctly published, (your printing, by the
+ way, always makes me ill with its eternal blunders, which are
+ incessant,) and God speed you. Hobhouse left Venice a fortnight
+ ago, saving two days. I have heard nothing of or from him.
+
+ "Yours, &c.
+
+ "He has the whole of the MSS.; so put up prayers in your back shop,
+ or in the printer's 'Chapel.'"
+
+[Footnote 12: Beppo.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 306. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, January 27. 1818.
+
+ "My father--that is, my Armenian father, Padre Pasquali--in the
+ name of all the other fathers of our Convent, sends you the
+ enclosed, greeting.
+
+ "Inasmuch as it has pleased the translators of the long-lost and
+ lately-found portions of the text of Eusebius to put forth the
+ enclosed prospectus, of which I send six copies, you are hereby
+ implored to obtain subscribers in the two Universities, and among
+ the learned, and the unlearned who would unlearn their
+ ignorance--This _they_ (the Convent) request, _I_ request, and _do
+ you_ request.
+
+ "I sent you Beppo some weeks agone. You must publish it alone; it
+ has politics and ferocity, and won't do for your isthmus of a
+ Journal.
+
+ "Mr. Hobhouse, if the Alps have not broken his neck, is, or ought
+ to be, swimming with my commentaries and his own coat of mail in
+ his teeth and right hand, in a cork jacket, between Calais and
+ Dover.
+
+ "It is the height of the Carnival, and I am in the extreme and
+ agonies of a new intrigue with I don't exactly know whom or what,
+ except that she is insatiate of love, and won't take money, and has
+ light hair and blue eyes, which are not common here, and that I met
+ her at the Masque, and that when her mask is off, I am as wise as
+ ever. I shall make what I can of the remainder of my youth."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 307. TO MR. MOORE.
+
+ "Venice, February 2. 1818.
+
+ "Your letter of December 8th arrived but this day, by some delay,
+ common but inexplicable. Your domestic calamity is very grievous,
+ and I feel with you as much as I _dare_ feel at all. Throughout
+ life, your loss must be my loss, and your gain my gain; and, though
+ my heart may ebb, there will always be a drop for you among the
+ dregs.
+
+ "I know how to feel with you, because (selfishness being always the
+ substratum of our damnable clay) I am quite wrapt up in my own
+ children. Besides my little legitimate, I have made unto myself an
+ _il_legitimate since (to say nothing of one before[13]), and I look
+ forward to one of these as the pillar of my old age, supposing that
+ I ever reach--which I hope I never shall--that desolating period. I
+ have a great love for my little Ada, though perhaps she may torture
+ me, like * * *.
+
+ "Your offered address will be as acceptable as you can wish. I
+ don't much care what the wretches of the world think of me--all
+ _that's_ past. But I care a good deal what _you_ think of me, and,
+ so, say what you like. You _know_ that I am not sullen; and, as to
+ being _savage_, such things depend on circumstances. However, as to
+ being in good humour in _your_ society, there is no great merit in
+ that, because it would be an effort, or an insanity, to be
+ otherwise.
+
+ "I don't know what Murray may have been saying or quoting.[14] I
+ called Crabbe and Sam the fathers of present Poesy; and said, that
+ I thought--except them--_all_ of '_us youth_' were on a wrong tack.
+ But I never said that we did not sail well. Our fame will be hurt
+ by _admiration_ and _imitation_. When I say _our_, I mean _all_
+ (Lakers included), except the postscript of the Augustans. The next
+ generation (from the quantity and facility of imitation) will
+ tumble and break their necks off our Pegasus, who runs away with
+ us; but we keep the _saddle_, because we broke the rascal and can
+ ride. But though easy to mount, he is the devil to guide; and the
+ next fellows must go back to the riding-school and the manege, and
+ learn to ride the 'great horse.'
+
+ "Talking of horses, by the way, I have transported my own, four in
+ number, to the Lido (_beach_ in English), a strip of some ten miles
+ along the Adriatic, a mile or two from the city; so that I not only
+ get a row in my gondola, but a spanking gallop of some miles daily
+ along a firm and solitary beach, from the fortress to Malamocco,
+ the which contributes considerably to my health and spirits.
+
+ "I have hardly had a wink of sleep this week past. We are in the
+ agonies of the Carnival's last days, and I must be up all night
+ again, as well as to-morrow. I have had some curious masking
+ adventures this Carnival; but, as they are not yet over, I shall
+ not say on. I will work the mine of my youth to the last veins of
+ the ore, and then--good night. I have lived, and am content.
+
+ "Hobhouse went away before the Carnival began, so that he had
+ little or no fun. Besides, it requires some time to be
+ thoroughgoing with the Venetians; but of all this anon, in some
+ other letter.
+
+ "I must dress for the evening. There is an opera and ridotto, and I
+ know not what, besides balls; and so, ever and ever yours,
+
+ "B.
+
+ "P.S. I send this without revision, so excuse errors. I delight in
+ the fame and fortune of Lalla, and again congratulate you on your
+ well-merited success."
+
+[Footnote 13: This possibly may have been the subject of the Poem given
+in p. 152. of the first volume.]
+
+[Footnote 14: Having seen by accident the passage in one of his letters
+to Mr. Murray, in which he denounces, as false and worthless, the
+poetical system on which the greater number of his contemporaries, as
+well as himself, founded their reputation, I took an opportunity, in the
+next letter I wrote to him, of jesting a little on this opinion, and his
+motives for it. It was, no doubt (I ventured to say), excellent policy
+in him, who had made sure of his own immortality in this style of
+writing, thus to _throw overboard_ all _us poor devils_, who were
+embarked with him. He was, in fact, I added, behaving towards us much in
+the manner of the methodist preacher who said to his congregation--"You
+may think, at the Last Day, to get to heaven by laying hold on my
+skirts; but I'll cheat you all, for I'll wear a spencer, I'll wear a
+spencer!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Of his daily rides on the Lido, which he mentions in this letter, the
+following account, by a gentleman who lived a good deal with him at
+Venice, will be found not a little interesting:--
+
+"Almost immediately after Mr. Hobhouse's departure, Lord Byron proposed
+to me to accompany him in his rides on the Lido. One of the long narrow
+islands which separate the Lagune, in the midst of which Venice stands,
+from the Adriatic, is more particularly distinguished by this name. At
+one extremity is a fortification, which, with the Castle of St. Andrea
+on an island on the opposite side, defends the nearest entrance to the
+city from the sea. In times of peace this fortification is almost
+dismantled, and Lord Byron had hired here of the Commandant an
+unoccupied stable, where he kept his horses. The distance from the city
+was not very considerable; it was much less than to the Terra Firma,
+and, as far as it went, the spot was not ineligible for riding.
+
+"Every day that the weather would permit, Lord Byron called for me in
+his gondola, and we found the horses waiting for us outside of the fort.
+We rode as far as we could along the sea-shore, and then on a kind of
+dyke, or embankment, which has been raised where the island was very
+narrow, as far as another small fort about half way between the
+principal one which I have already mentioned, and the town or village of
+Malamocco, which is near the other extremity of the island,--the
+distance between the two forts being about three miles.
+
+"On the land side of the embankment, not far from the smaller fort, was
+a boundary stone which probably marked some division of property,--all
+the side of the island nearest the Lagune being divided into gardens for
+the cultivation of vegetables for the Venetian markets. At the foot of
+this stone Lord Byron repeatedly told me that I should cause him to be
+interred, if he should die in Venice, or its neighbourhood, during my
+residence there; and he appeared to think, as he was not a Catholic,
+that, on the part of the government, there could be no obstacle to his
+interment in an unhallowed spot of ground by the sea-side. At all
+events, I was to overcome whatever difficulties might be raised on this
+account. I was, by no means, he repeatedly told me, to allow his body to
+be removed to England, nor permit any of his family to interfere with
+his funeral.
+
+"Nothing could be more delightful than these rides on the Lido were to
+me. We were from half to three quarters of an hour crossing the water,
+during which his conversation was always most amusing and interesting.
+Sometimes he would bring with him any new book he had received, and read
+to me the passages which most struck him. Often he would repeat to me
+whole stanzas of the poems he was engaged in writing, as he had composed
+them on the preceding evening; and this was the more interesting to me,
+because I could frequently trace in them some idea which he had started
+in our conversation of the preceding day, or some remark, the effect of
+which he had been evidently trying upon me. Occasionally, too, he spoke
+of his own affairs, making me repeat all I had heard with regard to
+him, and desiring that I would not spare him, but let him know the worst
+that was said."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 308. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, Feb. 20. 1818.
+
+ "I have to thank Mr. Croker for the arrival, and you for the
+ contents, of the parcel which came last week, much quicker than any
+ before, owing to Mr. Croker's kind attention and the official
+ exterior of the bags; and all safe, except much friction amongst
+ the magnesia, of which only two bottles came entire; but it is all
+ very well, and I am exceedingly obliged to you.
+
+ "The books I have read, or rather am reading. Pray, who may be the
+ Sexagenarian, whose gossip is very amusing? Many of his sketches I
+ recognise, particularly Gifford, Mackintosh, Drummond, Dutens, H.
+ Walpole, Mrs. Inchbald, Opie, &c., with the Scotts, Loughborough,
+ and most of the divines and lawyers, besides a few shorter hints of
+ authors, and a few lines about a certain '_noble author_,'
+ characterised as malignant and sceptical, according to the good old
+ story, 'as it was in the beginning, is now, but _not_ always shall
+ be:' do you know such a person, Master Murray? eh?--And pray, of
+ the booksellers, which be _you_? the dry, the dirty, the honest,
+ the opulent, the finical, the splendid, or the coxcomb bookseller?
+ Stap my vitals, but the author grows scurrilous in his grand
+ climacteric!
+
+ "I remember to have seen Porson at Cambridge, in the hall of our
+ college, and in private parties, but not frequently; and I never
+ can recollect him except as drunk or brutal, and generally both: I
+ mean in an evening, for in the hall he dined at the Dean's table,
+ and I at the Vice-master's, so that I was not near him; and he then
+ and there appeared sober in his demeanour, nor did I ever hear of
+ excess or outrage on his part in public,--commons, college, or
+ chapel; but I have seen him in a private party of undergraduates,
+ many of them fresh men and strangers, take up a poker to one of
+ them, and heard him use language as blackguard as his action. I
+ have seen Sheridan drunk, too, with all the world; but his
+ intoxication was that of Bacchus, and Porson's that of Silenus. Of
+ all the disgusting brutes, sulky, abusive, and intolerable, Porson
+ was the most bestial, as far as the few times that I saw him went,
+ which were only at William Bankes's (the Nubian discoverer's)
+ rooms. I saw him once go away in a rage, because nobody knew the
+ name of the 'Cobbler of Messina,' insulting their ignorance with
+ the most vulgar terms of reprobation. He was tolerated in this
+ state amongst the young men for his talents, as the Turks think a
+ madman inspired, and bear with him. He used to recite, or rather
+ vomit, pages of all languages, and could hiccup Greek like a Helot;
+ and certainly Sparta never shocked her children with a grosser
+ exhibition than this man's intoxication.
+
+ "I perceive, in the book you sent me, a long account of him, which
+ is very savage. I cannot judge, as I never saw him sober, except in
+ _hall_ or combination-room; and then I was never near enough to
+ hear, and hardly to see him. Of his drunken deportment, I can be
+ sure, because I saw it.
+
+ "With the Reviews I have been much entertained. It requires to be
+ as far from England as I am to relish a periodical paper properly:
+ it is like soda-water in an Italian summer. But what cruel work you
+ make with Lady * * * *! You should recollect that she is a woman;
+ though, to be sure, they are now and then very provoking; still, as
+ authoresses, they can do no great harm; and I think it a pity so
+ much good invective should have been laid out upon her, when there
+ is such a fine field of us Jacobin gentlemen for you to work upon.
+
+ "I heard from Moore lately, and was sorry to be made aware of his
+ domestic loss. Thus it is--'medio de fonte leporum'--in the acme of
+ his fame and his happiness comes a drawback as usual.
+
+ "Mr. Hoppner, whom I saw this morning, has been made the father of
+ a very fine boy[15].--Mother and child doing very well indeed. By
+ this time Hobhouse should be with you, and also certain packets,
+ letters, &c. of mine, sent since his departure.--I am not at all
+ well in health within this last eight days. My remembrances to
+ Gifford and all friends.
+
+ "Yours, &c.
+
+ "B.
+
+ "P.S. In the course of a month or two, Hanson will have probably to
+ send off a clerk with conveyances to sign (Newstead being sold in
+ November last for ninety-four thousand five hundred pounds), in
+ which case I supplicate supplies of articles as usual, for which,
+ desire Mr. Kinnaird to settle from funds in their bank, and deduct
+ from my account with him.
+
+ "P.S. To-morrow night I am going to see 'Otello,' an opera from our
+ 'Othello,' and one of Rossini's best, it is said. It will be
+ curious to see in Venice the Venetian story itself represented,
+ besides to discover what they will make of Shakspeare in music."
+
+[Footnote 15: On the birth of this child, who was christened John
+William Rizzo, Lord Byron wrote the four following lines, which are in
+no other respect remarkable than that they were thought worthy of being
+metrically translated into no less than ten different languages; namely,
+Greek, Latin, Italian (also in the Venetian dialect), German, French,
+Spanish, Illyrian, Hebrew, Armenian, and Samaritan:--
+
+ "His father's sense, his mother's grace
+ In him, I hope, will always fit so;
+ With (still to keep him in good case)
+ The health and appetite of Rizzo."
+
+The original lines, with the different versions just mentioned, were
+printed, in a small neat volume (which now lies before me), in the
+seminary of Padua.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 309. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "Venice, February 28. 1818.
+
+ "My dear Sir,
+
+ "Our friend, il Conte M., threw me into a cold sweat last night, by
+ telling me of a menaced version of Manfred (in Venetian, I hope, to
+ complete the thing) by some Italian, who had sent it to you for
+ correction, which is the reason why I take the liberty of troubling
+ you on the subject. If you have any means of communication with the
+ man, would you permit me to convey to him the offer of any price he
+ may obtain or think to obtain for his project, provided he will
+ throw his translation into the fire[16], and promise not to
+ undertake any other of that or any other of _my_ things: I will
+ send his money immediately on this condition.
+
+ "As I did not write _to_ the Italians, nor _for_ the Italians, nor
+ _of_ the Italians, (except in a poem not yet published, where I
+ have said all the good I know or do not know of them, and none of
+ the harm,) I confess I wish that they would let me alone, and not
+ drag me into their arena as one of the gladiators, in a silly
+ contest which I neither understand nor have ever interfered with,
+ having kept clear of all their literary parties, both here and at
+ Milan, and elsewhere.--I came into Italy to feel the climate and be
+ quiet, if possible. Mossi's translation I would have prevented, if
+ I had known it, or could have done so; and I trust that I shall yet
+ be in time to stop this new gentleman, of whom I heard yesterday
+ for the first time. He will only hurt himself, and do no good to
+ his party, for in _party_ the whole thing originates. Our modes of
+ thinking and writing are so unutterably different, that I can
+ conceive no greater absurdity than attempting to make any approach
+ between the English and Italian poetry of the present day. I like
+ the people very much, and their literature very much, but I am not
+ the least ambitious of being the subject of their discussions
+ literary and personal (which appear to be pretty much the same
+ thing, as is the case in most countries); and if you can aid me in
+ impeding this publication, you will add to much kindness already
+ received from you by yours Ever and truly,
+
+ "BYRON.
+
+ "P.S. How is _the_ son, and mamma? Well, I dare say."
+
+[Footnote 16: Having ascertained that the utmost this translator could
+expect to make by his manuscript was two hundred francs, Lord Byron
+offered him that sum, if he would desist from publishing. The Italian,
+however, held out for more; nor could he be brought to terms, till it
+was intimated to him pretty plainly from Lord Byron that, should the
+publication be persisted in, he would horsewhip him the very first time
+they met. Being but little inclined to suffer martyrdom in the cause,
+the translator accepted the two hundred francs, and delivered up his
+manuscript, entering at the same time into a written engagement never to
+translate any other of the noble poet's works.
+
+Of the qualifications of this person as a translator of English poetry,
+some idea may be formed from the difficulty he found himself under
+respecting the meaning of a line in the Incantation in Manfred,--"And
+the wisp on the morass,"--which he requested of Mr. Hoppner to expound
+to him, not having been able to find in the dictionaries to which he had
+access any other signification of the word "wisp" than "a bundle of
+straw."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 310. TO MR. ROGERS.
+
+ "Venice, March 3. 1828.
+
+ "I have not, as you say, 'taken to wife the Adriatic.' I heard of
+ Moore's loss from himself in a letter which was delayed upon the
+ road three months. I was sincerely sorry for it, but in such cases
+ what are words?
+
+ "The villa you speak of is one at Este, which Mr. Hoppner
+ (Consul-general here) has transferred to me. I have taken it for
+ two years as a place of Villeggiatura. The situation is very
+ beautiful, indeed, among the Euganean hills, and the house very
+ fair. The vines are luxuriant to a great degree, and all the fruits
+ of the earth abundant. It is close to the old castle of the Estes,
+ or Guelphs, and within a few miles of Arqua, which I have visited
+ twice, and hope to visit often.
+
+ "Last summer (except an excursion to Rome) I passed upon the
+ Brenta. In Venice I winter, transporting my horses to the Lido,
+ bordering the Adriatic (where the fort is), so that I get a gallop
+ of some miles daily along the strip of beach which reaches to
+ Malamocco, when in health; but within these few weeks I have been
+ unwell. At present I am getting better. The Carnival was short, but
+ a good one. I don't go out much, except during the time of masques;
+ but there are one or two conversazioni, where I go regularly, just
+ to keep up the system; as I had letters to their givers; and they
+ are particular on such points; and now and then, though very
+ rarely, to the Governor's.
+
+ "It is a very good place for women. I like the dialect and their
+ manner very much. There is a _naivete_ about them which is very
+ winning, and the romance of the place is a mighty adjunct; the _bel
+ sangue_ is not, however, now amongst the _dame_ or higher orders;
+ but all under _i fazzioli_, or kerchiefs (a white kind of veil
+ which the lower orders wear upon their heads);--the _vesta
+ zendale_, or old national female costume, is no more. The city,
+ however, is decaying daily, and does not gain in population.
+ However, I prefer it to any other in Italy; and here have I pitched
+ my staff, and here do I purpose to reside for the remainder of my
+ life, unless events, connected with business not to be transacted
+ out of England, compel me to return for that purpose; otherwise I
+ have few regrets, and no desires to visit it again for its own
+ sake. I shall probably be obliged to do so, to sign papers for my
+ affairs, and a proxy for the Whigs, and to see Mr. Waite, for I
+ can't find a good dentist here, and every two or three years one
+ ought to consult one. About seeing my children I must take my
+ chance. One I shall have sent here; and I shall be very happy to
+ see the legitimate one, when God pleases, which he perhaps will
+ some day or other. As for my mathematical * * *, I am as well
+ without her.
+
+ "Your account of your visit to Fonthill is very striking: could you
+ beg of _him_ for _me_ a copy in MS. of the remaining _Tales_?[17] I
+ think I deserve them, as a strenuous and public admirer of the
+ first one. I will return it when read, and make no ill use of the
+ copy, if granted. Murray would send me out any thing safely. If
+ ever I return to England, I should like very much to see the
+ author, with his permission. In the mean time, you could not oblige
+ me more than by obtaining me the perusal I request, in French or
+ English,--all's one for that, though I prefer Italian to either. I
+ have a French copy of Vathek which I bought at Lausanne. I can read
+ French with great pleasure and facility, though I neither speak nor
+ write it. Now Italian I _can_ speak with some fluency, and write
+ sufficiently for my purposes, but I don't like their _modern_ prose
+ at all; it is very heavy, and so different from Machiavelli.
+
+ "They say Francis is Junius;--I think it looks like it. I remember
+ meeting him at Earl Grey's at dinner. Has not he lately married a
+ young woman; and was not he Madame Talleyrand's _cavaliere
+ servente_ in India years ago?
+
+ "I read my death in the papers, which was not true. I see they are
+ marrying the remaining singleness of the royal family. They have
+ brought out Fazio with great and deserved success at Covent Garden:
+ that's a good sign. I tried, during the directory, to have it done
+ at Drury Lane, but was overruled. If you think of coming into this
+ country, you will let me know perhaps beforehand. I suppose Moore
+ won't move. Rose is here. I saw him the other night at Madame
+ Albrizzi's; he talks of returning in May. My love to the Hollands.
+
+ "Ever, &c.
+
+ "P.S. They have been crucifying Othello into an opera (_Otello_, by
+ Rossini): the music good, but lugubrious; but as for the words, all
+ the real scenes with Iago cut out, and the greatest nonsense
+ instead; the handkerchief turned into a _billet-doux_, and the
+ first singer would not _black_ his face, for some exquisite reasons
+ assigned in the preface. Singing, dresses, and music, very good."
+
+[Footnote 17: A continuation of Vathek, by the author of that very
+striking and powerful production. The "Tales" of which this unpublished
+sequel consists are, I understand, those supposed to have been related
+by the Princes in the Hall of Eblis.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 311. TO MR. MOORE.
+
+ "Venice, March 16. 1818.
+
+ "My dear Tom,
+
+ "Since my last, which I hope that you have received, I have had a
+ letter from our friend Samuel. He talks of Italy this summer--won't
+ you come with him? I don't know whether you would like our Italian
+ way of life or not.
+
+ "They are an odd people. The other day I was telling a girl, 'You
+ must not come to-morrow, because Margueritta is coming at such a
+ time,'--(they are both about five feet ten inches high, with great
+ black eyes and fine figures--fit to breed gladiators from--and I
+ had some difficulty to prevent a battle upon a rencontre once
+ before,)--'unless you promise to be friends, and'--the answer was
+ an interruption, by a declaration of war against the other, which
+ she said would be a 'Guerra di Candia.' Is it not odd, that the
+ lower order of Venetians should still allude proverbially to that
+ famous contest, so glorious and so fatal to the Republic?
+
+ "They have singular expressions, like all the Italians. For
+ example, 'Viscere'--as we would say, 'My love,' or 'My heart,' as
+ an expression of tenderness. Also, 'I would go for you into the
+ midst of a hundred _knives_.'--'_Mazza ben_,' excessive
+ attachment,--literally, 'I wish you well even to killing.' Then
+ they say (instead of our way, 'Do you think I would do you so much
+ harm?') 'Do you think I would _assassinate_ you in such a
+ manner?'--'Tempo _perfido_,' bad weather; 'Strade _perfide_,' bad
+ roads,--with a thousand other allusions and metaphors, taken from
+ the state of society and habits in the middle ages.
+
+ "I am not so sure about _mazza_, whether it don't mean _massa_,
+ _i.e._ a great deal, a _mass_, instead of the interpretation I have
+ given it. But of the other phrases I am sure.
+
+ "Three o' th' clock--I must 'to bed, to bed, to bed,' as mother S *
+ * (that tragical friend of the mathematical * * *) says.
+
+ "Have you ever seen--I forget what or whom--no matter. They tell me
+ Lady Melbourne is very unwell. I shall be so sorry. She was my
+ greatest _friend_, of the feminine gender:--when I say 'friend,' I
+ mean _not_ mistress, for that's the antipode. Tell me all about you
+ and every body--how Sam is--how you like your neighbours, the
+ Marquis and Marchesa, &c. &c.
+
+ "Ever," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 312. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, March 25. 1818.
+
+ "I have your letter, with the account of 'Beppo,' for which I sent
+ you four new stanzas a fortnight ago, in case you print, or
+ reprint.
+
+ "Croker's is a good guess; but the style is not English, it is
+ Italian;--Berni is the original of _all_. Whistlecraft was _my_
+ immediate _model_! Rose's 'Animali' I never saw till a few days
+ ago,--they are excellent. But (as I said above) Berni is the father
+ of that kind of writing, which, I think, suits our language, too,
+ very well;--we shall see by the experiment. If it does, I shall
+ send you a volume in a year or two, for I know the Italian way of
+ life well, and in time may know it yet better; and as for the verse
+ and the passions, I have them still in tolerable vigour.
+
+ "If you think that it will do you and the work, or works, any good,
+ you may put my name to it; _but first consult the knowing ones_. It
+ will, at any rate, show them that I can write cheerfully, and repel
+ the charge of monotony and mannerism.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 313. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, April 11. 1818.
+
+ "Will you send me by letter, packet, or parcel, half a dozen of the
+ coloured prints from Holmes's miniature (the latter done shortly
+ before I left your country, and the prints about a year ago); I
+ shall be obliged to you, as some people here have asked me for the
+ like. It is a picture of my upright self done for Scrope B. Davies,
+ Esq.[18]
+
+ "Why have you not sent me an answer, and list of subscribers to the
+ translation of the Armenian _Eusebius_? of which I sent you printed
+ copies of the prospectus (in French) two moons ago. Have you had
+ the letter?--I shall send you another:--you must not neglect my
+ Armenians. Tooth-powder, magnesia, tincture of myrrh,
+ tooth-brushes, diachylon plaster, Peruvian bark, are my personal
+ demands.
+
+ "Strahan, Tonson, Lintot of the times,
+ Patron and publisher of rhymes,
+ For thee the bard up Pindus climbs,
+ My Murray.
+
+ "To thee, with hope and terror dumb,
+ The unfledged MS. authors come;
+ Thou printest all--and sellest some--
+ My Murray.
+
+ "Upon thy table's baize so green
+ The last new Quarterly is seen,
+ But where is thy new Magazine,
+ My Murray?
+
+ "Along thy sprucest bookshelves shine
+ The works thou deemest most divine--
+ The 'Art of Cookery,' and mine,
+ My Murray.
+
+ "Tours, Travels, Essays, too, I wist,
+ And Sermons to thy mill bring grist!
+ And then thou hast the 'Navy List,'
+ My Murray.
+
+ "And Heaven forbid I should conclude
+ Without 'the Board of Longitude,'
+ Although this narrow paper would,
+ My Murray!"
+
+
+[Footnote 18: There follows, in this place, among other matter, a long
+string of verses, in various metres, to the amount of about sixty lines,
+so full of light gaiety and humour, that it is with some reluctance I
+suppress them. They might, however, have the effect of giving pain in
+quarters where even the author himself would not have deliberately
+inflicted it;--from a pen like his, touches may be wounds, and without
+being actually intended as such.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 314. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, April 12. 1818.
+
+ "This letter will be delivered by Signor Gioe. Bata. Missiaglia,
+ proprietor of the Apollo library, and the principal publisher and
+ bookseller now in Venice. He sets out for London with a view to
+ business and correspondence with the English booksellers: and it is
+ in the hope that it may be for your mutual advantage that I furnish
+ him with this letter of introduction to you. If you can be of use
+ to him, either by recommendation to others, or by any personal
+ attention on your own part, you will oblige him and gratify me. You
+ may also perhaps both be able to derive advantage, or establish
+ some mode of literary communication, pleasing to the public, and
+ beneficial to one another.
+
+ "At any rate, be civil to him for my sake, as well as for the
+ honour and glory of publishers and authors now and to come for
+ evermore.
+
+ "With him I also consign a great number of MS. letters written in
+ English, French, and Italian, by various English established in
+ Italy during the last century:--the names of the writers, Lord
+ Hervey, Lady M.W. Montague, (hers are but few--some billets-doux in
+ French to Algarotti, and one letter in English, Italian, and all
+ sorts of jargon, to the same,) Gray, the poet (one letter), Mason
+ (two or three), Garrick, Lord Chatham, David Hume, and many of
+ lesser note,--all addressed to Count Algarotti. Out of these, I
+ think, with discretion, an amusing miscellaneous volume of letters
+ might be extracted, provided some good editor were disposed to
+ undertake the selection, and preface, and a few notes, &c.
+
+ "The proprietor of these is a friend of mine, _Dr. Aglietti_,--a
+ great name in Italy,--and if you are disposed to publish, it will
+ be for _his benefit_, and it is to and for him that you will name a
+ price, if you take upon you the work. _I_ would _edite_ it myself,
+ but am too far off, and too lazy to undertake it; but I wish that
+ it could be done. The letters of Lord Hervey, in Mr. Rose's[19]
+ opinion and mine, are good; and the _short_ French love letters
+ _certainly_ are Lady M.W. Montague's--the _French_ not good, but
+ the sentiments beautiful. Gray's letter good; and Mason's
+ tolerable. The whole correspondence must be _well weeded_; but this
+ being done, a small and pretty popular volume might be made of
+ it.--There are many ministers' letters--Gray, the ambassador at
+ Naples, Horace Mann, and others of the same kind of animal.
+
+ "I thought of a preface, defending Lord Hervey against Pope's
+ attack, but Pope--_quoad_ Pope, the poet--against all the world, in
+ the unjustifiable attempts begun by Warton and carried on at this
+ day by the new school of critics and scribblers, who think
+ themselves poets because they do _not_ write like Pope. I have no
+ patience with such cursed humbug and bad taste; your whole
+ generation are not worth a Canto of the Rape of the Lock, or the
+ Essay on Man, or the Dunciad, or 'any thing that is his.'--But it
+ is three in the matin, and I must go to bed. Yours alway," &c.
+
+[Footnote 19: Among Lord Byron's papers, I find some verses addressed to
+him, about this time, by Mr. W. Rose, with the following note annexed to
+them:--"These verses were sent to me by W.S. Rose, from Abaro, in the
+spring of 1818. They are good and true; and Rose is a fine fellow, and
+one of the few English who understand _Italy_, without which Italian is
+nothing." The verses begin thus:
+
+ "Byron[20], while you make gay what circle fits ye,
+ Bandy Venetian slang with the Benzon,
+ Or play at company with the Albrizzi,
+ The self-pleased pedant, and patrician crone,
+ Grimanis, Mocenigos, Balbis, Rizzi,
+ Compassionate our cruel case,--alone,
+ Our pleasure an academy of frogs,
+ Who nightly serenade us from the bogs," &c. &c.
+]
+
+[Footnote 20: "I have _hunted_ out a precedent for this unceremonious
+address."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 315. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, April 17. 1818.
+
+ "A few days ago, I wrote to you a letter, requesting you to desire
+ Hanson to desire his messenger to come on from Geneva to Venice,
+ because I won't go from Venice to Geneva; and if this is not done,
+ the messenger may be damned, with him who mis-sent him. Pray
+ reiterate my request.
+
+ "With the proofs returned, I sent two additional stanzas for Canto
+ fourth: did they arrive?
+
+ "Your Monthly reviewer has made a mistake: _Cavaliere_, alone, is
+ well enough; but '_Cavalier' servente_' has always the _e_ mute in
+ conversation, and omitted in writing; so that it is not for the
+ sake of metre; and pray let Griffiths know this, with my
+ compliments. I humbly conjecture that I know as much of Italian
+ society and language as any of his people; but, to make assurance
+ doubly sure, I asked, at the Countess Benzona's last night, the
+ question of more than one person in _the office_, and of these
+ 'cavalieri serventi' (in the plural, recollect) I found that they
+ all accorded in pronouncing for 'cavalier' servente' in the
+ _singular_ number. I wish Mr. * * * * (or whoever Griffiths'
+ scribbler may be) would not talk of what he don't understand. Such
+ fellows are not fit to be intrusted with Italian, even in a
+ quotation.
+
+ "Did you receive two additional stanzas, to be inserted towards the
+ close of Canto fourth? Respond, that (if not) they may be sent.
+
+ "Tell Mr. * * and Mr. Hanson that they may as well expect Geneva to
+ come to me, as that I should go to Geneva. The messenger may go on
+ or return, as he pleases; I won't stir: and I look upon it as a
+ piece of singular absurdity in those who know me imagining that I
+ should;--not to say _malice_, in attempting unnecessary torture.
+ If, on the occasion, my interests should suffer, it is their
+ neglect that is to blame; and they may all be d----d together.
+
+ "It is ten o'clock and time to dress.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 316. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "April 23. 1818.
+
+ "The time is past in which I could feel for the dead,--or I should
+ feel for the death of Lady Melbourne, the best, and kindest, and
+ ablest female I ever knew, old or young. But 'I have supped full of
+ horrors,' and events of this kind have only a kind of numbness
+ worse than pain,--like a violent blow on the elbow or the head.
+ There is one link less between England and myself.
+
+ "Now to business. I presented you with Beppo, as part of the
+ contract for Canto fourth,--considering the price you are to pay
+ for the same, and intending to eke you out in case of public
+ caprice or my own poetical failure. If you choose to suppress it
+ entirely, at Mr. * * * *'s suggestion, you may do as you please.
+ But recollect it is not to be published in a _garbled_ or
+ _mutilated_ state. I reserve to my friends and myself the right of
+ correcting the press;--if the publication continue, it is to
+ continue in its present form.
+
+ "As Mr. * * says that he did not write this letter, &c. I am ready
+ to believe him; but for the firmness of my former persuasion, I
+ refer to Mr. * * * *, who can inform you how sincerely I erred on
+ this point. He has also the note--or, at least, had it, for I gave
+ it to him with my verbal comments thereupon. As to 'Beppo,' I will
+ not alter or suppress a syllable for any man's pleasure but my own.
+
+ "You may tell them this; and add, that nothing but force or
+ necessity shall stir me one step towards places to which they would
+ wring me.
+
+ "If your literary matters prosper let me know. If 'Beppo' pleases,
+ you shall have more in a year or two in the same mood. And so 'Good
+ morrow to you, good Master Lieutenant.' Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 317. TO MR. MOORE.
+
+ "Palazzo Mocenigo, Canal Grande,
+
+ "Venice, June 1. 1818.
+
+ "Your letter is almost the only news, as yet, of Canto fourth, and
+ it has by no means settled its fate,--at least, does not tell me
+ how the 'Poeshie' has been received by the public. But I suspect,
+ no great things,--firstly, from Murray's 'horrid stillness;'
+ secondly, from what you say about the stanzas running into each
+ other[21], which I take _not_ to be _yours_, but a notion you have
+ been dinned with among the Blues. The fact is, that the terza rima
+ of the Italians, which always _runs_ on and in, may have led me
+ into experiments, and carelessness into conceit--or conceit into
+ carelessness--in either of which events failure will be probable,
+ and my fair woman, 'superne,' end in a fish; so that Childe Harold
+ will be like the mermaid, my family crest, with the fourth Canto
+ for a tail thereunto. I won't quarrel with the public, however, for
+ the 'Bulgars' are generally right; and if I miss now, I may hit
+ another time:--and so, the 'gods give us joy.'
+
+ "You like Beppo, that's right. I have not had the Fudges yet, but
+ live in hopes. I need not say that your successes are mine. By the
+ way, Lydia White is here, and has just borrowed my copy of 'Lalla
+ Rookh.'
+
+ "Hunt's letter is probably the exact piece of vulgar coxcombry you
+ might expect from his situation. He is a good man, with some
+ poetical elements in his chaos; but spoilt by the Christ-Church
+ Hospital and a Sunday newspaper,--to say nothing of the Surrey
+ gaol, which conceited him into a martyr. But he is a good man. When
+ I saw 'Rimini' in MS., I told him that I deemed it good poetry at
+ bottom, disfigured only by a strange style. His answer was, that
+ his style was a system, or _upon system_, or some such cant; and,
+ when a man talks of system, his case is hopeless: so I said no more
+ to him, and very little to any one else.
+
+ "He believes his trash of vulgar phrases tortured into compound
+ barbarisms to be _old_ English; and we may say of it as Aimwell
+ says of Captain Gibbet's regiment, when the Captain calls it an
+ 'old corps,'--'the _oldest_ in Europe, if I may judge by your
+ uniform.' He sent out his 'Foliage' by Percy Shelley * * *, and, of
+ all the ineffable Centaurs that were ever begotten by Self-love
+ upon a Night-mare, I think this monstrous Sagittary the most
+ prodigious. _He_ (Leigh H.) is an honest charlatan, who has
+ persuaded himself into a belief of his own impostures, and talks
+ Punch in pure simplicity of heart, taking himself (as poor
+ Fitzgerald said of _himself_ in the Morning Post) for _Vates_ in
+ both senses, or nonsenses, of the word. Did you look at the
+ translations of his own which he prefers to Pope and Cowper, and
+ says so?--Did you read his skimble-skamble about * * being at the
+ head of his own _profession_, in the _eyes_ of _those_ who followed
+ it? I thought that poetry was an _art_, or an _attribute_, and not
+ a _profession_;--but be it one, is that * * * * * * at the head of
+ _your_ profession in _your_ eyes? I'll be curst if he is of _mine_,
+ or ever shall be. He is the only one of us (but of us he is not)
+ whose coronation I would oppose. Let them take Scott, Campbell,
+ Crabbe, or you, or me, or any of the living, and throne him;--but
+ not this new Jacob Behmen, this * * * * * * whose pride might have
+ kept him true, even had his principles turned as perverted as his
+ _soi-disant_ poetry.
+
+ "But Leigh Hunt is a good man, and a good father--see his Odes to
+ all the Masters Hunt;--a good husband--see his Sonnet to Mrs.
+ Hunt;--a good friend--see his Epistles to different people;--and a
+ great coxcomb and a very vulgar person in every thing about him.
+ But that's not his fault, but of circumstances.[22]
+
+ "I do not know any good model for a life of Sheridan but that of
+ _Savage_. Recollect, however, that the life of such a man may be
+ made far more amusing than if he had been a Wilberforce;--and this
+ without offending the living, or insulting the dead. The Whigs
+ abuse him; however, he never left them, and such blunderers deserve
+ neither credit nor compassion. As for his creditors,--remember,
+ Sheridan _never had_ a shilling, and was thrown, with great powers
+ and passions, into the thick of the world, and placed upon the
+ pinnacle of success, with no other external means to support him in
+ his elevation. Did Fox * * * _pay his_ debts?--or did Sheridan take
+ a subscription? Was the * *'s drunkenness more excusable than his?
+ Were his intrigues more notorious than those of all his
+ contemporaries? and is his memory to be blasted, and theirs
+ respected? Don't let yourself be led away by clamour, but compare
+ him with the coalitioner Fox, and the pensioner Burke, as a man of
+ principle, and with ten hundred thousand in personal views, and
+ with none in talent, for he beat them all _out_ and _out_. Without
+ means, without connection, without character, (which might be false
+ at first, and make him mad afterwards from desperation,) he beat
+ them all, in all he ever attempted. But alas, poor human nature!
+ Good night--or rather, morning. It is four, and the dawn gleams
+ over the Grand Canal, and unshadows the Rialto. I must to bed; up
+ all night--but, as George Philpot says, 'it's life, though, damme,
+ it's life!' Ever yours, B.
+
+ "Excuse errors--no time for revision. The post goes out at noon,
+ and I sha'n't be up then. I will write again soon about your _plan_
+ for a publication."
+
+[Footnote 21: I had said, I think, in my letter to him, that this
+practice of carrying one stanza into another was "something like taking
+on horses another stage without baiting."]
+
+[Footnote 22: I had, in first transcribing the above letter for the
+press, omitted the whole of this caustic, and, perhaps, over-severe
+character of Mr. Hunt; but the tone of that gentleman's book having, as
+far as himself is concerned, released me from all those scruples which
+prompted the suppression, I have considered myself at liberty to restore
+the passage.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+During the greater part of the period which this last series of letters
+comprises, he had continued to occupy the same lodgings in an extremely
+narrow street called the Spezieria, at the house of the linen-draper, to
+whose lady he devoted so much of his thoughts. That he was, for the
+time, attached to this person,--as far as a passion so transient can
+deserve the name of attachment,--is evident from his whole conduct. The
+language of his letters shows sufficiently how much the novelty of this
+foreign tie had caught his fancy; and to the Venetians, among whom such
+arrangements are mere matters of course, the assiduity with which he
+attended his Signora to the theatre, and the ridottos, was a subject of
+much amusement. It was with difficulty, indeed, that he could be
+prevailed upon to absent himself from her so long as to admit of that
+hasty visit to the Immortal City, out of which one of his own noblest
+titles to immortality sprung; and having, in the space of a few weeks,
+drunk in more inspiration from all he saw than, in a less excited state,
+possibly, he might have imbibed in years, he again hurried back, without
+extending his journey to Naples,--having written to the fair Marianna to
+meet him at some distance from Venice.
+
+Besides some seasonable acts of liberality to the husband, who had, it
+seems, failed in trade, he also presented to the lady herself a handsome
+set of diamonds; and there is an anecdote related in reference to this
+gift, which shows the exceeding easiness and forbearance of his
+disposition towards those who had acquired any hold on his heart. A
+casket, which was for sale, being one day offered to him, he was not a
+little surprised on discovering them to be the same jewels which he had,
+not long before, presented to his fair favourite, and which had, by some
+unromantic means, found their way back into the market. Without
+enquiring, however, any further into the circumstances, he generously
+repurchased the casket and presented it to the lady once more,
+good-humouredly taxing her with the very little estimation in which, as
+it appeared, she held his presents.
+
+To whatever extent this unsentimental incident may have had a share in
+dispelling the romance of his passion, it is certain that, before the
+expiration of the first twelvemonth, he began to find his lodgings in
+the Spezieria inconvenient, and accordingly entered into treaty with
+Count Gritti for his Palace on the Grand Canal,--engaging to give for
+it, what is considered, I believe, a large rent in Venice, 200 louis a
+year. On finding, however, that, in the counterpart of the lease brought
+for his signature, a new clause had been introduced, prohibiting him not
+only from underletting the house, in case he should leave Venice, but
+from even allowing any of his own friends to occupy it during his
+occasional absence, he declined closing on such terms; and resenting so
+material a departure from the original engagement, declared in society,
+that he would have no objection to give the same rent, though
+acknowledged to be exorbitant, for any other palace in Venice, however
+inferior, in all respects, to Count Gritti's. After such an
+announcement, he was not likely to remain long unhoused; and the
+Countess Mocenigo having offered him one of her three Palazzi, on the
+Grand Canal, he removed to this house in the summer of the present year,
+and continued to occupy it during the remainder of his stay in Venice.
+
+Highly censurable, in point of morality and decorum, as was his course
+of life while under the roof of Madame * *, it was (with pain I am
+forced to confess) venial in comparison with the strange, headlong
+career of licence to which, when weaned from that connection, he so
+unrestrainedly and, it may be added, defyingly abandoned himself. Of the
+state of his mind on leaving England I have already endeavoured to
+convey some idea, and, among the feelings that went to make up that
+self-centred spirit of resistance which he then opposed to his fate, was
+an indignant scorn of his own countrymen for the wrongs he thought they
+had done him. For a time, the kindly sentiments which he still harboured
+towards Lady Byron, and a sort of vague hope, perhaps, that all would
+yet come right again, kept his mind in a mood somewhat more softened and
+docile, as well as sufficiently under the influence of English opinion
+to prevent his breaking out into such open rebellion against it, as he
+unluckily did afterwards.
+
+By the failure of the attempted mediation with Lady Byron, his last link
+with home was severed; while, notwithstanding the quiet and unobtrusive
+life which he had led at Geneva, there was as yet, he found, no
+cessation of the slanderous warfare against his character;--the same
+busy and misrepresenting spirit which had tracked his every step at home
+having, with no less malicious watchfulness, dogged him into exile. To
+this persuasion, for which he had but too much grounds, was added all
+that an imagination like his could lend to truth,--all that he was left
+to interpret, in his own way, of the absent and the silent,--till, at
+length, arming himself against fancied enemies and wrongs, and, with the
+condition (as it seemed to him) of an outlaw, assuming also the
+desperation, he resolved, as his countrymen would not do justice to the
+better parts of his nature, to have, at least, the perverse satisfaction
+of braving and shocking them with the worst. It is to this feeling, I am
+convinced, far more than to any depraved taste for such a course of
+life, that the extravagances to which he now, for a short time, gave
+loose, are to be attributed. The exciting effect, indeed, of this mode
+of existence while it lasted, both upon his spirits and his genius,--so
+like what, as he himself tells us, was always produced in him by a state
+of contest and defiance,--showed how much of this latter feeling must
+have been mixed with his excesses. The altered character too, of his
+letters in this respect cannot fail, I think, to be remarked by the
+reader,--there being, with an evident increase of intellectual vigour, a
+tone of violence and bravado breaking out in them continually, which
+marks the high pitch of re-action to which he had now wound up his
+temper.
+
+In fact, so far from the powers of his intellect being at all weakened
+or dissipated by these irregularities, he was, perhaps, at no time of
+his life, so actively in the full possession of all its energies; and
+his friend Shelley, who went to Venice, at this period, to see him[23],
+used to say, that all he observed of the workings of Byron's mind,
+during his visit, gave him a far higher idea of its powers than he had
+ever before entertained. It was, indeed, then that Shelley sketched out,
+and chiefly wrote, his poem of "Julian and Maddalo," in the latter of
+which personages he has so picturesquely shadowed forth his noble
+friend[24]; and the allusions to "the Swan of Albion," in his "Lines
+written among the Euganean Hills," were also, I understand, the result
+of the same access of admiration and enthusiasm.
+
+In speaking of the Venetian women, in one of the preceding letters,
+Lord Byron, it will be recollected, remarks, that the beauty for which
+they were once so celebrated is no longer now to be found among the
+"Dame," or higher orders, but all under the "fazzioli," or kerchiefs, of
+the lower. It was, unluckily, among these latter specimens of the "bel
+sangue" of Venice that he now, by a suddenness of descent in the scale
+of refinement, for which nothing but the present wayward state of his
+mind can account, chose to select the companions of his disengaged
+hours;--and an additional proof that, in this short, daring career of
+libertinism, he was but desperately seeking relief for a wronged and
+mortified spirit, and
+
+ "What to us seem'd guilt might be but woe,"--
+
+is that, more than once, of an evening, when his house has been in the
+possession of such visitants, he has been known to hurry away in his
+gondola, and pass the greater part of the night upon the water, as if
+hating to return to his home. It is, indeed, certain, that to this least
+defensible portion of his whole life he always looked back, during the
+short remainder of it, with painful self-reproach; and among the causes
+of the detestation which he afterwards felt for Venice, this
+recollection of the excesses to which he had there abandoned himself was
+not the least prominent.
+
+The most distinguished and, at last, the reigning favourite of all this
+unworthy Harem was a woman named Margarita Cogni, who has been already
+mentioned in one of these letters, and who, from the trade of her
+husband, was known by the title of the Fornarina. A portrait of this
+handsome virago, drawn by Harlowe when at Venice, having fallen into the
+hands of one of Lord Byron's friends after the death of that artist, the
+noble poet, on being applied to for some particulars of his heroine,
+wrote a long letter on the subject, from which the following are
+extracts:--
+
+ "Since you desire the story of Margarita Cogni, you shall be told
+ it, though it may be lengthy.
+
+ "Her face is the fine Venetian cast of the old time; her figure,
+ though perhaps too tall, is not less fine--and taken altogether in
+ the national dress.
+
+ "In the summer of 1817, * * * * and myself were sauntering on
+ horseback along the Brenta one evening, when, amongst a group of
+ peasants, we remarked two girls as the prettiest we had seen for
+ some time. About this period, there had been great distress in the
+ country, and I had a little relieved some of the people. Generosity
+ makes a great figure at very little cost in Venetian livres, and
+ mine had probably been exaggerated as an Englishman's. Whether they
+ remarked us looking at them or no, I know not; but one of them
+ called out to me in Venetian, 'Why do not you, who relieve others,
+ think of us also?' I turned round and answered her--'Cara, tu sei
+ troppo bella e giovane per aver' bisogna del' soccorso mio.' She
+ answered, 'If you saw my hut and my food, you would not say so.'
+ All this passed half jestingly, and I saw no more of her for some
+ days.
+
+ "A few evenings after, we met with these two girls again, and they
+ addressed us more seriously, assuring us of the truth of their
+ statement. They were cousins; Margarita married, the other single.
+ As I doubted still of the circumstances, I took the business in a
+ different light, and made an appointment with them for the next
+ evening. In short, in a few evenings we arranged our affairs, and
+ for a long space of time she was the only one who preserved over me
+ an ascendency which was often disputed, and never impaired.
+
+ "The reasons of this were, firstly, her person;--very dark, tall,
+ the Venetian face, very fine black eyes. She was two-and-twenty
+ years old, * * * She was, besides, a thorough Venetian in her
+ dialect, in her thoughts, in her countenance, in every thing, with
+ all their _naivete_ and pantaloon humour. Besides, she could
+ neither read nor write, and could not plague me with
+ letters,--except twice that she paid sixpence to a public scribe,
+ under the piazza, to make a letter for her, upon some occasion when
+ I was ill and could not see her. In other respects, she was
+ somewhat fierce and 'prepotente,' that is, over-bearing, and used
+ to walk in whenever it suited her, with no very great regard to
+ time, place, nor persons; and if she found any women in her way,
+ she knocked them down.
+
+ "When I first knew her, I was in 'relazione' (liaison) with la
+ Signora * *, who was silly enough one evening at Dolo, accompanied
+ by some of her female friends, to threaten her; for the gossips of
+ the villeggiatura had already found out, by the neighing of my
+ horse one evening, that I used to 'ride late in the night' to meet
+ the Fornarina. Margarita threw back her veil (fazziolo), and
+ replied in very explicit Venetian, '_You_ are _not_ his _wife_: _I_
+ am _not_ his _wife_: you are his Donna, and _I_ am his _Donna_:
+ your husband is a _becco_, and mine is another. For the rest, what
+ _right_ have you to reproach me? If he prefers me to you, is it my
+ fault? If you wish to secure him, tie him to your
+ petticoat-string.--But do not think to speak to me without a reply,
+ because you happen to be richer than I am.' Having delivered this
+ pretty piece of eloquence (which I translate as it was related to
+ me by a bystander), she went on her way, leaving a numerous
+ audience with Madame * *, to ponder at her leisure on the dialogue
+ between them.
+
+ "When I came to Venice for the winter, she followed; and as she
+ found herself out to be a favourite, she came to me pretty often.
+ But she had inordinate self-love, and was not tolerant of other
+ women. At the 'Cavalchina,' the masked ball on the last night of
+ the carnival, where all the world goes, she snatched off the mask
+ of Madame Contarini, a lady noble by birth, and decent in conduct,
+ for no other reason, but because she happened to be leaning on my
+ arm. You may suppose what a cursed noise this made; but this is
+ only one of her pranks.
+
+ "At last she quarrelled with her husband, and one evening ran away
+ to my house. I told her this would not do: she said she would lie
+ in the street, but not go back to him; that he beat her, (the
+ gentle tigress!) spent her money, and scandalously neglected her.
+ As it was midnight I let her stay, and next day there was no moving
+ her at all. Her husband came, roaring and crying, and entreating
+ her to come back:--_not_ she! He then applied to the police, and
+ they applied to me: I told them and her husband to _take_ her; I
+ did not want her; she had come, and I could not fling her out of
+ the window; but they might conduct her through that or the door if
+ they chose it. She went before the commissary, but was obliged to
+ return with that 'becco ettico,' as she called the poor man, who
+ had a phthisic. In a few days she ran away again. After a precious
+ piece of work, she fixed herself in my house, really and truly
+ without my consent; but, owing to my indolence, and not being able
+ to keep my countenance, for if I began in a rage, she always
+ finished by making me laugh with some Venetian pantaloonery or
+ another; and the gipsy knew this well enough, as well as her other
+ powers of persuasion, and exerted them with the usual tact and
+ success of all she-things; high and low, they are all alike for
+ that.
+
+ "Madame Benzoni also took her under her protection, and then her
+ head turned. She was always in extremes, either crying or laughing,
+ and so fierce when angered, that she was the terror of men, women,
+ and children--for she had the strength of an Amazon, with the
+ temper of Medea. She was a fine animal, but quite untameable. _I_
+ was the only person that could at all keep her in any order, and
+ when she saw me really angry (which they tell me is a savage
+ sight), she subsided. But she had a thousand fooleries. In her
+ fazziolo, the dress of the lower orders, she looked beautiful;
+ but, alas! she longed for a hat and feathers; and all I could say
+ or do (and I said much) could not prevent this travestie. I put the
+ first into the fire; but I got tired of burning them, before she
+ did of buying them, so that she made herself a figure--for they did
+ not at all become her.
+
+ "Then she would have her gowns with a _tail_--like a lady,
+ forsooth; nothing would serve her but 'l'abita colla _coua_,' or
+ _cua_, (that is the Venetian for 'la cola,' the tail or train,) and
+ as her cursed pronunciation of the word made me laugh, there was an
+ end of all controversy, and she dragged this diabolical tail after
+ her every where.
+
+ "In the mean time, she beat the women and stopped my letters. I
+ found her one day pondering over one. She used to try to find out
+ by their shape whether they were feminine or no; and she used to
+ lament her ignorance, and actually studied her alphabet, on purpose
+ (as she declared) to open all letters addressed to me and read
+ their contents.
+
+ "I must not omit to do justice to her housekeeping qualities. After
+ she came into my house as 'donna di governo,' the expenses were
+ reduced to less than half, and every body did their duty
+ better--the apartments were kept in order, and every thing and
+ every body else, except herself.
+
+ "That she had a sufficient regard for me in her wild way, I had
+ many reasons to believe. I will mention one. In the autumn, one
+ day, going to the Lido with my gondoliers, we were overtaken by a
+ heavy squall, and the gondola put in peril--hats blown away, boat
+ filling, oar lost, tumbling sea, thunder, rain in torrents, night
+ coming, and wind unceasing. On our return, after a tight struggle,
+ I found her on the open steps of the Mocenigo palace, on the Grand
+ Canal, with her great black eyes flashing through her tears, and
+ the long dark hair, which was streaming, drenched with rain, over
+ her brows and breast. She was perfectly exposed to the storm; and
+ the wind blowing her hair and dress about her thin tall figure, and
+ the lightning flashing round her, and the waves rolling at her
+ feet, made her look like Medea alighted from her chariot, or the
+ Sibyl of the tempest that was rolling around her, the only living
+ thing within hail at that moment except ourselves. On seeing me
+ safe, she did not wait to greet me, as might have been expected,
+ but calling out to me--'Ah! can' della Madonna, xe esto il tempo
+ per andar' al' Lido?' (Ah! dog of the Virgin, is this a time to go
+ to Lido?) ran into the house, and solaced herself with scolding the
+ boatmen for not foreseeing the 'temporale.' I am told by the
+ servants that she had only been prevented from coming in a boat to
+ look after me, by the refusal of all the gondoliers of the canal to
+ put out into the harbour in such a moment; and that then she sat
+ down on the steps in all the thickest of the squall, and would
+ neither be removed nor comforted. Her joy at seeing me again was
+ moderately mixed with ferocity, and gave me the idea of a tigress
+ over her recovered cubs.
+
+ "But her reign drew near a close. She became quite ungovernable
+ some months after, and a concurrence of complaints, some true, and
+ many false--'a favourite has no friends'--determined me to part
+ with her. I told her quietly that she must return home, (she had
+ acquired a sufficient provision for herself and mother, &c. in my
+ service,) and she refused to quit the house. I was firm, and she
+ went threatening knives and revenge. I told her that I had seen
+ knives drawn before her time, and that if she chose to begin, there
+ was a knife, and fork also, at her service on the table, and that
+ intimidation would not do. The next day, while I was at dinner, she
+ walked in, (having broken open a glass door that led from the hall
+ below to the staircase, by way of prologue,) and advancing straight
+ up to the table, snatched the knife from my hand, cutting me
+ slightly in the thumb in the operation. Whether she meant to use
+ this against herself or me, I know not--probably against
+ neither--but Fletcher seized her by the arms, and disarmed her. I
+ then called my boatmen, and desired them to get the gondola ready,
+ and conduct her to her own house again, seeing carefully that she
+ did herself no mischief by the way. She seemed quite quiet, and
+ walked down stairs. I resumed my dinner.
+
+ "We heard a great noise, and went out, and met them on the
+ staircase, carrying her up stairs. She had thrown herself into the
+ canal. That she intended to destroy herself, I do not believe; but
+ when we consider the fear women and men who can't swim have of deep
+ or even of shallow water, (and the Venetians in particular, though
+ they live on the waves,) and that it was also night, and dark, and
+ very cold, it shows that she had a devilish spirit of some sort
+ within her. They had got her out without much difficulty or damage,
+ excepting the salt water she had swallowed, and the wetting she had
+ undergone.
+
+ "I foresaw her intention to refix herself, and sent for a surgeon,
+ enquiring how many hours it would require to restore her from her
+ agitation; and he named the time. I then said, 'I give you that
+ time, and more if you require it; but at the expiration of this
+ prescribed period, if _she_ does not leave the house, _I_ will.'
+
+ "All my people were consternated. They had always been frightened
+ at her, and were now paralysed: they wanted me to apply to the
+ police, to guard myself, &c. &c. like a pack of snivelling servile
+ boobies as they were. I did nothing of the kind, thinking that I
+ might as well end that way as another; besides, I had been used to
+ savage women, and knew their ways.
+
+ "I had her sent home quietly after her recovery, and never saw her
+ since, except twice at the opera, at a distance amongst the
+ audience. She made many attempts to return, but no more violent
+ ones. And this is the story of Margarita Cogni, as far as it
+ relates to me.
+
+ "I forgot to mention that she was very devout, and would cross
+ herself if she heard the prayer time strike.
+
+ "She was quick in reply; as, for instance--One day when she had
+ made me very angry with beating somebody or other, I called her a
+ _cow_ (_cow_, in Italian, is a sad affront). I called her 'Vacca.'
+ She turned round, courtesied, and answered, 'Vacca _tua_,
+ 'celenza' (_i.e._ eccelenza). '_Your_ cow, please your Excellency.'
+ In short, she was, as I said before, a very fine animal, of
+ considerable beauty and energy, with many good and several amusing
+ qualities, but wild as a witch and fierce as a demon. She used to
+ boast publicly of her ascendency over me, contrasting it with that
+ of other women, and assigning for it sundry reasons. True it was,
+ that they all tried to get her away, and no one succeeded till her
+ own absurdity helped them.
+
+ "I omitted to tell you her answer, when I reproached her for
+ snatching Madame Contarini's mask at the Cavalchina. I represented
+ to her that she was a lady of high birth, 'una Dama,' &c. She
+ answered, 'Se ella e dama _mi_ (_io_) son Veneziana;'--'If she is a
+ lady, I am a Venetian.' This would have been fine a hundred years
+ ago, the pride of the nation rising up against the pride of
+ aristocracy: but, alas! Venice, and her people, and her nobles, are
+ alike returning fast to the ocean; and where there is no
+ independence, there can be no real self-respect. I believe that I
+ mistook or mis-stated one of her phrases in my letter; it should
+ have been--'Can' della Madonna cosa vus' tu? esto non e tempo per
+ andar' a Lido?'"
+
+[Footnote 23: The following are extracts from a letter of Shelley's to a
+friend at this time.
+
+ "Venice, August, 1818.
+
+ "We came from Padua hither in a gondola; and the gondolier, among
+ other things, without any hint on our part, began talking of Lord
+ Byron. He said he was a 'Giovanotto Inglese,' with a 'nome
+ stravagante,' who lived very luxuriously, and spent great sums of
+ money.
+
+ "At three o'clock I called on Lord Byron. He was delighted to see
+ me, and our first conversation of course consisted in the object of
+ our visit. He took me in his gondola, across the Laguna, to a long,
+ strandy sand, which defends Venice from the Adriatic. When we
+ disembarked, we found his horses waiting for us, and we rode along
+ the sands, talking. Our conversation consisted in histories of his
+ own wounded feelings, and questions as to my affairs, with great
+ professions of friendship and regard for me. He said that if he had
+ been in England, at the time of the Chancery affair, he would have
+ moved heaven and earth to have prevented such a decision. He talked
+ of literary matters,--his fourth Canto, which he says is very good,
+ and indeed repeated some stanzas, of great energy, to me. When we
+ returned to his palace, which is one if the most magnificent in
+ Venice," &c. &c.
+]
+
+[Footnote 24: In the preface also to this poem, under the fictitious
+name of Count Maddalo, the following just and striking portrait of Lord
+Byron is drawn:--
+
+"He is a person of the most consummate genius, and capable, if he would
+direct his energies to such an end, of becoming the redeemer of his
+degraded country. But it is his weakness to be proud: he derives, from a
+comparison of his own extraordinary mind with the dwarfish intellects
+that surround him, an intense apprehension of the nothingness of human
+life. His passions and his powers are incomparably greater than those of
+other men, and instead of the latter having been employed in curbing the
+former, they have mutually lent each other strength. His ambition preys
+upon itself for want of objects which it can consider worthy of
+exertion. I say that Maddalo is proud, because I can find no other word
+to express the concentred and impatient feelings which consume him; but
+it is on his own hopes and affections only that he seems to trample, for
+in social life no human being can be more gentle, patient, and
+unassuming than Maddalo. He is cheerful, frank, and witty. His more
+serious conversation is a sort of intoxication. He has travelled much;
+and there is an inexpressible charm in his relation of his adventures in
+different countries."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was at this time, as we shall see by the letters I am about to
+produce, and as the features, indeed, of the progeny itself would but
+too plainly indicate, that he conceived, and wrote some part of, his
+poem of 'Don Juan;'--and never did pages more faithfully and, in many
+respects, lamentably, reflect every variety of feeling, and whim, and
+passion that, like the wrack of autumn, swept across the author's mind
+in writing them. Nothing less, indeed, than that singular combination of
+attributes, which existed and were in full activity in his mind at this
+moment, could have suggested, or been capable of, the execution of such
+a work. The cool shrewdness of age, with the vivacity and glowing
+temperament of youth,--the wit of a Voltaire, with the sensibility of a
+Rousseau,--the minute, practical knowledge of the man of society, with
+the abstract and self-contemplative spirit of the poet,--a
+susceptibility of all that is grandest and most affecting in human
+virtue, with a deep, withering experience of all that is most fatal to
+it,--the two extremes, in short, of man's mixed and inconsistent nature,
+now rankly smelling of earth, now breathing of heaven,--such was the
+strange assemblage of contrary elements, all meeting together in the
+same mind, and all brought to bear, in turn, upon the same task, from
+which alone could have sprung this extraordinary poem,--the most
+powerful and, in many respects, painful display of the versatility of
+genius that has ever been left for succeeding ages to wonder at and
+deplore.
+
+I shall now proceed with his correspondence,--having thought some of the
+preceding observations necessary, not only to explain to the reader much
+of what he will find in these letters, but to account to him for much
+that has been necessarily omitted.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 318. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, June 18. 1818.
+
+ "Business and the utter and inexplicable silence of all my
+ correspondents renders me impatient and troublesome. I wrote to Mr.
+ Hanson for a balance which is (or ought to be) in his hands;--no
+ answer. I expected the messenger with the Newstead papers two
+ months ago, and instead of him, I received a requisition to proceed
+ to Geneva, which (from * *, who knows my wishes and opinions about
+ approaching England) could only be irony or insult.
+
+ "I must, therefore, trouble _you_ to pay into my bankers'
+ _immediately_ whatever sum or sums you can make it convenient to do
+ on our agreement; otherwise, I shall be put to the _severest_ and
+ most immediate inconvenience; and this at a time when, by every
+ rational prospect and calculation, I ought to be in the receipt of
+ considerable sums. Pray do not neglect this; you have no idea to
+ what inconvenience you will otherwise put me. * * had some absurd
+ notion about the disposal of this money in annuity (or God knows
+ what), which I merely listened to when he was here to avoid
+ squabbles and sermons; but I have occasion for the principal, and
+ had never any serious idea of appropriating it otherwise than to
+ answer my personal expenses. Hobhouse's wish is, if possible, to
+ force me back to England[25]: he will not succeed; and if he did, I
+ would not stay. I hate the country, and like this; and all foolish
+ opposition, of course, merely adds to the feeling. _Your_ silence
+ makes me doubt the success of Canto fourth. If it has failed, I
+ will make such deduction as you think proper and fair from the
+ original agreement; but I could wish whatever is to be paid were
+ remitted to me, without delay, through the usual channel, by course
+ of post.
+
+ "When I tell you that I have not heard a word from England since
+ very early in May, I have made the eulogium of my friends, or the
+ persons who call themselves so, since I have written so often and
+ in the greatest anxiety. Thank God, the longer I am absent, the
+ less cause I see for regretting the country or its living contents.
+ I am yours," &c.
+
+[Footnote 25: Deeply is it, for many reasons, to be regretted that this
+friendly purpose did not succeed.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 319. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, July 10. 1818.
+
+ "I have received your letter and the credit from Morlands, &c. for
+ whom I have also drawn upon you at sixty days' sight for the
+ remainder, according to your proposition.
+
+ "I am still waiting in Venice, in expectancy of the arrival of
+ Hanson's clerk. What can detain him, I do not know; but I trust
+ that Mr. Hobhouse, and Mr. Kinnaird, when their political fit is
+ abated, will take the trouble to enquire and expedite him, as I
+ have nearly a hundred thousand pounds depending upon the completion
+ of the sale and the signature of the papers.
+
+ "The draft on you is drawn up by Siri and Willhalm. I hope that
+ the form is correct. I signed it two or three days ago, desiring
+ them to forward it to Messrs. Morland and Ransom.
+
+ "Your projected editions for November had better be postponed, as I
+ have some things in project, or preparation, that may be of use to
+ you, though not very important in themselves. I have completed an
+ Ode on Venice, and have two Stories, one serious and one ludicrous
+ (a la Beppo), not yet finished, and in no hurry to be so.
+
+ "You talk of the letter to Hobhouse being much admired, and speak
+ of prose. I think of writing (for your full edition) some Memoirs
+ of my life, to prefix to them, upon the same model (though far
+ enough, I fear, from reaching it) of Gifford, Hume, &c.; and this
+ without any intention of making disclosures or remarks upon living
+ people, which would be unpleasant to them: but I think it might be
+ done, and well done. However, this is to be considered. I have
+ _materials_ in plenty, but the greater part of them could not be
+ used by _me_, nor for these hundred years to come. However, there
+ is enough without these, and merely as a literary man, to make a
+ preface for such an edition as you meditate. But this is by the
+ way: I have not made up my mind.
+
+ "I enclose you a _note_ on the subject of '_Parisina_,' which
+ Hobhouse can dress for you. It is an extract of particulars from a
+ history of Ferrara.
+
+ "I trust you have been attentive to Missiaglia, for the English
+ have the character of neglecting the Italians, at present, which I
+ hope you will redeem.
+
+ "Yours in haste, B."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 320. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, July 17. 1818.
+
+ "I suppose that Aglietti will take whatever you offer, but till his
+ return from Vienna I can make him no proposal; nor, indeed, have
+ you authorised me to do so. The three French notes _are_ by Lady
+ Mary; also another half-English-French-Italian. They are very
+ pretty and passionate; it is a pity that a piece of one of them is
+ lost. Algarotti seems to have treated her ill; but she was much his
+ senior, and all women are used ill--or say so, whether they are or
+ not.
+
+ "I shall be glad of your books and powders. I am still in waiting
+ for Hanson's clerk, but luckily not at Geneva. All my good friends
+ wrote to me to hasten _there_ to meet him, but not one had the good
+ sense or the good nature, to write afterwards to tell me that it
+ would be time and a journey thrown away, as he could not set off
+ for some months after the period appointed. If I _had_ taken the
+ journey on the general suggestion, I never would have spoken again
+ to one of you as long as I existed. I have written to request Mr.
+ Kinnaird, when the foam of his politics is wiped away, to extract a
+ positive answer from that * * * *, and not to keep me in a state of
+ suspense upon the subject. I hope that Kinnaird, who has my power
+ of attorney, keeps a look-out upon the gentleman, which is the more
+ necessary, as I have a great dislike to the idea of coming over to
+ look after him myself.
+
+ "I have several things begun, verse and prose, but none in much
+ forwardness. I have written some six or seven sheets of a Life,
+ which I mean to continue, and send you when finished. It may
+ perhaps serve for your projected editions. If you would tell me
+ exactly (for I know nothing, and have no correspondents except on
+ business) the state of the reception of our late publications, and
+ the feeling upon them, without consulting any delicacies (I am too
+ seasoned to require them), I should know how and in what manner to
+ proceed. I should not like to give them too much, which may
+ probably have been the case already; but, as I tell you, I know
+ nothing.
+
+ "I once wrote from the fulness of my mind and the love of fame,
+ (not as an _end_, but as a _means_, to obtain that influence over
+ men's minds which is power in itself and in its consequences,) and
+ now from habit and from avarice; so that the effect may probably be
+ as different as the inspiration. I have the same facility, and
+ indeed necessity, of composition, to avoid idleness (though
+ idleness in a hot country is a pleasure), but a much greater
+ indifference to what is to become of it, after it has served my
+ immediate purpose. However, I should on no account like to--but I
+ won't go on, like the Archbishop of Granada, as I am very sure that
+ you dread the fate of Gil Blas, and with good reason. Yours, &c.
+
+ "P.S. I have written some very savage letters to Mr. Hobhouse,
+ Kinnaird, to you, and to Hanson, because the silence of so long a
+ time made me tear off my remaining rags of patience. I have seen
+ one or two late English publications which are no great things,
+ except Rob Roy. I shall be glad of Whistlecraft."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 321. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, August 26. 1818.
+
+ "You may go on with your edition, without calculating on the
+ Memoir, which I shall not publish at present. It is nearly
+ finished, but will be too long; and there are so many things,
+ which, out of regard to the living, cannot be mentioned, that I
+ have written with too much detail of that which interested me
+ least; so that my autobiographical Essay would resemble the tragedy
+ of Hamlet at the country theatre, recited 'with the part of Hamlet
+ left out by particular desire.' I shall keep it among my papers; it
+ will be a kind of guide-post in case of death, and prevent some of
+ the lies which would otherwise be told, and destroy some which have
+ been told already.
+
+ "The tales also are in an unfinished state, and I can fix no time
+ for their completion: they are also not in the best manner. You
+ must not, therefore, calculate upon any thing in time for this
+ edition. The Memoir is already above forty-four sheets of very
+ large, long paper, and will be about fifty or sixty; but I wish to
+ go on leisurely; and when finished, although it might do a good
+ deal for you at the time, I am not sure that it would serve any
+ good purpose in the end either, as it is full of many passions and
+ prejudices, of which it has been impossible for me to keep
+ clear:--I have not the patience.
+
+ "Enclosed is a list of books which Dr. Aglietti would be glad to
+ receive by way of price for his MS. letters, if you are disposed to
+ purchase at the rate of fifty pounds sterling. These he will be
+ glad to have as part, and the rest _I_ will give him in money, and
+ you may carry it to the account of books, &c. which is in balance
+ against me, deducting it accordingly. So that the letters are
+ yours, if you like them, at this rate; and he and I are going to
+ hunt for more Lady Montague letters, which he thinks of finding. I
+ write in haste. Thanks for the article, and believe me
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+To the charge brought against Lord Byron by some English travellers of
+being, in general, repulsive and inhospitable to his own countrymen, I
+have already made allusion; and shall now add to the testimony then
+cited in disproof of such a charge some particulars, communicated to me
+by Captain Basil Hall, which exhibit the courtesy and kindliness of the
+noble poet's disposition in their true, natural light.
+
+"On the last day of August, 1818 (says this distinguished writer and
+traveller), I was taken ill with an ague at Venice, and having heard
+enough of the low state of the medical art in that country, I was not a
+little anxious as to the advice I should take. I was not acquainted with
+any person in Venice to whom I could refer, and had only one letter of
+introduction, which was to Lord Byron; but as there were many stories
+floating about of his Lordship's unwillingness to be pestered with
+tourists, I had felt unwilling, before this moment, to intrude myself in
+that shape. Now, however, that I was seriously unwell, I felt sure that
+this offensive character would merge in that of a countryman in
+distress, and I sent the letter by one of my travelling companions to
+Lord Byron's lodgings, with a note, excusing the liberty I was taking,
+explaining that I was in want of medical assistance, and saying I should
+not send to any one till I heard the name of the person who, in his
+Lordship's opinion, was the best practitioner in Venice.
+
+"Unfortunately for me, Lord Byron was still in bed, though it was near
+noon, and still more unfortunately, the bearer of my message scrupled to
+awake him, without first coming back to consult me. By this time I was
+in all the agonies of a cold ague fit, and, therefore, not at all in a
+condition to be consulted upon any thing--so I replied pettishly, 'Oh,
+by no means disturb Lord Byron on my account--ring for the landlord, and
+send for any one he recommends.' This absurd injunction being forthwith
+and literally attended to, in the course of an hour I was under the
+discipline of mine host's friend, whose skill and success it is no part
+of my present purpose to descant upon:--it is sufficient to mention that
+I was irrevocably in his hands long before the following most kind note
+was brought to me, in great haste, by Lord Byron's servant.
+
+ "'Venice, August 31. 1818.
+
+ "'Dear Sir,
+
+ "'Dr. Aglietti is the best physician, not only in Venice, but in
+ Italy: his residence is on the Grand Canal, and easily found; I
+ forget the number, but am probably the only person in Venice who
+ don't know it. There is no comparison between him and any of the
+ other medical people here. I regret very much to hear of your
+ indisposition, and shall do myself the honour of waiting upon you
+ the moment I am up. I write this in bed, and have only just
+ received the letter and note. I beg you to believe that nothing but
+ the extreme lateness of my hours could have prevented me from
+ replying immediately, or coming in person. I have not been called a
+ minute.--I have the honour to be, very truly,
+
+ "'Your most obedient servant,
+
+ "'BYRON.'
+
+"His Lordship soon followed this note, and I heard his voice in the next
+room; but although he waited more than an hour, I could not see him,
+being under the inexorable hands of the doctor. In the course of the
+same evening he again called, but I was asleep. When I awoke I found his
+Lordship's valet sitting by my bedside. 'He had his master's orders,' he
+said, 'to remain with me while I was unwell, and was instructed to say,
+that whatever his Lordship had, or could procure, was at my service, and
+that he would come to me and sit with me, or do whatever I liked, if I
+would only let him know in what way he could be useful.'
+
+"Accordingly, on the next day, I sent for some book, which was brought,
+with a list of his library. I forget what it was which prevented my
+seeing Lord Byron on this day, though he called more than once; and on
+the next, I was too ill with fever to talk to any one.
+
+"The moment I could get out, I took a gondola and went to pay my
+respects, and to thank his Lordship for his attentions. It was then
+nearly three o'clock, but he was not yet up; and when I went again on
+the following day at five, I had the mortification to learn that he had
+gone, at the same hour, to call upon me, so that we had crossed each
+other on the canal; and, to my deep and lasting regret, I was obliged to
+leave Venice without seeing him."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 322. TO MR. MOORE.
+
+ "Venice, September 19. 1818.
+
+ "An English newspaper here would be a prodigy, and an opposition
+ one a monster; and except some ex tracts _from_ extracts in the
+ vile, garbled Paris gazettes, nothing of the kind reaches the
+ Veneto-Lombard public, who are, perhaps, the most oppressed in
+ Europe. My correspondences with England are mostly on business, and
+ chiefly with my * * *, who has no very exalted notion, or extensive
+ conception, of an author's attributes; for he once took up an
+ Edinburgh Review, and, looking at it a minute, said to me, 'So, I
+ see you have got into the magazine,'--which is the only sentence I
+ ever heard him utter upon literary matters, or the men thereof.
+
+ "My first news of your Irish Apotheosis has, consequently, been
+ from yourself. But, as it will not be forgotten in a hurry, either
+ by your friends or your enemies, I hope to have it more in detail
+ from some of the former, and, in the mean time, I wish you joy with
+ all my heart. Such a moment must have been a good deal better than
+ Westminster-abbey,--besides being an assurance of _that_ one day
+ (many years hence, I trust,) into the bargain.
+
+ "I am sorry to perceive, however, by the close of your letter, that
+ even _you_ have not escaped the 'surgit amari,' &c. and that your
+ damned deputy has been gathering such 'dew from the still _vext_
+ Bermoothes'--or rather _vexatious_. Pray, give me some items of the
+ affair, as you say it is a serious one; and, if it grows more so,
+ you should make a trip over here for a few months, to see how
+ things turn out. I suppose you are a violent admirer of England by
+ your staying so long in it. For my own part, I have passed, between
+ the age of one-and-twenty and thirty, half the intervenient years
+ out of it without regretting any thing, except that I ever returned
+ to it at all, and the gloomy prospect before me of business and
+ parentage obliging me, one day, to return to it again,--at least,
+ for the transaction of affairs, the signing of papers, and
+ inspecting of children.
+
+ "I have here my natural daughter, by name Allegra,--a pretty little
+ girl enough, and reckoned like papa.[26] Her mamma is English,--but
+ it is a long story, and--there's an end. She is about twenty
+ months old.
+
+ "I have finished the first Canto (a long one, of about 180 octaves)
+ of a poem in the style and manner of 'Beppo', encouraged by the
+ good success of the same. It is called 'Don Juan', and is meant to
+ be a little quietly facetious upon every thing. But I doubt whether
+ it is not--at least, as far as it has yet gone--too free for these
+ very modest days. However, I shall try the experiment, anonymously,
+ and if it don't take, it will be discontinued. It is dedicated to S
+ * * in good, simple, savage verse, upon the * * * *'s politics, and
+ the way he got them. But the bore of copying it out is intolerable;
+ and if I had an amanuensis he would be of no use, as my writing is
+ so difficult to decipher.
+
+ "My poem's Epic, and is meant to be
+ Divided in twelve books, each book containing
+ With love and war, a heavy gale at sea--
+ A list of ships, and captains, and kings reigning--
+ New characters, &c. &c.
+
+ The above are two stanzas, which I send you as a brick of my Babel,
+ and by which you can judge of the texture of the structure.
+
+ "In writing the Life of Sheridan, never mind the angry lies of the
+ humbug Whigs. Recollect that he was an Irishman and a clever
+ fellow, and that we have had some very pleasant days with him.
+ Don't forget that he was at school at Harrow, where, in my time, we
+ used to show his name--R.B. Sheridan, 1765,--as an honour to the
+ walls. Remember * *. Depend upon it that there were worse folks
+ going, of that gang, than ever Sheridan was.
+
+ "What did Parr mean by 'haughtiness and coldness?' I listened to
+ him with admiring ignorance, and respectful silence. What more
+ could a talker for fame have?--they don't like to be answered. It
+ was at Payne Knight's I met him, where he gave me more Greek than I
+ could carry away. But I certainly meant to (and _did_) treat him
+ with the most respectful deference.
+
+ "I wish you a good night, with a Venetian benediction, 'Benedetto
+ te, e la terra che ti fara!'--'May you be blessed, and the _earth_
+ which you will _make_!'--is it not pretty? You would think it
+ still prettier if you had heard it, as I did two hours ago, from
+ the lips of a Venetian girl, with large black eyes, a face like
+ Faustina's, and the figure of a Juno--tall and energetic as a
+ Pythoness, with eyes flashing, and her dark hair streaming in the
+ moonlight--one of those women who may be made any thing. I am sure
+ if I put a poniard into the hand of this one, she would plunge it
+ where I told her,--and into _me_, if I offended her. I like this
+ kind of animal, and am sure that I should have preferred Medea to
+ any woman that ever breathed. You may, perhaps, wonder that I don't
+ in that case. I could have forgiven the dagger or the bowl, any
+ thing, but the deliberate desolation piled upon me, when I stood
+ alone upon my hearth, with my household gods shivered around me[27]
+ * * Do you suppose I have forgotten or forgiven it? It has
+ comparatively swallowed up in me every other feeling, and I am only
+ a spectator upon earth, till a tenfold opportunity offers. It may
+ come yet. There are others more to be blamed than * * * *, and it
+ is on these that my eyes are fixed unceasingly."
+
+[Footnote 26: This little child had been sent to him by its mother about
+four or five months before, under the care of a Swiss nurse, a young
+girl not above nineteen or twenty years of age, and in every respect
+unfit to have the charge of such an infant, without the superintendence
+of some more experienced person. "The child, accordingly," says my
+informant, "was but ill taken care of;--not that any blame could attach
+to Lord Byron, for he always expressed himself most anxious for her
+welfare, but because the nurse wanted the necessary experience. The poor
+girl was equally to be pitied; for, as Lord Byron's household consisted
+of English and Italian men servants, with whom she could hold no
+converse, and as there was no other female to consult with and assist
+her in her charge, nothing could be more forlorn than her situation
+proved to be."
+
+Soon after the date of the above letter, Mrs. Hoppner, the lady of the
+Consul General, who had, from the first, in compassion both to father
+and child, invited the little Allegra occasionally to her house, very
+kindly proposed to Lord Byron to take charge of her altogether, and an
+arrangement was accordingly concluded upon for that purpose.]
+
+[Footnote 27:
+
+ "I had one only fount of quiet left,
+ And that they poison'd! _My pure household gods
+ Were shivered on my hearth._" MARINO FALIERO.
+]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 323. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, September 24. 1818.
+
+ "In the one hundredth and thirty-second stanza of Canto fourth, the
+ stanza runs in the manuscript--
+
+ "And thou, who never yet of human wrong
+ Left the unbalanced scale, great Nemesis!
+
+ and _not 'lost,'_ which is nonsense, as what losing a scale means,
+ I know not; but _leaving_ an unbalanced scale, or a scale
+ unbalanced, is intelligible.[28] Correct this, I pray,--not for the
+ public, or the poetry, but I do not choose to have blunders made in
+ addressing any of the deities so seriously as this is addressed.
+
+ "Yours, &c.
+
+ "P.S. In the translation from the Spanish, alter
+
+ "In increasing squadrons flew,
+
+ to--
+
+ To a mighty squadron grew.
+
+ "What does 'thy waters _wasted_ them' mean (in the Canto)? _That is
+ not me._[29] Consult the MS. _always_.
+
+ "I have written the first Canto (180 octave stanzas) of a poem in
+ the style of Beppo, and have Mazeppa to finish besides.
+
+ "In referring to the mistake in stanza 132. I take the opportunity
+ to desire that in future, in all parts of my writings referring to
+ religion, you will be more careful, and not forget that it is
+ possible that in addressing the Deity a blunder may become a
+ blasphemy; and I do not choose to suffer such infamous perversions
+ of my words or of my intentions.
+
+ "I saw the Canto by accident."
+
+[Footnote 28: This correction, I observe, has never been made,--the
+passage still remaining, unmeaningly,
+
+ "_Lost_ the unbalanced scale."
+]
+
+[Footnote 29: This passage also remains uncorrected.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 324. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, January 20. 1819.
+
+ "The opinions which I have asked of Mr. H. and others were with
+ regard to the poetical merit, and not as to what they may think due
+ to the _cant_ of the day, which still reads the Bath Guide,
+ Little's Poems, Prior, and Chaucer, to say nothing of Fielding and
+ Smollet. If published, publish entire, with the above-mentioned
+ exceptions; or you may publish anonymously, or _not at all_. In the
+ latter event, print 50 on my account, for private distribution.
+
+ "Yours, &c.
+
+ "I have written to Messrs. K. and H. to desire that they will not
+ erase more than I have stated.
+
+ "The second Canto of Don Juan is finished in 206 stanzas."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 325. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, January 25. 1819.
+
+ "You will do me the favour to print privately (for private
+ distribution) fifty copies of 'Don Juan.' The list of the men to
+ whom I wish it to be presented, I will send hereafter. The other
+ two poems had best be added to the collective edition: I do not
+ approve of _their_ being published separately. Print Don Juan
+ _entire_, omitting, of course, the lines on Castlereagh, as I am
+ not on the spot to meet him. I have a second Canto ready, which
+ will be sent by and by. By this post, I have written to Mr.
+ Hobhouse, addressed to your care.
+
+ "Yours, &c.
+
+ "P.S. I have acquiesced in the request and representation; and
+ having done so, it is idle to detail my arguments in favour of my
+ own self-love and 'Poeshie;' but I _protest_. If the poem has
+ poetry, it would stand; if not, fall; the rest is 'leather and
+ prunello,' and has never yet affected any human production 'pro or
+ con.' Dulness is the only annihilator in such cases. As to the cant
+ of the day, I despise it, as I have ever done all its other finical
+ fashions, which become you as paint became the ancient Britons. If
+ you admit this prudery, you must omit half Ariosto, La Fontaine,
+ Shakspeare, Beaumont, Fletcher, Massinger, Ford, all the Charles
+ Second writers; in short, _something_ of most who have written
+ before Pope and are worth reading, and much of Pope himself. _Read
+ him_--most of you _don't_--but _do_--and I will forgive you; though
+ the inevitable consequence would be that you would burn all I have
+ ever written, and all your other wretched Claudians of the day
+ (except Scott and Crabbe) into the bargain. I wrong Claudian, who
+ _was_ a _poet_, by naming him with such fellows; but he was the
+ 'ultimus Romanorum,' the tail of the comet, and these persons are
+ the tail of an old gown cut into a waistcoat for Jackey; but being
+ both _tails_, I have compared the one with the other, though very
+ unlike, like all similes. I write in a passion and a sirocco, and I
+ was up till six this morning at the Carnival: but I _protest_, as I
+ did in my former letter."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 326. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, February 1. 1819.
+
+ "After one of the concluding stanzas of the first Canto of 'Don
+ Juan,' which ends with (I forget the number)--
+
+ "To have ...
+ ... when the original is dust,
+ A book, a d----d bad picture, and worse bust,
+
+ insert the following stanza:--
+
+ "What are the hopes of man, &c.
+
+ "I have written to you several letters, some with additions, and
+ some upon the subject of the poem itself, which my cursed
+ puritanical committee have protested against publishing. But we
+ will circumvent them on that point. I have not yet begun to copy
+ out the second Canto, which is finished, from natural laziness, and
+ the discouragement of the milk and water they have thrown upon the
+ first. I say all this to them as to you, that is, for _you_ to say
+ to _them_, for I will have nothing underhand. If they had told me
+ the poetry was bad, I would have acquiesced; but they say the
+ contrary, and then talk to me about morality--the first time I ever
+ heard the word from any body who was not a rascal that used it for
+ a purpose. I maintain that it is the most moral of poems; but if
+ people won't discover the moral, that is their fault, not mine. I
+ have already written to beg that in any case you will print _fifty_
+ for private distribution. I will send you the list of persons to
+ whom it is to be sent afterwards.
+
+ "Within this last fortnight I have been rather indisposed with a
+ rebellion of stomach, which would retain nothing, (liver, I
+ suppose,) and an inability, or fantasy, not to be able to eat of
+ any thing with relish but a kind of Adriatic fish called 'scampi,'
+ which happens to be the most indigestible of marine viands.
+ However, within these last two days, I am better, and very truly
+ yours."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 327. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, April 6. 1819.
+
+ "The second Canto of Don Juan was sent, on Saturday last, by post,
+ in four packets, two of four, and two of three sheets each,
+ containing in all two hundred and seventeen stanzas, octave
+ measure. But I will permit no curtailments, except those mentioned
+ about Castlereagh and * * * *. You sha'n't make _canticles_ of my
+ cantos. The poem will please, if it is lively; if it is stupid, it
+ will fail: but I will have none of your damned cutting and
+ slashing. If you please, you may publish _anonymously_; it will
+ perhaps be better; but I will battle my way against them all, like
+ a porcupine.
+
+ "So you and Mr. Foscolo, &c. want me to undertake what you call a
+ 'great work?' an Epic Poem, I suppose, or some such pyramid. I'll
+ try no such thing; I hate tasks. And then 'seven or eight years!'
+ God send us all well this day three months, let alone years. If
+ one's years can't be better employed than in sweating poesy, a man
+ had better be a ditcher. And works, too!--is Childe Harold
+ nothing? You have so many 'divine poems,' is it nothing to have
+ written a _human_ one? without any of your worn-out machinery. Why,
+ man, I could have spun the thoughts of the four Cantos of that poem
+ into twenty, had I wanted to book-make, and its passion into as
+ many modern tragedies. Since you want _length_, you shall have
+ enough of _Juan_, for I'll make fifty Cantos.
+
+ "And Foscolo, too! Why does _he_ not do something more than the
+ Letters of Ortis, and a tragedy, and pamphlets? He has good fifteen
+ years more at his command than I have: what has he done all that
+ time?--proved his genius, doubtless, but not fixed its fame, nor
+ done his utmost.
+
+ "Besides, I mean to write my best work in _Italian_, and it will
+ take me nine years more thoroughly to master the language; and then
+ if my fancy exist, and I exist too, I will try what I _can_ do
+ _really_. As to the estimation of the English which you talk of,
+ let them calculate what it is worth, before they insult me with
+ their insolent condescension.
+
+ "I have not written for their pleasure. If they are pleased, it is
+ that they chose to be so; I have never flattered their opinions,
+ nor their pride; nor will I. Neither will I make 'Ladies' books 'al
+ dilettar le femine e la plebe.' I have written from the fulness of
+ my mind, from passion, from impulse, from many motives, but not for
+ their 'sweet voices.'
+
+ "I know the precise worth of popular applause, for few scribblers
+ have had more of it; and if I chose to swerve into their paths, I
+ could retain it, or resume it. But I neither love ye, nor fear ye;
+ and though I buy with ye and sell with ye, I will neither eat with
+ ye, drink with ye, nor pray with ye. They made me, without any
+ search, a species of popular idol; they, without reason or
+ judgment, beyond the caprice of their good pleasure, threw down the
+ image from its pedestal; it was not broken with the fall, and they
+ would, it seems, again replace it,--but they shall not.
+
+ "You ask about my health: about the beginning of the year I was in
+ a state of great exhaustion, attended by such debility of stomach
+ that nothing remained upon it; and I was obliged to reform my 'way
+ of life,' which was conducting me from the 'yellow leaf' to the
+ ground, with all deliberate speed. I am better in health and
+ morals, and very much yours, &c.
+
+ "P.S. I have read Hodgson's 'Friends.' He is right in defending
+ Pope against the bastard pelicans of the poetical winter day, who
+ add insult to their parricide, by sucking the blood of the parent
+ of English _real_ poetry,--poetry without fault,--and then spurning
+ the bosom which fed them."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was about the time when the foregoing letter was written, and when,
+as we perceive, like the first return of reason after intoxication, a
+full consciousness of some of the evils of his late libertine course of
+life had broken upon him, that an attachment differing altogether, both
+in duration and devotion, from any of those that, since the dream of his
+boyhood, had inspired him, gained an influence over his mind which
+lasted through his few remaining years; and, undeniably wrong and
+immoral (even allowing for the Italian estimate of such frailties) as
+was the nature of the connection to which this attachment led, we can
+hardly perhaps,--taking into account the far worse wrong from which it
+rescued and preserved him,--consider it otherwise than as an event
+fortunate both for his reputation and happiness.
+
+The fair object of this last, and (with one signal exception) only
+_real_ love of his whole life, was a young Romagnese lady, the daughter
+of Count Gamba, of Ravenna, and married, but a short time before Lord
+Byron first met with her, to an old and wealthy widower, of the same
+city, Count Guiccioli. Her husband had in early life been the friend of
+Alfieri, and had distinguished himself by his zeal in promoting the
+establishment of a National Theatre, in which the talents of Alfieri and
+his own wealth were to be combined. Notwithstanding his age, and a
+character, as it appears, by no means reputable, his great opulence
+rendered him an object of ambition among the mothers of Ravenna, who,
+according to the too frequent maternal practice, were seen vying with
+each other in attracting so rich a purchaser for their daughters, and
+the young Teresa Gamba, not yet sixteen, and just emancipated from a
+convent, was the selected victim.
+
+The first time Lord Byron had ever seen this lady was in the autumn of
+1818, when she made her appearance, three days after her marriage, at
+the house of the Countess Albrizzi, in all the gaiety of bridal array,
+and the first delight of exchanging a convent for the world. At this
+time, however, no acquaintance ensued between them;--it was not till the
+spring of the present year that, at an evening party of Madame
+Benzoni's, they were introduced to each other. The love that sprung out
+of this meeting was instantaneous and mutual, though with the usual
+disproportion of sacrifice between the parties; such an event being, to
+the man, but one of the many scenes of life, while, with woman, it
+generally constitutes the whole drama. The young Italian found herself
+suddenly inspired with a passion of which, till that moment, her mind
+could not have formed the least idea;--she had thought of love but as an
+amusement, and now became its slave. If at the outset, too, less slow to
+be won than an Englishwoman, no sooner did she begin to understand the
+full despotism of the passion than her heart shrunk from it as something
+terrible, and she would have escaped, but that the chain was already
+around her.
+
+No words, however, can describe so simply and feelingly as her own, the
+strong impression which their first meeting left upon her mind:--
+
+"I became acquainted (says Madame Guiccioli) with Lord Byron in the
+April of 1819:--he was introduced to me at Venice, by the Countess
+Benzoni, at one of that lady's parties. This introduction, which had so
+much influence over the lives of us both, took place contrary to our
+wishes, and had been permitted by us only from courtesy. For myself,
+more fatigued than usual that evening on account of the late hours they
+keep at Venice, I went with great repugnance to this party, and purely
+in obedience to Count Guiccioli. Lord Byron, too, who was averse to
+forming new acquaintances,--alleging that he had entirely renounced all
+attachments, and was unwilling any more to expose himself to their
+consequences,--on being requested by the countess Benzoni to allow
+himself to be presented to me, refused, and, at last, only assented from
+a desire to oblige her.
+
+"His noble and exquisitely beautiful countenance, the tone of his voice,
+his manners, the thousand enchantments that surrounded him, rendered him
+so different and so superior a being to any whom I had hitherto seen,
+that it was impossible he should not have left the most profound
+impression upon me. From that evening, during the whole of my subsequent
+stay at Venice, we met every day."[30]
+
+[Footnote 30: "Nell' Aprile del 1819, io feci la conoscenza di Lord
+Byron; e mi fu presentato a Venezia dalla Contessa Benzoni nella di lei
+societa. Questa presentazione che ebbe tante consequenze per tutti e due
+fu fatta contro la volonta d'entrambi, e solo per condiscendenza
+l'abbiamo permessa. Io stanca piu che mai quella sera par le ore tarde
+che si costuma fare in Venezia andai con molta ripugnanza e solo per
+ubbidire al Conte Guiccioli in quella societa. Lord Byron che scansava
+di fare nuove conoscenze, dicendo sempre che aveva interamente
+rinunciato alle passioni e che non voleva esporsi piu alle loro
+consequenze, quando la Contessa Benzoni la prego di volersi far
+presentare a me egli recuso, e solo per la compiacenza glielo permise.
+La nobile e bellissima sua fisonomia, il suono della sua voce, le sue
+maniere, i mille incanti che lo circondavano lo rendevano un essere cosi
+differente, cosi superiore a tutti quelli che io aveva sino allora
+veduti che non potei a meno di non provarne la piu profonda impressione.
+Da quella sera in poi in tutti i giorni che mi fermai in Venezia ei
+siamo seinpre veduti."--MS.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 328. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, May 15. 1819.
+
+ "I have got your extract, and the 'Vampire.' I need not say it is
+ _not mine_. There is a rule to go by: you are my publisher (till we
+ quarrel), and what is not published by you is not written by me.
+
+ "Next week I set out for Romagna--at least, in all probability. You
+ had better go on with the publications, without waiting to hear
+ farther, for I have other things in my head. 'Mazeppa' and the
+ 'Ode' separate?--what think you? _Juan anonymous, without the
+ Dedication;_ for I won't be shabby, and attack Southey under cloud
+ of night.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In another letter on the subject of the Vampire, I find the following
+interesting particulars:--
+
+ "TO MR. ----.
+
+ "The story of Shelley's agitation is true.[31] I can't tell what
+ seized him, for he don't want courage. He was once with me in a
+ gale of wind, in a small boat, right under the rocks between
+ Meillerie and St. Gingo. We were five in the boat--a servant, two
+ boatmen, and ourselves. The sail was mismanaged, and the boat was
+ filling fast. He can't swim. I stripped off my coat, made him strip
+ off his, and take hold of an oar, telling him that I thought (being
+ myself an expert swimmer) I could save him, if he would not
+ struggle when I took hold of him--unless we got smashed against the
+ rocks, which were high and sharp, with an awkward surf on them at
+ that minute. We were then about a hundred yards from shore, and the
+ boat in peril. He answered me with the greatest coolness, 'that he
+ had no notion of being saved, and that I would have enough to do to
+ save myself, and begged not to trouble me.' Luckily, the boat
+ righted, and, bailing, we got round a point into St. Gingo, where
+ the inhabitants came down and embraced the boatmen on their escape,
+ the wind having been high enough to tear up some huge trees from
+ the Alps above us, as we saw next day.
+
+ "And yet the same Shelley, who was as cool as it was possible to be
+ in such circumstances, (of which I am no judge myself, as the
+ chance of swimming naturally gives self-possession when near
+ shore,) certainly had the fit of phantasy which Polidori describes,
+ though _not exactly_ as he describes it.
+
+ "The story of the agreement to write the ghost-books is true; but
+ the ladies are _not_ sisters. Mary Godwin (now Mrs. Shelley) wrote
+ Frankenstein, which you have reviewed, thinking it Shelley's.
+ Methinks it is a wonderful book for a girl of nineteen,--not
+ nineteen, indeed, at that time. I enclose you the beginning of
+ mine, by which you will see how far it resembles Mr. Colburn's
+ publication. If you choose to publish it, you may, _stating why_,
+ and with such explanatory proem as you please. I never went on with
+ it, as you will perceive by the date. I began it in an old
+ account-book of Miss Milbanke's, which I kept because it contains
+ the word 'Household,' written by her twice on the inside blank page
+ of the covers, being the only two scraps I have in the world in her
+ writing, except her name to the Deed of Separation. Her letters I
+ sent back except those of the quarrelling correspondence, and
+ those, being documents, are placed in the hands of a third person,
+ with copies of several of my own; so that I have no kind of
+ memorial whatever of her, but these two words,--and her actions. I
+ have torn the leaves containing the part of the Tale out of the
+ book, and enclose them with this sheet.
+
+ "What do you mean? First you seem hurt by my letter, and then, in
+ your next, you talk of its 'power,' and so forth. 'This is a
+ d----d blind story, Jack; but never mind, go on.' You may be sure I
+ said nothing _on purpose_ to plague you; but if you will put me 'in
+ a frenzy, I will never call you _Jack_ again.' I remember nothing
+ of the epistle at present.
+
+ "What do you mean by Polidori's _Diary_? Why, I defy him to say any
+ thing about me, but he is welcome. I have nothing to reproach me
+ with on his score, and I am much mistaken if that is not his _own_
+ opinion. But why publish the names of the two girls? and in such a
+ manner?--what a blundering piece of exculpation! _He_ asked Pictet,
+ &c. to dinner, and of course was left to entertain them. I went
+ into society _solely_ to present _him_ (as I told him), that he
+ might return into good company if he chose; it was the best thing
+ for his youth and circumstances: for myself, I had done with
+ society, and, having presented him, withdrew to my own 'way of
+ life.' It is true that I returned without entering Lady Dalrymple
+ Hamilton's, because I saw it full. It is true that Mrs. Hervey (she
+ writes novels) fainted at my entrance into Coppet, and then came
+ back again. On her fainting, the Duchess de Broglie exclaimed,
+ 'This is _too much_--at _sixty-five_ years of age!'--I never gave
+ 'the English' an opportunity of avoiding me; but I trust that, if
+ ever I do, they will seize it. With regard to Mazeppa and the Ode,
+ you may join or separate them, as you please, from the two Cantos.
+
+ "Don't suppose I want to put you out of humour. I have a great
+ respect for your good and gentlemanly qualities, and return your
+ personal friendship towards me; and although I think you a little
+ spoilt by 'villanous company,'--wits, persons of honour about town,
+ authors, and fashionables, together with your 'I am just going to
+ call at Carlton House, are you walking that way?'--I say,
+ notwithstanding 'pictures, taste, Shakspeare, and the musical
+ glasses,' you deserve and possess the esteem of those whose esteem
+ is worth having, and of none more (however useless it may be) than
+ yours very truly, &c.
+
+ "P.S. Make my respects to Mr. Gifford. I am perfectly aware that
+ 'Don Juan' must set us all by the ears, but that is my concern, and
+ my beginning. There will be the 'Edinburgh,' and all, too, against
+ it, so that, like 'Rob Roy,' I shall have my hands full."
+
+[Footnote 31: This story, as given in the Preface to the "Vampire," is
+as follows:--
+
+"It appears that one evening Lord B., Mr. P.B. Shelley, two ladies, and
+the gentleman before alluded to, after having perused a German work
+called Phantasmagoria, began relating ghost stories, when his Lordship
+having recited the beginning of Christabel, then unpublished, the whole
+took so strong a hold of Mr. Shelley's mind, that he suddenly started
+up, and ran out of the room. The physician and Lord Byron followed, and
+discovered him leaning against a mantel-piece, with cold drops of
+perspiration trickling down his face. After having given him something
+to refresh him, upon enquiring into the cause of his alarm, they found
+that his wild imagination having pictured to him the bosom of one of the
+ladies with eyes (which was reported of a lady in the neighbourhood
+where he lived), he was obliged to leave the room in order to destroy
+the impression."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 329. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, May 25. 1819.
+
+ "I have received no proofs by the last post, and shall probably
+ have quitted Venice before the arrival of the next. There wanted a
+ few stanzas to the termination of Canto first in the last proof;
+ the next will, I presume, contain them, and the whole or a portion
+ of Canto second; but it will be idle to wait for further answers
+ from me, as I have directed that my letters wait for my return
+ (perhaps in a month, and probably so); therefore do not wait for
+ further advice from me. You may as well talk to the wind, and
+ better--for _it_ will at least convey your accents a little further
+ than they would otherwise have gone; whereas _I_ shall neither
+ echo nor acquiesce in your 'exquisite reasons.' You may omit the
+ _note_ of reference to Hobhouse's travels, in Canto second, and you
+ will put as motto to the whole--
+
+ 'Difficile est proprie communia dicere.'--HORACE.
+
+ "A few days ago I sent you all I know of Polidori's Vampire. He may
+ do, say, or write, what he pleases, but I wish he would not
+ attribute to me his own compositions. If he has any thing of mine
+ in his possession, the MS. will put it beyond controversy; but I
+ scarcely think that any one who knows me would believe the thing in
+ the Magazine to be mine, even if they saw it in my own
+ hieroglyphics.
+
+ "I write to you in the agonies of a _sirocco_, which annihilates
+ me; and I have been fool enough to do four things since dinner,
+ which are as well omitted in very hot weather: 1stly, * * * *;
+ 2dly, to play at billiards from 10 to 12, under the influence of
+ lighted lamps, that doubled the heat; 3dly, to go afterwards into a
+ red-hot conversazione of the Countess Benzoni's; and, 4thly, to
+ begin this letter at three in the morning: but being begun, it must
+ be finished.
+
+ "Ever very truly and affectionately yours,
+
+ "B.
+
+ "P.S. I petition for tooth-brushes, powder, magnesia, Macassar oil
+ (or Russia), _the_ sashes, and Sir Nl. Wraxall's Memoirs of his own
+ Times. I want, besides, a bull-dog, a terrier, and two Newfoundland
+ dogs; and I want (is it Buck's?) a life of _Richard 3d_,
+ advertised by Longman _long, long, long_ ago; I asked for it at
+ least three years since. See Longman's advertisements."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+About the middle of April, Madame Guiccioli had been obliged to quit
+Venice with her husband. Having several houses on the road from Venice
+to Ravenna, it was his habit to stop at these mansions, one after the
+other, in his journeys between the two cities; and from all these places
+the enamoured young Countess now wrote to Lord Byron, expressing, in the
+most passionate and pathetic terms, her despair at leaving him. So
+utterly, indeed, did this feeling overpower her, that three times, in
+the course of her first day's journey, she was seized with fainting
+fits. In one of her letters, which I saw when at Venice, dated, if I
+recollect right, from "Ca Zen, Cavanelle di Po," she tells him that the
+solitude of this place, which she had before found irksome, was, now
+that one sole idea occupied her mind, become dear and welcome to her,
+and promises that, as soon as she arrives at Ravenna, "she will,
+according to his wish, avoid all general society, and devote herself to
+reading, music, domestic occupations, riding on horseback,--every thing,
+in short, that she knew he would most like." What a change for a young
+and simple girl, who, but a few weeks before, had thought only of
+society and the world, but who now saw no other happiness but in the
+hope of making herself worthy, by seclusion and self-instruction, of the
+illustrious object of her devotion!
+
+On leaving this place, she was attacked with a dangerous illness on the
+road, and arrived half dead at Ravenna; nor was it found possible to
+revive or comfort her till an assurance was received from Lord Byron,
+expressed with all the fervour of real passion, that, in the course of
+the ensuing month, he would pay her a visit. Symptoms of consumption,
+brought on by her state of mind, had already shown themselves; and, in
+addition to the pain which this separation had caused her, she was also
+suffering much grief from the loss of her mother, who, at this time,
+died in giving birth to her fourteenth child. Towards the latter end of
+May she wrote to acquaint Lord Byron that, having prepared all her
+relatives and friends to expect him, he might now, she thought, venture
+to make his appearance at Ravenna. Though, on the lady's account,
+hesitating as to the prudence of such a step, he, in obedience to her
+wishes, on the 2d of June, set out from La Mira (at which place he had
+again taken a villa for the summer), and proceeded towards Romagna.
+
+From Padua he addressed a letter to Mr. Hoppner, chiefly occupied with
+matters of household concern which that gentleman had undertaken to
+manage for him at Venice, but, on the immediate object of his journey,
+expressing himself in a tone so light and jesting, as it would be
+difficult for those not versed in his character to conceive that he
+could ever bring himself, while under the influence of a passion so
+sincere, to assume. But such is ever the wantonness of the mocking
+spirit, from which nothing,--not even love,--remains sacred; and which,
+at last, for want of other food, turns upon himself. The same horror,
+too, of hypocrisy that led Lord Byron to exaggerate his own errors, led
+him also to disguise, under a seemingly heartless ridicule, all those
+natural and kindly qualities by which they were redeemed.
+
+This letter from Padua concludes thus:--
+
+ "A journey in an Italian June is a conscription; and if I was not
+ the most constant of men, I should now be swimming from the Lido,
+ instead of smoking in the dust of Padua. Should there be letters
+ from England, let them wait my return. And do look at my house and
+ (not lands, but) waters, and scold;--and deal out the monies to
+ Edgecombe[32] with an air of reluctance and a shake of the
+ head--and put queer questions to him--and turn up your nose when he
+ answers.
+
+ "Make my respect to the Consules--and to the Chevalier--and to
+ Scotin--and to all the counts and countesses of our acquaintance.
+
+ "And believe me ever
+
+ "Your disconsolate and affectionate," &c.
+
+[Footnote 32: A clerk of the English Consulate, whom he at this time
+employed to control his accounts.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As a contrast to the strange levity of this letter, as well as in
+justice to the real earnestness of the passion, however censurable in
+all other respects, that now engrossed him, I shall here transcribe some
+stanzas which he wrote in the course of this journey to Romagna, and
+which, though already published, are not comprised in the regular
+collection of his works.
+
+ "River[33], that rollest by the ancient walls,
+ Where dwells the lady of my love, when she
+ Walks by thy brink, and there perchance recalls
+ A faint and fleeting memory of me;
+
+ "What if thy deep and ample stream should be
+ A mirror of my heart, where she may read
+ The thousand thoughts I now betray to thee,
+ Wild as thy wave, and headlong as thy speed!
+
+ "What do I say--a mirror of my heart?
+ Are not thy waters sweeping, dark, and strong?
+ Such as my feelings were and are, thou art;
+ And such as thou art were my passions long.
+
+ "Time may have somewhat tamed them,--not for ever;
+ Thou overflow'st thy banks, and not for aye
+ Thy bosom overboils, congenial river!
+ Thy floods subside, and mine have sunk away,
+
+ "But left long wrecks behind, and now again,
+ Borne in our old unchanged career, we move;
+ Thou tendest wildly onwards to the main,
+ And I--to loving _one_ I should not love.
+
+ "The current I behold will sweep beneath
+ Her native walls and murmur at her feet;
+ Her eyes will look on thee, when she shall breathe
+ The twilight air, unharm'd by summer's heat.
+
+ "She will look on thee,--I have look'd on thee,
+ Full of that thought; and, from that moment, ne'er
+ Thy waters could I dream of, name, or see,
+ Without the inseparable sigh for her!
+
+ "Her bright eyes will be imaged in thy stream,--
+ Yes! they will meet the wave I gaze on now:
+ Mine cannot witness, even in a dream,
+ That happy wave repass me in its flow!
+
+ "The wave that bears my tears returns no more:
+ Will she return by whom that wave shall sweep?--
+ Both tread thy banks, both wander on thy shore,
+ I by thy source, she by the dark-blue deep.
+
+ "But that which keepeth us apart is not
+ Distance, nor depth of wave, nor space of earth.
+ But the distraction of a various lot,
+ As various as the climates of our birth.
+
+ "A stranger loves the lady of the land,
+ Born far beyond the mountains, but his blood
+ Is all meridian, as if never fann'd
+ By the black wind that chills the polar flood.
+
+ "My blood is all meridian; were it not,
+ I had not left my clime, nor should I be,
+ In spite of tortures, ne'er to be forgot,
+ A slave again of love,--at least of thee.
+
+ "'Tis vain to struggle--let me perish young--
+ Live as I lived, and love as I have loved;
+ To dust if I return, from dust I sprung,
+ And then, at least, my heart can ne'er be moved."
+
+On arriving at Bologna and receiving no further intelligence from the
+Contessa, he began to be of opinion, as we shall perceive in the annexed
+interesting letters, that he should act most prudently, for all parties,
+by returning to Venice.
+
+[Footnote 33: The Po.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 330. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "Bologna, June 6. 1819.
+
+ "I am at length joined to Bologna, where I am settled like a
+ sausage, and shall be broiled like one, if this weather continues.
+ Will you thank Mengaldo on my part for the Ferrara acquaintance,
+ which was a very agreeable one. I stayed two days at Ferrara, and
+ was much pleased with the Count Mosti, and the little the shortness
+ of the time permitted me to see of his family. I went to his
+ conversazione, which is very far superior to any thing of the kind
+ at Venice--the women almost all young--several pretty--and the men
+ courteous and cleanly. The lady of the mansion, who is young,
+ lately married, and with child, appeared very pretty by candlelight
+ (I did not see her by day), pleasing in her manners, and very
+ lady-like, or thorough-bred, as we call it in England,--a kind of
+ thing which reminds one of a racer, an antelope, or an Italian
+ greyhound. She seems very fond of her husband, who is amiable and
+ accomplished; he has been in England two or three times, and is
+ young. The sister, a Countess somebody--I forget what--(they are
+ both Maffei by birth, and Veronese of course)--is a lady of more
+ display; she sings and plays divinely; but I thought she was a
+ d----d long time about it. Her likeness to Madame Flahaut (Miss
+ Mercer that was) is something quite extraordinary.
+
+ "I had but a bird's eye view of these people, and shall not
+ probably see them again; but I am very much obliged to Mengaldo for
+ letting me see them at all. Whenever I meet with any thing
+ agreeable in this world, it surprises me so much, and pleases me so
+ much (when my passions are not interested one way or the other),
+ that I go on wondering for a week to come. I feel, too, in great
+ admiration of the Cardinal Legate's red stockings.
+
+ "I found, too, such a pretty epitaph in the Certosa cemetery, or
+ rather two: one was
+
+ 'Martini Luigi
+ Implora pace;'
+
+ the other,
+
+ 'Lucrezia Picini
+ Implora eterna quiete.'
+
+ That was all; but it appears to me that these two and three words
+ comprise and compress all that can be said on the subject,--and
+ then, in Italian, they are absolute music. They contain doubt,
+ hope, and humility; nothing can be more pathetic than the 'implora'
+ and the modesty of the request;--they have had enough of life--they
+ want nothing but rest--they implore it, and 'eterna quiete.' It is
+ like a Greek inscription in some good old heathen 'City of the
+ Dead.' Pray, if I am shovelled into the Lido churchyard in your
+ time, let me have the 'implora pace,' and nothing else, for my
+ epitaph. I never met with any, ancient or modern, that pleased me a
+ tenth part so much.
+
+ "In about a day or two after you receive this letter, I will thank
+ you to desire Edgecombe to prepare for my return. I shall go back
+ to Venice before I village on the Brenta. I shall stay but a few
+ days in Bologna. I am just going out to see sights, but shall not
+ present my introductory letters for a day or two, till I have run
+ over again the place and pictures; nor perhaps at all, if I find
+ that I have books and sights enough to do without the inhabitants.
+ After that, I shall return to Venice, where you may expect me about
+ the eleventh, or perhaps sooner. Pray make my thanks acceptable to
+ Mengaldo: my respects to the Consuless, and to Mr. Scott. I hope my
+ daughter is well.
+
+ "Ever yours, and truly.
+
+ "P.S. I went over the Ariosto MS. &c. &c. again at Ferrara, with
+ the castle, and cell, and house, &c. &c.
+
+ "One of the Ferrarese asked me if I knew 'Lord Byron,' an
+ acquaintance of his, _now_ at Naples. I told him '_No!_' which was
+ true both ways; for I knew not the impostor, and in the other, no
+ one knows himself. He stared when told that I was 'the real Simon
+ Pure.' Another asked me if I had _not translated_ 'Tasso.' You see
+ what _fame_ is! how _accurate!_ how _boundless!_ I don't know how
+ others feel, but I am always the lighter and the better looked on
+ when I have got rid of mine; it sits on me like armour on the Lord
+ Mayor's champion; and I got rid of all the husk of literature, and
+ the attendant babble, by answering, that I had not translated
+ Tasso, but a namesake had; and by the blessing of Heaven, I looked
+ so little like a poet, that every body believed me."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 331. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Bologna, June 7. 1819.
+
+ "Tell Mr. Hobhouse that I wrote to him a few days ago from Ferrara.
+ It will therefore be idle in him or you to wait for any further
+ answers or returns of proofs from Venice, as I have directed that
+ no English letters be sent after me. The publication can be
+ proceeded in without, and I am already sick of your remarks, to
+ which I think not the least attention ought to be paid.
+
+ "Tell Mr. Hobhouse that, since I wrote to him, I had availed myself
+ of my Ferrara letters, and found the society much younger and
+ better there than at Venice. I am very much pleased with the little
+ the shortness of my stay permitted me to see of the Gonfaloniere
+ Count Mosti, and his family and friends in general.
+
+ "I have been picture-gazing this morning at the famous Domenichino
+ and Guido, both of which are superlative. I afterwards went to the
+ beautiful cemetery of Bologna, beyond the walls, and found, besides
+ the superb burial-ground, an original of a Custode, who reminded
+ one of the grave-digger in Hamlet. He has a collection of
+ capuchins' skulls, labelled on the forehead, and taking down one of
+ them, said, 'This was Brother Desiderio Berro, who died at
+ forty--one of my best friends. I begged his head of his brethren
+ after his decease, and they gave it me. I put it in lime, and then
+ boiled it. Here it is, teeth and all, in excellent preservation. He
+ was the merriest, cleverest fellow I ever knew. Wherever he went,
+ he brought joy; and whenever any one was melancholy, the sight of
+ him was enough to make him cheerful again. He walked so actively,
+ you might have taken him for a dancer--he joked--he laughed--oh! he
+ was such a Frate as I never saw before, nor ever shall again!'
+
+ "He told me that he had himself planted all the cypresses in the
+ cemetery; that he had the greatest attachment to them and to his
+ dead people; that since 1801 they had buried fifty-three thousand
+ persons. In showing some older monuments, there was that of a Roman
+ girl of twenty, with a bust by Bernini. She was a princess
+ Bartorini, dead two centuries ago: he said that, on opening her
+ grave, they had found her hair complete, and 'as yellow as gold.'
+ Some of the epitaphs at Ferrara pleased me more than the more
+ splendid monuments at Bologna; for instance:--
+
+ "Martini Luigi
+ Implora pace;
+
+ "Lucrezia Picini
+ Implora eterna quiete.
+
+ Can any thing be more full of pathos? Those few words say all that
+ can be said or sought: the dead had had enough of life; all they
+ wanted was rest, and this they _implore_! There is all the
+ helplessness, and humble hope, and deathlike prayer, that can arise
+ from the grave--'implora pace.'[34] I hope, whoever may survive
+ me, and shall see me put in the foreigners' burying-ground at the
+ Lido, within the fortress by the Adriatic, will see those two
+ words, and no more, put over me. I trust they won't think of
+ 'pickling, and bringing me home to Clod or Blunderbuss Hall.' I am
+ sure my bones would not rest in an English grave, or my clay mix
+ with the earth of that country. I believe the thought would drive
+ me mad on my deathbed, could I suppose that any of my friends would
+ be base enough to convey my carcass back to your soil. I would not
+ even feed your worms, if I could help it.
+
+ "So, as Shakspeare says of Mowbray, the banished Duke of Norfolk,
+ who died at Venice (see Richard II.) that he, after fighting
+
+ "'Against black Pagans, Turks, and Saracens,
+ And toiled with works of war, retired himself
+ To Italy, and there, at _Venice_, gave
+ His body to that _pleasant_ country's earth,
+ And his pure soul unto his captain, Christ,
+ Under whose colours he had fought so long.'
+
+ "Before I left Venice, I had returned to you your late, and Mr.
+ Hobhouse's sheets of Juan. Don't wait for further answers from me,
+ but address yours to Venice, as usual. I know nothing of my own
+ movements; I may return there in a few days, or not for some time.
+ All this depends on circumstances. I left Mr. Hoppner very well. My
+ daughter Allegra was well too, and is growing pretty; her hair is
+ growing darker, and her eyes are blue. Her temper and her ways, Mr.
+ Hoppner says, are like mine, as well as her features: she will
+ make, in that case, a manageable young lady.
+
+ "I have never heard any thing of Ada, the little Electra of
+ Mycenae. But there will come a day of reckoning, even if I should
+ not live to see it.[35] What a long letter I have scribbled! Yours,
+ &c.
+
+ "P.S. Here, as in Greece, they strew flowers on the tombs. I saw a
+ quantity of rose-leaves, and entire roses, scattered over the
+ graves at Ferrara. It has the most pleasing effect you can
+ imagine."
+
+[Footnote 34: Though Lord Byron, like most other persons, in writing to
+different friends, was sometimes led to repeat the same circumstances
+and thoughts, there is, from the ever ready fertility of his mind, much
+less of such repetition in his correspondence than in that, perhaps, of
+any other multifarious letter-writer; and, in the instance before us,
+where the same facts and reflections are, for the second time,
+introduced, it is with such new touches, both of thought and expression,
+as render them, even a second time, interesting;--what is wanting in the
+novelty of the matter being made up by the new aspect given to it.]
+
+[Footnote 35: There were, in the former edition, both here and in a
+subsequent letter, some passages reflecting upon the late Sir Samuel
+Romilly, which, in my anxiety to lay open the workings of Lord Byron's
+mind upon a subject in which so much of his happiness and character were
+involved, I had been induced to retain, though aware of the erroneous
+impression under which they were written;--the evident morbidness of the
+feeling that dictated the attack, and the high, stainless reputation of
+the person assailed, being sufficient, I thought, to neutralise any ill
+effects such reflections might otherwise have produced. As I find it,
+however, to be the opinion of all those whose opinions I most respect,
+that, even with these antidotes, such an attack upon such a man ought
+not to be left on record, I willingly expunge all trace of it from these
+pages.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+While he was thus lingering irresolute at Bologna, the Countess
+Guiccioli had been attacked with an intermittent fever, the violence of
+which, combining with the absence of a confidential person to whom she
+had been in the habit of intrusting her letters, prevented her from
+communicating with him. At length, anxious to spare him the
+disappointment of finding her so ill on his arrival, she had begun a
+letter, requesting that he would remain at Bologna till the visit to
+which she looked forward should bring her there also; and was in the act
+of writing, when a friend came in to announce the arrival of an English
+lord in Ravenna. She could not doubt for an instant that it was her
+noble friend; and he had, in fact, notwithstanding his declaration to
+Mr. Hoppner that it was his intention to return to Venice immediately,
+wholly altered this resolution before the letter announcing it was
+despatched,--the following words being written on the outside cover:--"I
+am just setting off for Ravenna, June 8. 1819.--I changed my mind this
+morning, and decided to go on."
+
+The reader, however, shall have Madame Guiccioli's own account of these
+events, which, fortunately for the interest of my narration, I am
+enabled to communicate.
+
+"On my departure from Venice, he had promised to come and see me at
+Ravenna. Dante's tomb, the classical pine wood[36], the relics of
+antiquity which are to be found in that place, afforded a sufficient
+pretext for me to invite him to come, and for him to accept my
+invitation. He came, in fact, in the month of June, arriving at Ravenna
+on the day of the festival of the Corpus Domini; while I, attacked by a
+consumptive complaint, which had its origin from the moment of my
+quitting Venice, appeared on the point of death. The arrival of a
+distinguished foreigner at Ravenna, a town so remote from the routes
+ordinarily followed by travellers, was an event which gave rise to a
+good deal of conversation. His motives for such a visit became the
+subject of discussion, and these he himself afterwards involuntarily
+divulged; for having made some enquiries with a view to paying me a
+visit, and being told that it was unlikely that he would ever see me
+again, as I was at the point of death, he replied, if such were the
+case, he hoped that he should die also; which circumstance, being
+repeated, revealed the object of his journey. Count Guiccioli, having
+been acquainted with Lord Byron at Venice, went to visit him now, and in
+the hope that his presence might amuse, and be of some use to me in the
+state in which I then found myself, invited him to call upon me. He came
+the day following. It is impossible to describe the anxiety he
+showed,--the delicate attentions that he paid me. For a long time he had
+perpetually medical books in his hands; and not trusting my physicians,
+he obtained permission from Count Guiccioli to send for a very clever
+physician, a friend of his, in whom he placed great confidence. The
+attentions of Professor Aglietti (for so this celebrated Italian was
+called), together with tranquillity, and the inexpressible happiness
+which I experienced in Lord Byron's society, had so good an effect on my
+health, that only two months afterwards I was able to accompany my
+husband in a tour he was obliged to make to visit his various
+estates."[37]
+
+[Footnote 36:
+
+ "Tal qual di ramo in ramo si raccoglie
+ Per la pineta in sul lito di Chiassi,
+ Quando Eolo Scirocco fuor discioglie."
+ DANTE, PURG. Canto xxviii.
+
+Dante himself (says Mr. Carey, in one of the notes on his admirable
+translation of this poet) "perhaps wandered in this wood during his
+abode with Guido Novello da Polenta."]
+
+[Footnote 37: "Partendo io da Venezia egli promise di venir a vedermi a
+Ravenna. La Tomba di Dante, il classico bosco di pini, gli avvanzi di
+antichita che a Ravenna si trovano davano a me ragioni plausibili per
+invitarlo a venire, ed a lui per accettare l'invito. Egli venne difatti
+nel mese Guigno, e giunse a Ravenna nel giorno della Solennita del
+Corpus Domini, mentre io attaccata da una malattia de consunzione ch'
+ebbe principio dalla mia partenza da Venezia ero vicina a morire.
+L'arrivo in Ravenna d'un forestiero distinto, in un paese cosi lontano
+dalle strade che ordinariamente tengono i viaggiatori era un avvenimento
+del quale molto si parlava, indagandosene i motivi, che
+involontariamente poi egli feci conoscere. Perche avendo egli domandato
+di me per venire a vedermi ed essendogli risposto 'che non potrebbe
+vedermi piu perche ero vicina a morire'--egli rispose che in quel caso
+voleva morire egli pure; la qual cosa essendosi poi ripetata si conobbe
+cosi l'oggetto del suo viaggio.
+
+"Il Conte Guiccioli visito Lord Byron, essendolo conosciuto in Venezia,
+e nella speranza che la di lui compagnia potesse distrarmi ed essermi di
+qualche giovamento nello stato in cui mi trovavo egli lo invito di
+venire a visitarmi. Il giorno appresso egli venne. Non si potrebbero
+descrivere le cure, i pensieri delicati, quanto egli fece per me. Per
+molto tempo egli non ebbe per le mani che dei Libri di Medicina; e poco
+confidandosi nel miei medici ottenne dal Conte Guiccioli il permesso di
+far venire un valente medico di lui amico nel quale egli aveva molta
+confidenza. Le cure del Professore Aglietti (cosi si chiama questo
+distinto Italiano) la tranquillita, anzi la felicita inesprimibile che
+mi cagionava la presenza di Lord Byron migliorarono cosi rapidamente la
+mia salute che entro lo spazio di due mesi potei seguire mio marito in
+un giro che egli doveva fare per le sue terre."--MS.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 332. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "Ravenna, June 20. 1819.
+
+ "I wrote to you from Padua, and from Bologna, and since from
+ Ravenna. I find my situation very agreeable, but want my horses
+ very much, there being good riding in the environs. I can fix no
+ time for my return to Venice--it may be soon or late--or not at
+ all--it all depends on the Donna, whom I found very seriously in
+ _bed_ with a cough and spitting of blood, &c. all of which has
+ subsided. I found all the people here firmly persuaded that she
+ would never recover;--they were mistaken, however.
+
+ "My letters were useful as far as I employed them; and I like both
+ the place and people, though I don't trouble the latter more than I
+ can help _She_ manages very well--but if I come away with a
+ stiletto in my gizzard some fine afternoon, I shall not be
+ astonished. I can't make _him_ out at all--he visits me frequently,
+ and takes me out (like Whittington, the Lord Mayor) in a coach and
+ _six_ horses. The fact appears to be, that he is completely
+ _governed_ by her--for that matter, so am I.[38] The people here
+ don't know what to make of us, as he had the character of jealousy
+ with all his wives--this is the third. He is the richest of the
+ Ravennese, by their own account, but is not popular among them. Now
+ do, pray, send off Augustine, and carriage and cattle, to Bologna,
+ without fail or delay, or I shall lose my remaining shred of
+ senses. Don't forget this. My coming, going, and every thing,
+ depend upon HER entirely, just as Mrs. Hoppner (to whom I remit my
+ reverences) said in the true spirit of female prophecy.
+
+ "You are but a shabby fellow not to have written before. And I am
+ truly yours," &c.
+
+[Footnote 38: That this task of "governing" him was one of more ease
+than, from the ordinary view of his character, might be concluded, I
+have more than once, in these pages, expressed my opinion, and shall
+here quote, in corroboration of it, the remark of his own servant
+(founded on an observation of more than twenty years), in speaking of
+his master's matrimonial fate:--
+
+"It is very odd, but I never yet knew a lady that could not manage my
+Lord, _except_ my Lady."
+
+"More knowledge," says Johnson, "may be gained of a man's real character
+by a short conversation with one of his servants than from the most
+formal and studied narrative."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 333. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, June 29. 1819.
+
+ "The letters have been forwarded from Venice, but I trust that you
+ will not have waited for further alterations--I will make none.
+
+ "I have no time to return you the proofs--publish without them. I
+ am glad you think the poesy good; and as to 'thinking of the
+ effect,' think _you_ of the sale, and leave me to pluck the
+ porcupines who may point their quills at you.
+
+ "I have been here (at Ravenna) these four weeks, having left Venice
+ a month ago;--I came to see my 'Amica,' the Countess Guiccioli, who
+ has been, and still continues, very unwell. * * She is only in her
+ seventeenth, but not of a strong constitution. She has a perpetual
+ cough and an intermittent fever, but bears up most _gallantly_ in
+ every sense of the word. Her husband (this is his third wife) is
+ the richest noble of Ravenna, and almost of Romagna; he is also
+ _not_ the youngest, being upwards of three-score, but in good
+ preservation. All this will appear strange to you, who do not
+ understand the meridian morality, nor our way of life in such
+ respects, and I cannot at present expound the difference;--but you
+ would find it much the same in these parts. At Faenza there is Lord
+ * * * * with an opera girl; and at the inn in the same town is a
+ Neapolitan Prince, who serves the wife of the Gonfaloniere of that
+ city. I am on duty here--so you see 'Cosi fan tut_ti_ e tut_te_.'
+
+ "I have my horses here, _saddle_ as well as carriage, and ride or
+ drive every day in the forest, the _Pineta_, the scene of
+ Boccaccio's novel, and Dryden's fable of Honoria, &c. &c.; and I
+ see my Dama every day; but I feel seriously uneasy about her
+ health, which seems very precarious. In losing her, I should lose a
+ being who has run great risks on my account, and whom I have every
+ reason to love--but I must not think this possible. I do not know
+ what I _should_ do if she died, but I ought to blow my brains
+ out--and I hope that I should. Her husband is a very polite
+ personage, but I wish he would not carry me out in his coach and
+ six, like Whittington and his cat.
+
+ "You ask me if I mean to continue D.J. &c. How should I know? What
+ encouragement do you give me, all of you, with your nonsensical
+ prudery? publish the two Cantos, and then you will see. I desired
+ Mr. Kinnaird to speak to you on a little matter of business; either
+ he has not spoken, or you have not answered. You are a pretty pair,
+ but I will be even with you both. I perceive that Mr. Hobhouse has
+ been challenged by Major Cartwright--Is the Major 'so cunning of
+ fence?'--why did not they fight?--they ought.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 334. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "Ravenna, July 2. 1819.
+
+ "Thanks for your letter and for Madame's. I will answer it
+ directly. Will you recollect whether I did not consign to you one
+ or two receipts of Madame Mocenigo's for house-rent--(I am not sure
+ of this, but think I did--if not, they will be in my drawers)--and
+ will you desire Mr. Dorville[39] to have the goodness to see if
+ Edgecombe has _receipts_ to all payments _hitherto_ made by him on
+ my account, and that there are _no debts_ at Venice? On your
+ answer, I shall send order of further remittance to carry on my
+ household expenses, as my present return to Venice is very
+ problematical; and it may happen--but I can say nothing
+ positive--every thing with me being indecisive and undecided,
+ except the disgust which Venice excites when fairly compared with
+ any other city in this part of Italy. When I say _Venice_, I mean
+ the _Venetians_--the city itself is superb as its history--but the
+ people are what I never thought them till they taught me to think
+ so.
+
+ "The best way will be to leave Allegra with Antonio's spouse till I
+ can decide something about her and myself--but I thought that you
+ would have had an answer from Mrs. V----r.[40] You have had bore
+ enough with me and mine already.
+
+ "I greatly fear that the Guiccioli is going into a consumption, to
+ which her constitution tends. Thus it is with every thing and every
+ body for whom I feel any thing like a real attachment;--'War,
+ death, or discord, doth lay siege to them.' I never even could
+ keep alive a dog that I liked or that liked me. Her symptoms are
+ obstinate cough of the lungs, and occasional fever, &c. &c. and
+ there are latent causes of an eruption in the skin, which she
+ foolishly repelled into the system two years ago: but I have made
+ them send her case to Aglietti; and have begged him to come--if
+ only for a day or two--to consult upon her state.
+
+ "If it would not bore Mr. Dorville, I wish he would keep an eye on
+ E---- and on my other ragamuffins. I might have more to say, but I
+ am absorbed about La Gui. and her illness. I cannot tell you the
+ effect it has upon me.
+
+ "The horses came, &c. &c. and I have been galloping through the
+ pine forest daily.
+
+ "Believe me, &c.
+
+ "P.S. My benediction on Mrs. Hoppner, a pleasant journey among the
+ Bernese tyrants, and safe return. You ought to bring back a
+ Platonic Bernese for my reformation. If any thing happens to my
+ present Amica, I have done with the passion for ever--it is my
+ _last_ love. As to libertinism, I have sickened myself of that, as
+ was natural in the way I went on, and I have at least derived that
+ advantage from vice, to _love_ in the better sense of the word.
+ _This_ will be my last adventure--I can hope no more to inspire
+ attachment, and I trust never again to feel it."
+
+[Footnote 39: The Vice-Consul of Mr. Hoppner.]
+
+[Footnote 40: An English widow lady, of considerable property in the
+north of England, who, having seen the little Allegra at Mr. Hoppner's,
+took an interest in the poor child's fate, and having no family of her
+own, offered to adopt and provide for this little girl, if Lord Byron
+would consent to renounce all claim to her. At first he seemed not
+disinclined to enter into her views--so far, at least, as giving
+permission that she should take the child with her to England and
+educate it; but the entire surrender of his paternal authority he would
+by no means consent to. The proposed arrangement accordingly was never
+carried into effect.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The impression which, I think, cannot but be entertained, from some
+passages of these letters, of the real fervour and sincerity of his
+attachment to Madame Guiccioli[41], would be still further confirmed by
+the perusal of his letters to that lady herself, both from Venice and
+during his present stay at Ravenna--all bearing, throughout, the true
+marks both of affection and passion. Such effusions, however, are but
+little suited to the general eye. It is the tendency of all strong
+feeling, from dwelling constantly on the same idea, to be monotonous;
+and those often-repeated vows and verbal endearments, which make the
+charm of true love-letters to the parties concerned in them, must for
+ever render even the best of them cloying to others. Those of Lord Byron
+to Madame Guiccioli, which are for the most part in Italian, and written
+with a degree of ease and correctness attained rarely by foreigners,
+refer chiefly to the difficulties thrown in the way of their
+meetings,--not so much by the husband himself, who appears to have liked
+and courted Lord Byron's society, as by the watchfulness of other
+relatives, and the apprehension felt by themselves lest their intimacy
+should give uneasiness to the father of the lady, Count Gamba, a
+gentleman to whose good nature and amiableness of character all who know
+him bear testimony.
+
+In the near approaching departure of the young Countess for Bologna,
+Lord Byron foresaw a risk of their being again separated; and under the
+impatience of this prospect, though through the whole of his preceding
+letters the fear of committing her by any imprudence seems to have been
+his ruling thought, he now, with that wilfulness of the moment which has
+so often sealed the destiny of years, proposed that she should, at once,
+abandon her husband and fly with him:--"c'e uno solo rimedio efficace,"
+he says,--"cioe d' andar via insieme." To an Italian wife, almost every
+thing but this is permissible. The same system which so indulgently
+allows her a friend, as one of the regular appendages of her matrimonial
+establishment, takes care also to guard against all unseemly
+consequences of this privilege; and in return for such convenient
+facilities of wrong exacts rigidly an observance of all the appearances
+of right. Accordingly, the open step of deserting the husband for the
+lover instead of being considered, as in England, but a sign and sequel
+of transgression, takes rank, in Italian morality, as the main
+transgression itself; and being an offence, too, rendered wholly
+unnecessary by the latitude otherwise enjoyed, becomes, from its rare
+occurrence, no less monstrous than odious.
+
+The proposition, therefore, of her noble friend seemed to the young
+Contessa little less than sacrilege, and the agitation of her mind,
+between the horrors of such a step, and her eager readiness to give up
+all and every thing for him she adored, was depicted most strongly in
+her answer to the proposal. In a subsequent letter, too, the romantic
+girl even proposed, as a means of escaping the ignominy of an elopement,
+that she should, like another Juliet, "pass for dead,"--assuring him
+that there were many easy ways of effecting such a deception.
+
+[Footnote 41: "During my illness," says Madame Guiccioli, in her
+recollections of this period, "he was for ever near me, paying me the
+most amiable attentions, and when I became convalescent he was
+constantly at my side. In society, at the theatre, riding, walking, he
+never was absent from me. Being deprived at that time of his books, his
+horses, and all that occupied him at Venice, I begged him to gratify me
+by writing something on the subject of Dante, and, with his usual
+facility and rapidity, he composed his 'Prophecy.'"--"Durante la mia
+malattia L.B. era sempre presso di me, prestandomi le piu sensibili
+cure, e quando passai allo stato di convalescenza egli era sempre al mio
+fianco;--e in societa, e al teatro, e cavalcando, e passeggiando egli
+non si allontanava mai da me. In quel' epoca essendo egli privo de' suoi
+libri, e de' suoi cavalli, e di tuttocio che lo occupava in Venezia io
+lo pregai di volersi occupare per me scrivendo qualche cosa sul Dante;
+ed egli colla usata sua facilita e rapidita scrisse la sua Profezia."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 335. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, August 1. 1819.
+
+ [Address your Answer to Venice, however.]
+
+ "Don't be alarmed. You will see me defend myself gaily--that is, if
+ I happen to be in spirits; and by spirits, I don't mean your
+ meaning of the word, but the spirit of a bull-dog when pinched, or
+ a bull when pinned; it is then that they make best sport; and as my
+ sensations under an attack are probably a happy compound of the
+ united energies of these amiable animals, you may perhaps see what
+ Marrall calls 'rare sport,' and some good tossing and goring, in
+ the course of the controversy. But I must be in the right cue
+ first, and I doubt I am almost too far off to be in a sufficient
+ fury for the purpose. And then I have effeminated and enervated
+ myself with love and the summer in these last two months.
+
+ "I wrote to Mr. Hobhouse, the other day, and foretold that Juan
+ would either fall entirely or succeed completely; there will be no
+ medium. Appearances are not favourable; but as you write the day
+ after publication, it can hardly be decided what opinion will
+ predominate. You seem in a fright, and doubtless with cause. Come
+ what may I never will flatter the million's canting in any shape.
+ Circumstances may or may not have placed me at times in a situation
+ to lead the public opinion, but the public opinion never led, nor
+ ever shall lead, me. I will not sit on a degraded throne; so pray
+ put Messrs. * * or * *, or Tom Moore, or * * * upon it; they will
+ all of them be transported with their coronation.
+
+ "P.S. The Countess Guiccioli is much better than she was. I sent
+ you, before leaving Venice, the real original sketch which gave
+ rise to the 'Vampire,' &c.--Did you get it?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+This letter was, of course (like most of those he addressed to England
+at this time), intended to be shown; and having been, among others,
+permitted to see it, I took occasion, in my very next communication to
+Lord Byron, to twit him a little with the passage in it relating to
+myself,--the only one, as far as I can learn, that ever fell from my
+noble friend's pen during our intimacy, in which he has spoken of me
+otherwise than in terms of kindness and the most undeserved praise.
+Transcribing his own words, as well as I could recollect them, at the
+top of my letter, I added, underneath, "Is _this_ the way you speak of
+your friends?" Not long after, too, when visiting him at Venice, I
+remember making the same harmless little sneer a subject of raillery
+with him; but he declared boldly that he had no recollection of having
+ever written such words, and that, if they existed, "he must have been
+half asleep when he wrote them."
+
+I have mentioned the circumstance merely for the purpose of remarking,
+that with a sensibility vulnerable at so many points as his was, and
+acted upon by an imagination so long practised in self-tormenting, it is
+only wonderful that, thinking constantly, as his letters prove him to
+have been, of distant friends, and receiving from few or none equal
+proofs of thoughtfulness in return, he should not more frequently have
+broken out into such sallies against the absent and "unreplying." For
+myself, I can only say that, from the moment I began to unravel his
+character, the most slighting and even acrimonious expressions that I
+could have heard he had, in a fit of spleen, uttered against me, would
+have no more altered my opinion of his disposition, nor disturbed my
+affection for him, than the momentary clouding over of a bright sky
+could leave an impression on the mind of gloom, after its shadow had
+passed away.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 336. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, August 9. 1819.
+
+ "Talking of blunders reminds me of Ireland--Ireland of Moore.
+ What is this I see in Galignani about
+ 'Bermuda--agent--deputy--appeal--attachment,' &c.? What is the
+ matter? Is it any thing in which his friends can be of use to him?
+ Pray inform me.
+
+ "Of Don Juan I hear nothing further from you; * * *, but the papers
+ don't seem so fierce as the letter you sent me seemed to
+ anticipate, by their extracts at least in Galignani's Messenger. I
+ never saw such a set of fellows as you are! And then the pains
+ taken to exculpate the modest publisher--he remonstrated, forsooth!
+ I will write a preface that _shall_ exculpate _you_ and * * *, &c.
+ completely, on that point; but, at the same time, I will cut you
+ up, like gourds. You have no more soul than the Count de Caylus,
+ (who assured his friends, on his death-bed, that he had none, and
+ that _he_ must know better than they whether he had one or no,) and
+ no more blood than a water-melon! And I see there hath been
+ asterisks, and what Perry used to called 'd_o_mned cutting and
+ slashing'--but, never mind.
+
+ "I write in haste. To-morrow I set off for Bologna. I write to you
+ with thunder, lightning, &c. and all the winds of heaven whistling
+ through my hair, and the racket of preparation to boot. 'My
+ mistress dear, who hath fed my heart upon smiles and wine' for the
+ last two months, set off with her husband for Bologna this morning,
+ and it seems that I follow him at three to-morrow morning. I
+ cannot tell how our romance will end, but it hath gone on hitherto
+ most erotically. Such perils and escapes! Juan's are as child's
+ play in comparison. The fools think that all my _poeshie_ is always
+ allusive to my _own_ adventures: I have had at one time or another
+ better and more extraordinary and perilous and pleasant than these,
+ every day of the week, if I might tell them; but that must never
+ be.
+
+ "I hope Mrs. M. has accouched.
+
+ "Yours ever."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 337. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Bologna, August 12. 1819.
+
+ "I do not know how far I may be able to reply to your letter, for I
+ am not very well to-day. Last night I went to the representation of
+ Alfieri's Mirra, the two last acts of which threw me into
+ convulsions. I do not mean by that word a lady's hysterics, but the
+ agony of reluctant tears, and the choking shudder, which I do not
+ often undergo for fiction. This is but the second time for any
+ thing under reality: the first was on seeing Kean's Sir Giles
+ Overreach. The worst was, that the 'Dama' in whose box I was, went
+ off in the same way, I really believe more from fright than any
+ other sympathy--at least with the players: but she has been ill,
+ and I have been ill, and we are all languid and pathetic this
+ morning, with great expenditure of sal volatile.[42] But, to return
+ to your letter of the 23d of July.
+
+ "You are right, Gifford is right, Crabbe is right, Hobhouse is
+ right--you are all right, and I am all wrong; but do, pray, let me
+ have that pleasure. Cut me up root and branch; quarter me in the
+ Quarterly; send round my 'disjecti membra poetae,' like those of
+ the Levite's concubine; make me, if you will, a spectacle to men
+ and angels; but don't ask me to alter, for I won't:--I am obstinate
+ and lazy--and there's the truth.
+
+ "But, nevertheless, I will answer your friend P * *, who objects to
+ the quick succession of fun and gravity, as if in that case the
+ gravity did not (in intention, at least) heighten the fun. His
+ metaphor is, that 'we are never scorched and drenched at the same
+ time.' Blessings on his experience! Ask him these questions about
+ 'scorching and drenching.' Did he never play at cricket, or walk a
+ mile in hot weather? Did he never spill a dish of tea over himself
+ in handing the cup to his charmer, to the great shame of his
+ nankeen breeches? Did he never swim in the sea at noonday with the
+ sun in his eyes and on his head, which all the foam of ocean could
+ not cool? Did he never draw his foot out of too hot water,
+ d----ning his eyes and his valet's? Did he never tumble into a
+ river or lake, fishing, and sit in his wet clothes in the boat, or
+ on the bank, afterwards 'scorched and drenched,' like a true
+ sportsman? 'Oh for breath to utter!'--but make him my compliments;
+ he is a clever fellow for all that--a very clever fellow.
+
+ "You ask me for the plan of Donny Johnny: I _have_ no plan; I _had_
+ no plan; but I had or have materials; though if, like Tony Lumpkin,
+ 'I am to be snubbed so when I am in spirits,' the poem will be
+ naught, and the poet turn serious again. If it don't take, I will
+ leave it off where it is, with all due respect to the public; but
+ if continued, it must be in my own way. You might as well make
+ Hamlet (or Diggory) 'act mad' in a strait waistcoat as trammel my
+ buffoonery, if I am to be a buffoon; their gestures and my thoughts
+ would only be pitiably absurd and ludicrously constrained. Why,
+ man, the soul of such writing is its licence; at least the
+ _liberty_ of that _licence_, if one likes--_not_ that one should
+ abuse it. It is like Trial by Jury and Peerage and the Habeas
+ Corpus--a very fine thing, but chiefly in the _reversion;_ because
+ no one wishes to be tried for the mere pleasure of proving his
+ possession of the privilege.
+
+ "But a truce with these reflections. You are too earnest and eager
+ about a work never intended to be serious. Do you suppose that I
+ could have any intention but to giggle and make giggle?--a playful
+ satire, with as little poetry as could be helped, was what I meant.
+ And as to the indecency, do, pray, read in Boswell what _Johnson_,
+ the sullen moralist, says of _Prior_ and Paulo Purgante.
+
+ "Will you get a favour done for me? _You_ can, by your government
+ friends, Croker, Canning, or my old schoolfellow Peel, and I can't.
+ Here it is. Will you ask them to appoint (_without salary or
+ emolument_) a noble Italian (whom I will name afterwards) consul or
+ vice-consul for Ravenna? He is a man of very large
+ property,--noble, too; but he wishes to have a British protection,
+ in case of changes. Ravenna is near the sea. He wants no
+ _emolument_ whatever. That his office might be useful, I know; as I
+ lately sent off from Ravenna to Trieste a poor devil of an English
+ sailor, who had remained there sick, sorry, and pennyless (having
+ been set ashore in 1814), from the want of any accredited agent
+ able or willing to help him homewards. Will you get this done? If
+ you do, I will then send his name and condition, subject, of
+ course, to rejection, if _not_ approved when known.
+
+ "I know that in the Levant you make consuls and vice-consuls,
+ perpetually, of foreigners. This man is a patrician, and has twelve
+ thousand a year. His motive is a British protection in case of new
+ invasions. Don't you think Croker would do it for us? To be sure,
+ my _interest_ is rare!! but, perhaps, a brother wit in the Tory
+ line might do a good turn at the request of so harmless and long
+ absent a Whig, particularly as there is no _salary_ or _burden_ of
+ any sort to be annexed to the office.
+
+ "I can assure you, I should look upon it as a great obligation;
+ but, alas! that very circumstance may, very probably, operate to
+ the contrary--indeed, it ought; but I have, at least, been an
+ honest and an open enemy. Amongst your many splendid government
+ connections, could not you, think you, get our Bibulus made a
+ Consul? or make me one, that I may make him my Vice. You may be
+ assured that, in case of accidents in Italy, he would be no feeble
+ adjunct--as you would think, if you knew his patrimony.
+
+ "What is all this about Tom Moore? but why do I ask? since the
+ state of my own affairs would not permit me to be of use to him,
+ though they are greatly improved since 1816, and may, with some
+ more luck and a little prudence, become quite clear. It seems his
+ claimants are _American_ merchants? _There goes Nemesis!_ Moore
+ abused America. It is always thus in the long run:--Time, the
+ Avenger. You have seen every trampler down, in turn, from
+ Buonaparte to the simplest individuals. You saw how some were
+ avenged even upon my insignificance, and how in turn * * * paid for
+ his atrocity. It is an odd world; but the watch has its mainspring,
+ after all.
+
+ "So the Prince has been repealing Lord Edward Fitzgerald's
+ forfeiture? _Ecco un' sonetto!_
+
+ "To be the father of the fatherless,
+ To stretch the hand from the throne's height, and raise
+ _His_ offspring, who expired in other days
+ To make thy sire's sway by a kingdom less,--
+ _This_ is to be a monarch, and repress
+ Envy into unutterable praise.
+ Dismiss thy guard, and trust thee to such traits,
+ For who would lift a hand, except to bless?
+ Were it not easy, sir, and is't not sweet
+ To make thyself beloved? and to be
+ Omnipotent by Mercy's means? for thus
+ Thy sovereignty would grow but more complete,
+ A despot thou, and yet thy people free,
+ And by the heart, not hand, enslaving us.
+
+ "There, you dogs! there's a sonnet for you: you won't have such as
+ that in a hurry from Mr. Fitzgerald. You may publish it with my
+ name, an' ye wool. He deserves all praise, bad and good; it was a
+ very noble piece of principality. Would you like an epigram--a
+ translation?
+
+ "If for silver, or for gold,
+ You could melt ten thousand pimples
+ Into half a dozen dimples,
+ Then your face we might behold,
+ Looking, doubtless, much more snugly,
+ Yet ev'n _then_ 'twould be d----d _ugly_.
+
+ "This was written on some Frenchwoman, by Rulhieres, I believe.
+ Yours."
+
+[Footnote 42: The "Dama," in whose company he witnessed this
+representation, thus describes its effect upon him:--"The play was that
+of Mirra; the actors, and particularly the actress who performed the
+part of Mirra, seconded with much success the intentions of our great
+dramatist. Lord Byron took a strong interest in the representation, and
+it was evident that he was deeply affected. At length there came a point
+of the performance at which he could no longer restrain his
+emotions;--he burst into a flood of tears, and, his sobs preventing him
+from remaining any longer in the box, he rose and left the theatre.--I
+saw him similarly affected another time during a representation of
+Alfieri's 'Philip,' at Ravenna."--"Gli attori, e specialmente l' attrice
+che rappresentava Mirra secondava assai bene la mente del nostro grande
+tragico. L.B. prece molto interesse alla rappresentazione, e si
+conosceva che era molto commosso. Venne un punto poi della tragedia in
+cui non pote piu frenare la sua emozione,--diede in un diretto pianto e
+i singhiozzi gl' impedirono di piu restare nel palco; onde si levo, e
+parti dal teatro. In uno stato simile lo viddi un altra volta a Ravenna
+ad una rappresentazione del Filippo d'Alfieri."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 338. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Bologna, August 23. 1819.
+
+ "I send you a letter to R * *ts, signed Wortley Clutterbuck, which
+ you may publish in what form you please, in answer to his article.
+ I have had many proofs of men's absurdity, but he beats all in
+ folly. Why, the wolf in sheep's clothing has tumbled into the very
+ trap! We'll strip him. The letter is written in great haste, and
+ amidst a thousand vexations. Your letter only came yesterday, so
+ that there is no time to polish: the post goes out to-morrow. The
+ date is 'Little Piddlington.' Let * * * * correct the press: he
+ knows and can read the handwriting. Continue to keep the
+ _anonymous_ about 'Juan;' it helps us to fight against overwhelming
+ numbers. I have a thousand distractions at present; so excuse
+ haste, and wonder I can act or write at all. Answer by post, as
+ usual.
+
+ "Yours.
+
+ "P.S. If I had had time, and been quieter and nearer, I would have
+ cut him to hash; but as it is, you can judge for yourselves."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The letter to the Reviewer, here mentioned, had its origin in rather an
+amusing circumstance. In the first Canto of Don Juan appeared the
+following passage:--
+
+ "For fear some prudish readers should grow skittish,
+ I've bribed My Grandmother's Review,--the British!
+
+ "I sent it in a letter to the editor,
+ Who thank'd me duly by return of post--
+ I'm for a handsome article his creditor;
+ Yet if my gentle Muse he please to roast,
+ And break a promise after having made it her,
+ Denying the receipt of what it cost,
+ And smear his page with gall instead of honey,
+ All I can say is--that he had the money."
+
+On the appearance of the poem, the learned editor of the Review in
+question allowed himself to be decoyed into the ineffable absurdity of
+taking the charge as serious, and, in his succeeding number, came forth
+with an indignant contradiction of it. To this tempting subject the
+letter, written so hastily off at Bologna, related; but, though printed
+for Mr. Murray, in a pamphlet consisting of twenty-three pages, it was
+never published by him.[43] Being valuable, however, as one of the best
+specimens we have of Lord Byron's simple and thoroughly English prose, I
+shall here preserve some extracts from it.
+
+[Footnote 43: It appeared afterwards in the Liberal.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"TO THE EDITOR OF THE BRITISH REVIEW.
+
+ "My dear R----ts,
+
+ "As a believer in the Church of England--to say nothing of the
+ State--I have been an occasional reader, and great admirer, though
+ not a subscriber, to your Review. But I do not know that any
+ article of its contents ever gave me much surprise till the
+ eleventh of your late twenty-seventh number made its appearance.
+ You have there most manfully refuted a calumnious accusation of
+ bribery and corruption, the credence of which in the public mind
+ might not only have damaged your reputation as a clergyman and an
+ editor, but, what would have been still worse, have injured the
+ circulation of your journal; which, I regret to hear, is not so
+ extensive as the 'purity (as you well observe) of its, &c. &c.' and
+ the present taste for propriety, would induce us to expect. The
+ charge itself is of a solemn nature; and, although in verse, is
+ couched in terms of such circumstantial gravity as to induce a
+ belief little short of that generally accorded to the thirty-nine
+ articles, to which you so generously subscribed on taking your
+ degrees. It is a charge the most revolting to the heart of man from
+ its frequent occurrence; to the mind of a statesman from its
+ occasional truth; and to the soul of an editor from its moral
+ impossibility. You are charged then in the last line of one octave
+ stanza, and the whole eight lines of the next, viz. 209th and 210th
+ of the first Canto of that 'pestilent poem,' Don Juan, with
+ receiving, and still more foolishly acknowledging, the receipt of
+ certain moneys to eulogise the unknown author, who by this account
+ must be known to you, if to nobody else. An impeachment of this
+ nature, so seriously made, there is but one way of refuting; and it
+ is my firm persuasion, that whether you did or did not (and _I_
+ believe that you did not) receive the said moneys, of which I wish
+ that he had specified the sum, you are quite right in denying all
+ knowledge of the transaction. If charges of this nefarious
+ description are to go forth, sanctioned by all the solemnity of
+ circumstance, and guaranteed by the veracity of verse (as
+ Counsellor Phillips would say), what is to become of readers
+ hitherto implicitly confident in the not less veracious prose of
+ our critical journals? what is to become of the reviews; and, if
+ the reviews fail, what is to become of the editors? It is common
+ cause, and you have done well to sound the alarm. I myself, in my
+ humble sphere, will be one of your echoes. In the words of the
+ tragedian Liston, 'I love a row,' and you seem justly determined to
+ make one.
+
+ "It is barely possible, certainly improbable, that the writer might
+ have been in jest; but this only aggravates his crime. A joke, the
+ proverb says, 'breaks no bones;' but it may break a bookseller, or
+ it may be the cause of bones being broken. The jest is but a bad
+ one at the best for the author, and might have been a still worse
+ one for you, if your copious contradiction did not certify to all
+ whom it may concern your own indignant innocence, and the
+ immaculate purity of the British Review. I do not doubt your word,
+ my dear R----ts, yet I cannot help wishing that, in a case of such
+ vital importance, it had assumed the more substantial shape of an
+ affidavit sworn before the Lord Mayor Atkins, who readily receives
+ any deposition; and doubtless would have brought it in some way as
+ evidence of the designs of the Reformers to set fire to London, at
+ the same time that he himself meditates the same good office
+ towards the river Thames.
+
+ "I recollect hearing, soon after the publication, this subject
+ discussed at the tea-table of Mr. * * * the poet,--and Mrs. and the
+ Misses * * * * * being in a corner of the room perusing the proof
+ sheets of Mr. * * *'s poems, the male part of the _conversazione_
+ were at liberty to make some observations on the poem and passage
+ in question, and there was a difference of opinion. Some thought
+ the allusion was to the 'British Critic;' others, that by the
+ expression 'My Grandmother's Review,' it was intimated that 'my
+ grandmother' was not the reader of the review, but actually the
+ writer; thereby insinuating, my dear Mr. R----ts, that you were an
+ old woman; because, as people often say, 'Jeffrey's Review,"
+ 'Gifford's Review,' in lieu of Edinburgh and Quarterly, so 'My
+ Grandmother's Review' and R----ts's might be also synonymous. Now,
+ whatever colour this insinuation might derive from the circumstance
+ of your wearing a gown, as well as from your time of life, your
+ general style, and various passages of your writings,--I will take
+ upon myself to exculpate you from all suspicion of the kind, and
+ assert, without calling Mrs. R----ts in testimony, that if ever you
+ should be chosen Pope, you will pass through all the previous
+ ceremonies with as much credit as any pontiff since the parturition
+ of Joan. It is very unfair to judge of sex from writings,
+ particularly from those of the British Review. We are all liable to
+ be deceived, and it is an indisputable fact that many of the best
+ articles in your journal, which were attributed to a veteran
+ female, were actually written by you yourself, and yet to this day
+ there are people who could never find out the difference. But let
+ us return to the more immediate question.
+
+ "I agree with you that it is impossible Lord B. should be the
+ author, not only because, as a British peer and a British poet, it
+ would be impracticable for him to have recourse to such facetious
+ fiction, but for some other reasons which you have omitted to
+ state. In the first place, his Lordship has no grandmother. Now the
+ author--and we may believe him in this--doth expressly state that
+ the 'British' is his 'Grandmother's Review;' and if, as I think I
+ have distinctly proved, this was not a mere figurative allusion to
+ your supposed intellectual age and sex, my dear friend, it follows,
+ whether you be she or no, that there is such an elderly lady still
+ extant.
+
+ "Shall I give you what I think a prudent opinion? I don't mean to
+ insinuate, God forbid! but if, by any accident, there should have
+ been such a correspondence between you and the unknown author,
+ whoever he may be, send him back his money; I dare say he will be
+ very glad to have it again; it can't be much, considering the value
+ of the article and the circulation of the journal; and you are too
+ modest to rate your praise beyond its real worth:--don't be angry,
+ I know you won't, at this appraisement of your powers of eulogy:
+ for on the other hand, my dear fellow, depend upon it your abuse is
+ worth, not its own weight, that's a feather, but _your_ weight in
+ gold. So don't spare it; if he has bargained for _that_, give it
+ handsomely, and depend upon your doing him a friendly office.
+
+ "What the motives of this writer may have been for (as you
+ magnificently translate his quizzing you) 'stating, with the
+ particularity which belongs to fact, the forgery of a groundless
+ fiction,' (do, pray, my dear R., talk a little less 'in King
+ Cambyses' vein,') I cannot pretend to say; perhaps to laugh at you,
+ but that is no reason for your benevolently making all the world
+ laugh also. I approve of your being angry, I tell you I am angry
+ too, but you should not have shown it so outrageously. Your solemn
+ '_if_ somebody personating the Editor of the, &c. &c. has received
+ from Lord B. or from any other person,' reminds me of Charley
+ Incledon's usual exordium when people came into the tavern to hear
+ him sing without paying their share of the reckoning--'if a maun,
+ or _ony_ maun, or _ony other_ maun,' &c. &c.; you have both the
+ same redundant eloquence. But why should you think any body would
+ personate you? Nobody would dream of such a prank who ever read
+ your compositions, and perhaps not many who have heard your
+ conversation. But I have been inoculated with a little of your
+ prolixity. The fact is, my dear R----ts, that somebody has tried to
+ make a fool of you, and what he did not succeed in doing, you have
+ done for him and for yourself."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Towards the latter end of August, Count Guiccioli, accompanied by his
+lady, went for a short time to visit some of his Romagnese estates,
+while Lord Byron remained at Bologna alone. And here, with a heart
+softened and excited by the new feeling that had taken possession of
+him, he appears to have given himself up, during this interval of
+solitude, to a train of melancholy and impassioned thought, such as, for
+a time, brought back all the romance of his youthful days. That spring
+of natural tenderness within his soul, which neither the world's efforts
+nor his own had been able to chill or choke up, was now, with something
+of its first freshness, set flowing once more. He again knew what it was
+to love and be loved,--too late, it is true, for happiness, and too
+wrongly for peace, but with devotion enough, on the part of the woman,
+to satisfy even his thirst for affection, and with a sad earnestness, on
+his own, a foreboding fidelity, which made him cling but the more
+passionately to this attachment from feeling that it would be his last.
+
+A circumstance which he himself used to mention as having occurred at
+this period will show how over-powering, at times, was the rush of
+melancholy over his heart. It was his fancy, during Madame Guiccioli's
+absence from Bologna, to go daily to her house at his usual hour of
+visiting her, and there, causing her apartments to be opened, to sit
+turning over her books, and writing in them.[44] He would then descend
+into her garden, where he passed hours in musing; and it was on an
+occasion of this kind, as he stood looking, in a state of unconscious
+reverie, into one of those fountains so common in the gardens of Italy,
+that there came suddenly into his mind such desolate fancies, such
+bodings of the misery he might bring on her he loved, by that doom which
+(as he has himself written) "makes it fatal to be loved[45]," that,
+overwhelmed with his own thoughts, he burst into an agony of tears.
+
+During the same few days it was that he wrote in the last page of Madame
+Guiccioli's copy of "Corinne" the following remarkable note:--
+
+ "My dearest Teresa,--I have read this book in your garden;--my
+ love, you were absent, or else I could not have read it. It is a
+ favourite book of yours, and the writer was a friend of mine. You
+ will not understand these English words, and _others_ will not
+ understand them--which is the reason I have not scrawled them in
+ Italian. But you will recognise the hand-writing of him who
+ passionately loved you, and you will divine that, over a book which
+ was yours, he could only think of love. In that word, beautiful in
+ all languages, but most so in yours--_Amor mio_--is comprised my
+ existence here and hereafter. I feel I exist here, and I fear that
+ I shall exist hereafter,--to _what_ purpose you will decide; my
+ destiny rests with you, and you are a woman, seventeen years of
+ age, and two out of a convent. I wish that you had stayed there,
+ with all my heart,--or, at least, that I had never met you in your
+ married state.
+
+ "But all this is too late. I love you, and you love me,--at least,
+ you _say so_, and _act_ as if you _did_ so, which last is a great
+ consolation in all events. But _I_ more than love you, and cannot
+ cease to love you.
+
+ "Think of me, sometimes, when the Alps and the ocean divide
+ us,--but they never will, unless you _wish_ it. BYRON.
+
+ "Bologna, August 25. 1819."
+
+[Footnote 44: One of these notes, written at the end of the 5th chapter,
+18th book of Corinne ("Fragmens des Pensees de Corinne") is as
+follows:--
+
+ "I knew Madame de Stael well,--better than she knew Italy,--but I
+ little thought that, one day, I should _think with her thoughts_,
+ in the country where she has laid the scene of her most attractive
+ productions. She is sometimes right, and often wrong, about Italy
+ and England; but almost always true in delineating the heart, which
+ is of but one nation, and of no country,--or, rather, of all.
+
+ "BYRON.
+
+ "Bologna, August 23. 1819."
+]
+
+[Footnote 45:
+
+ "Oh Love! what is it, in this world of ours,
+ Which makes it fatal to be loved? ah! why
+ With cypress branches hast thou wreath'd thy bowers,
+ And made thy best interpreter a sigh?
+ As those who dote on odours pluck the flowers,
+ And place them on their breasts--but place to die.--
+ Thus the frail beings we would fondly cherish
+ Are laid within our bosoms but to perish."
+]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 339. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Bologna, August 24. 1819.
+
+ "I wrote to you by last post, enclosing a buffooning letter for
+ publication, addressed to the buffoon R----ts, who has thought
+ proper to tie a canister to his own tail. It was written off-hand,
+ and in the midst of circumstances not very favourable to
+ facetiousness, so that there may, perhaps, be more bitterness than
+ enough for that sort of small acid punch:--you will tell me.
+
+ "Keep the anonymous, in any case: it helps what fun there may be.
+ But if the matter grow serious about _Don Juan_, and you feel
+ _yourself_ in a scrape, or _me_ either, _own that I am the author._
+ _I_ will never _shrink_; and if _you_ do, I can always answer you
+ in the question of Guatimozin to his minister--each being on his
+ own coals.[46]
+
+ "I wish that I had been in better spirits; but I am out of sorts,
+ out of nerves, and now and then (I begin to fear) out of my senses.
+ All this Italy has done for me, and not England: I defy all you,
+ and your climate to boot, to make me mad. But if ever I do really
+ become a bedlamite, and wear a strait waistcoat, let me be brought
+ back among you; your people will then be proper company.
+
+ "I assure you what I here say and feel has nothing to do with
+ England, either in a literary or personal point of view. All my
+ present pleasures or plagues are as Italian as the opera. And after
+ all, they are but trifles; for all this arises from my 'Dama's'
+ being in the country for three days (at Capo-fiume). But as I could
+ never live but for one human being at a time, (and, I assure you,
+ _that one_ has never been _myself_, as you may know by the
+ consequences, for the _selfish_ are _successful_ in life,) I feel
+ alone and unhappy.
+
+ "I have sent for my daughter from Venice, and I ride daily, and
+ walk in a garden, under a purple canopy of grapes, and sit by a
+ fountain, and talk with the gardener of his tools, which seem
+ greater than Adam's, and with his wife, and with his son's wife,
+ who is the youngest of the party, and, I think, talks best of the
+ three. Then I revisit the Campo Santo, and my old friend, the
+ sexton, has two--but _one_ the prettiest daughter imaginable; and I
+ amuse myself with contrasting her beautiful and innocent face of
+ fifteen with the skulls with which he has peopled several cells,
+ and particularly with that of one skull dated 1766, which was once
+ covered (the tradition goes) by the most lovely features of
+ Bologna--noble and rich. When I look at these, and at this
+ girl--when I think of what _they were_, and what she must be--why,
+ then, my dear Murray, I won't shock you by saying what I think. It
+ is little matter what becomes of us 'bearded men,' but I don't like
+ the notion of a beautiful woman's lasting less than a beautiful
+ tree--than her own picture--her own shadow, which won't change so
+ to the sun as her face to the mirror. I must leave off, for my head
+ aches consumedly. I have never been quite well since the night of
+ the representation of Alfieri's Mirra, a fortnight ago. Yours
+ ever."
+
+[Footnote 46:
+
+ "Am I now reposing on a bed of flowers?"
+
+See ROBERTSON.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 340. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Bologna, August 29. 1819.
+
+ "I have been in a rage these two days, and am still bilious
+ therefrom. You shall hear. A captain of dragoons, * *, Hanoverian
+ by birth, in the Papal troops at present, whom I had obliged by a
+ loan when nobody would lend him a paul, recommended a horse to me,
+ on sale by a Lieutenant * *, an officer who unites the sale of
+ cattle to the purchase of men. I bought it. The next day, on
+ shoeing the horse, we discovered the _thrush_,--the animal being
+ warranted sound. I sent to reclaim the contract and the money. The
+ lieutenant desired to speak with me in person. I consented. He
+ came. It was his own particular request. He began a story. I asked
+ him if he would return the money. He said no--but he would
+ exchange. He asked an exorbitant price for his other horses. I told
+ him that he was a thief. He said he was an _officer_ and a man of
+ honour, and pulled out a Parmesan passport signed by General Count
+ Neifperg. I answered, that as he was an officer, I would treat him
+ as such; and that as to his being a gentleman, he might prove it by
+ returning the money: as for his Parmesan passport, I should have
+ valued it more if it had been a Parmesan cheese. He answered in
+ high terms, and said that if it were the _morning_ (it was about
+ eight o'clock in the evening) he would have _satisfaction_. I then
+ lost my temper: 'As for THAT,' I replied, 'you shall have it
+ directly,--it will be _mutual_ satisfaction, I can assure you. You
+ are a thief, and, as you say, an officer; my pistols are in the
+ next room loaded; take one of the candles, examine, and make your
+ choice of weapons.' He replied, that _pistols_ were _English
+ weapons_; _he_ always fought with the _sword_. I told him that I
+ was able to accommodate him, having three regimental swords in a
+ drawer near us: and he might take the longest and put himself on
+ guard.
+
+ "All this passed in presence of a third person. He then said _No_;
+ but to-morrow morning he would give me the meeting at any time or
+ place. I answered that it was not usual to appoint meetings in the
+ presence of witnesses, and that we had best speak man to man, and
+ appoint time and instruments. But as the man present was leaving
+ the room, the Lieutenant * *, before he could shut the door after
+ him, ran out roaring 'Help and murder' most lustily, and fell into
+ a sort of hysteric in the arms of about fifty people, who all saw
+ that I had no weapon of any sort or kind about me, and followed
+ him, asking him what the devil was the matter with him. Nothing
+ would do: he ran away without his hat, and went to bed, ill of the
+ fright. He then tried his complaint at the police, which dismissed
+ it as frivolous. He is, I believe, gone away, or going.
+
+ "The horse was warranted, but, I believe, so worded that the
+ villain will not be obliged to refund, according to law. He
+ endeavoured to raise up an indictment of assault and battery, but
+ as it was in a public inn, in a frequented street, there were too
+ many witnesses to the contrary; and, as a military man, he has not
+ cut a martial figure, even in the opinion of the priests. He ran
+ off in such a hurry that he left his hat, and never missed it till
+ he got to his hostel or inn. The facts are as I tell you, I can
+ assure you. He began by 'coming Captain Grand over me,' or I should
+ never have thought of trying his 'cunning in fence.' But what could
+ I do? He talked of 'honour, and satisfaction, and his commission;'
+ he produced a military passport; there are severe punishments for
+ _regular duels_ on the Continent, and trifling ones for
+ _rencontres_, so that it is best to fight it out directly; he had
+ robbed, and then wanted to insult me;--what could I do? My
+ patience was gone, and the weapons at hand, fair and equal.
+ Besides, it was just after dinner, when my digestion was bad, and I
+ don't like to be disturbed. His friend * * is at Forli; we shall
+ meet on my way back to Ravenna. The Hanoverian seems the greater
+ rogue of the two; and if my valour does not ooze away like
+ Acres's--'Odds flints and triggers!' if it should be a rainy
+ morning, and my stomach in disorder, there may be something for the
+ obituary.
+
+ "Now pray, 'Sir Lucius, do not you look upon me as a very ill-used
+ gentleman?' I send my Lieutenant to match Mr. Hobhouse's Major
+ Cartwright: and so 'good morrow to you, good master Lieutenant.'
+ With regard to other things I will write soon, but I have been
+ quarrelling and fooling till I can scribble no more."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the month of September, Count Guiccioli, being called away by
+business to Ravenna, left his young Countess and her lover to the free
+enjoyment of each other's society at Bologna. The lady's ill health,
+which had been the cause of her thus remaining behind, was thought, soon
+after, to require the still further advantage of a removal to Venice;
+and the Count her husband, being written to on the subject, consented,
+with the most complaisant readiness, that she should proceed thither in
+company with Lord Byron. "Some business" (says the lady's own Memoir)
+"having called Count Guiccioli to Ravenna, I was obliged, by the state
+of my health, instead of accompanying him, to return to Venice, and he
+consented that Lord Byron should be the companion of my journey. We left
+Bologna on the fifteenth of September: we visited the Euganean Hills
+and Arqua, and wrote our names in the book which is presented to those
+who make this pilgrimage. But I cannot linger over these recollections
+of happiness;--the contrast with the present is too dreadful. If a
+blessed spirit, while in the full enjoyment of heavenly happiness, were
+sent down to this earth to suffer all its miseries, the contrast could
+not be more dreadful between the past and the present, than what I have
+endured from the moment when that terrible word reached my ears, and I
+for ever lost the hope of again beholding him, one look from whom I
+valued beyond earth's all happiness. When I arrived at Venice, the
+physicians ordered that I should try the country air, and Lord Byron,
+having a villa at La Mira, gave it up to me, and came to reside there
+with me. At this place we passed the autumn, and there I had the
+pleasure of forming your acquaintance."[47]
+
+It was my good fortune, at this period, in the course of a short and
+hasty tour through the north of Italy, to pass five or six days with
+Lord Byron at Venice. I had written to him on my way thither to announce
+my coming, and to say how happy it would make me could I tempt him to
+accompany me as far as Rome.
+
+During my stay at Geneva, an opportunity had been afforded me of
+observing the exceeding readiness with which even persons the least
+disposed to be prejudiced gave an ear to any story relating to Lord
+Byron, in which the proper portions of odium and romance were but
+plausibly mingled. In the course of conversation, one day, with the late
+amiable and enlightened Monsieur D * *, that gentleman related, with
+much feeling, to my fellow-traveller and myself, the details of a late
+act of seduction of which Lord Byron had, he said, been guilty, and
+which was made to comprise within itself all the worst features of such
+unmanly frauds upon innocence;--the victim, a young unmarried lady, of
+one of the first families of Venice, whom the noble seducer had lured
+from her father's house to his own, and, after a few weeks, most
+inhumanly turned her out of doors. In vain, said the relator, did she
+entreat to become his servant, his slave;--in vain did she ask to
+remain in some dark corner of his mansion, from which she might be able
+to catch a glimpse of his form as he passed. Her betrayer was obdurate,
+and the unfortunate young lady, in despair at being thus abandoned by
+him, threw herself into the canal, from which she was taken out but to
+be consigned to a mad-house. Though convinced that there must be
+considerable exaggeration in this story, it was only on my arrival at
+Venice I ascertained that the whole was a romance; and that out of the
+circumstances (already laid before the reader) connected with Lord
+Byron's fantastic and, it must be owned, discreditable fancy for the
+Fornarina, this pathetic tale, so implicitly believed at Geneva, was
+fabricated.
+
+Having parted at Milan, with Lord John Russell, whom I had accompanied
+from England, and whom I was to rejoin, after a short visit to Rome, at
+Genoa, I made purchase of a small and (as it soon proved) crazy
+travelling carriage, and proceeded alone on my way to Venice. My time
+being limited, I stopped no longer at the intervening places than was
+sufficient to hurry over their respective wonders, and, leaving Padua at
+noon on the 8th of October, I found myself, about two o'clock, at the
+door of my friend's villa, at La Mira. He was but just up, and in his
+bath; but the servant having announced my arrival, he returned a message
+that, if I would wait till he was dressed, he would accompany me to
+Venice. The interval I employed in conversing with my old acquaintance,
+Fletcher, and in viewing, under his guidance, some of the apartments of
+the villa.
+
+It was not long before Lord Byron himself made his appearance; and the
+delight I felt in meeting him once more, after a separation of so many
+years, was not a little heightened by observing that his pleasure was,
+to the full, as great, while it was rendered doubly touching by the
+evident rarity of such meetings to him of late, and the frank outbreak
+of cordiality and gaiety with which he gave way to his feelings. It
+would be impossible, indeed, to convey to those who have not, at some
+time or other, felt the charm of his manner, any idea of what it could
+be when under the influence of such pleasurable excitement as it was
+most flatteringly evident he experienced at this moment.
+
+I was a good deal struck, however, by the alteration that had taken
+place in his personal appearance. He had grown fatter both in person and
+face, and the latter had most suffered by the change,--having lost, by
+the enlargement of the features, some of that refined and spiritualised
+look that had, in other times, distinguished it. The addition of
+whiskers, too, which he had not long before been induced to adopt, from
+hearing that some one had said he had a "faccia di musico," as well as
+the length to which his hair grew down on his neck, and the rather
+foreign air of his coat and cap,--all combined to produce that
+dissimilarity to his former self I had observed in him. He was still,
+however, eminently handsome: and, in exchange for whatever his features
+might have lost of their high, romantic character, they had become more
+fitted for the expression of that arch, waggish wisdom, that Epicurean
+play of humour, which he had shown to be equally inherent in his
+various and prodigally gifted nature; while, by the somewhat increased
+roundness of the contours, the resemblance of his finely formed mouth
+and chin to those of the Belvedere Apollo had become still more
+striking.
+
+His breakfast, which I found he rarely took before three or four o'clock
+in the afternoon, was speedily despatched,--his habit being to eat it
+standing, and the meal in general consisting of one or two raw eggs, a
+cup of tea without either milk or sugar, and a bit of dry biscuit.
+Before we took our departure, he presented me to the Countess Guiccioli,
+who was at this time, as my readers already know, living under the same
+roof with him at La Mira; and who, with a style of beauty singular in an
+Italian, as being fair-complexioned and delicate, left an impression
+upon my mind, during this our first short interview, of intelligence and
+amiableness such as all that I have since known or heard of her has but
+served to confirm.
+
+We now started together, Lord Byron and myself, in my little Milanese
+vehicle, for Fusina,--his portly gondolier Tita, in a rich livery and
+most redundant mustachios, having seated himself on the front of the
+carriage, to the no small trial of its strength, which had already once
+given way, even under my own weight, between Verona and Vicenza. On our
+arrival at Fusina, my noble friend, from his familiarity with all the
+details of the place, had it in his power to save me both trouble and
+expense in the different arrangements relative to the custom-house,
+remise, &c.; and the good-natured assiduity with which he bustled about
+in despatching these matters, gave me an opportunity of observing, in
+his use of the infirm limb, a much greater degree of activity than I had
+ever before, except in sparring, witnessed.
+
+As we proceeded across the Lagoon in his gondola, the sun was just
+setting, and it was an evening such as Romance would have chosen for a
+first sight of Venice, rising "with her tiara of bright towers" above
+the wave; while, to complete, as might be imagined, the solemn interest
+of the scene, I beheld it in company with him who had lately given a new
+life to its glories, and sung of that fair City of the Sea thus
+grandly:--
+
+ "I stood in Venice on the Bridge of Sighs;
+ A palace and a prison on each hand:
+ I saw from out the wave her structures rise
+ As from the stroke of the enchanter's wand:
+ A thousand years their cloudy wings expand
+ Around me, and a dying glory smiles
+ O'er the far times, when many a subject land
+ Look'd to the winged lion's marble piles,
+ Where Venice sat in state, throned in her hundred isles."
+
+But, whatever emotions the first sight of such a scene might, under
+other circumstances, have inspired me with, the mood of mind in which I
+now viewed it was altogether the very reverse of what might have been
+expected. The exuberant gaiety of my companion, and the
+recollections,--any thing but romantic,--into which our conversation
+wandered, put at once completely to flight all poetical and historical
+associations; and our course was, I am almost ashamed to say, one of
+uninterrupted merriment and laughter till we found ourselves at the
+steps of my friend's palazzo on the Grand Canal. All that had ever
+happened, of gay or ridiculous, during our London life together,--his
+scrapes and my lecturings,--our joint adventures with the Bores and
+Blues, the two great enemies, as he always called them, of London
+happiness,--our joyous nights together at Watier's, Kinnaird's, &c. and
+"that d----d supper of Rancliffe's which _ought_ to have been a
+dinner,"--all was passed rapidly in review between us, and with a flow
+of humour and hilarity, on his side, of which it would have been
+difficult, even for persons far graver than I can pretend to be, not to
+have caught the contagion.
+
+He had all along expressed his determination that I should not go to any
+hotel, but fix my quarters at his house during the period of my stay;
+and, had he been residing there himself, such an arrangement would have
+been all that I most desired. But, this not being the case, a common
+hotel was, I thought, a far readier resource; and I therefore entreated
+that he would allow me to order an apartment at the Gran Bretagna, which
+had the reputation, I understood, of being a comfortable hotel. This,
+however, he would not hear of; and, as an inducement for me to agree to
+his plan, said that, as long as I chose to stay, though he should be
+obliged to return to La Mira in the evenings, he would make it a point
+to come to Venice every day and dine with me. As we now turned into the
+dismal canal, and stopped before his damp-looking mansion, my
+predilection for the Gran Bretagna returned in full force; and I again
+ventured to hint that it would save an abundance of trouble to let me
+proceed thither. But "No--no," he answered,--"I see you think you'll be
+very uncomfortable here; but you'll find that it is not quite so bad as
+you expect."
+
+As I groped my way after him through the dark hall, he cried out, "Keep
+clear of the dog;" and before we had proceeded many paces farther, "Take
+care, or that monkey will fly at you;"--a curious proof, among many
+others, of his fidelity to all the tastes of his youth, as it agrees
+perfectly with the description of his life at Newstead, in 1809, and of
+the sort of menagerie which his visiters had then to encounter in their
+progress through his hall. Having escaped these dangers, I followed him
+up the staircase to the apartment destined for me. All this time he had
+been despatching servants in various directions,--one, to procure me a
+_laquais de place_; another to go in quest of Mr. Alexander Scott, to
+whom he wished to give me in charge; while a third was sent to order his
+Segretario to come to him. "So, then, you keep a Secretary?" I said.
+"Yes," he answered, "a fellow who _can't write_[48]--but such are the
+names these pompous people give to things."
+
+When we had reached the door of the apartment it was discovered to be
+locked, and, to all appearance, had been so for some time, as the key
+could not be found;--a circumstance which, to my English apprehension,
+naturally connected itself with notions of damp and desolation, and I
+again sighed inwardly for the Gran Bretagna. Impatient at the delay of
+the key, my noble host, with one of his humorous maledictions, gave a
+vigorous kick to the door and burst it open; on which we at once entered
+into an apartment not only spacious and elegant, but wearing an aspect
+of comfort and habitableness which to a traveller's eye is as welcome as
+it is rare. "Here," he said, in a voice whose every tone spoke kindness
+and hospitality,--"these are the rooms I use myself, and here I mean to
+establish you."
+
+He had ordered dinner from some Tratteria, and while waiting its
+arrival--as well as that of Mr. Alexander Scott, whom he had invited to
+join us--we stood out on the balcony, in order that, before the daylight
+was quite gone, I might have some glimpses of the scene which the Canal
+presented. Happening to remark, in looking up at the clouds, which were
+still bright in the west, that "what had struck me in Italian sunsets
+was that peculiar rosy hue--" I had hardly pronounced the word "rosy,"
+when Lord Byron, clapping his hand on my mouth, said, with a laugh,
+"Come, d----n it, Tom, don't be poetical." Among the few gondolas
+passing at the time, there was one at some distance, in which sat two
+gentlemen, who had the appearance of being English; and, observing them
+to look our way, Lord Byron putting his arms a-kimbo, said with a sort
+of comic swagger, "Ah! if you, John Bulls, knew who the two fellows
+are, now standing up here, I think you _would_ stare!"--I risk
+mentioning these things, though aware how they may be turned against
+myself, for the sake of the otherwise indescribable traits of manner and
+character which they convey. After a very agreeable dinner, through
+which the jest, the story, and the laugh were almost uninterruptedly
+carried on, our noble host took leave of us to return to La Mira, while
+Mr. Scott and I went to one of the theatres, to see the Ottavia of
+Alfieri.
+
+The ensuing evenings, during my stay, were passed much in the same
+manner,--my mornings being devoted, under the kind superintendence of
+Mr. Scott, to a hasty, and, I fear, unprofitable view of the treasures
+of art with which Venice abounds. On the subjects of painting and
+sculpture Lord Byron has, in several of his letters, expressed strongly
+and, as to most persons will appear, heretically his opinions. In his
+want, however, of a due appreciation of these arts, he but resembled
+some of his great precursors in the field of poetry;--both Tasso and
+Milton, for example, having evinced so little tendency to such
+tastes[49], that, throughout the whole of their pages, there is not, I
+fear, one single allusion to any of those great masters of the pencil
+and chisel, whose works, nevertheless, both had seen. That Lord Byron,
+though despising the imposture and jargon with which the worship of the
+Arts is, like other worships, clogged and mystified, felt deeply, more
+especially in sculpture, whatever imaged forth true grace and energy,
+appears from passages of his poetry, which are in every body's memory,
+and not a line of which but thrills alive with a sense of grandeur and
+beauty such as it never entered into the capacity of a mere connoisseur
+even to conceive.
+
+In reference to this subject, as we were conversing one day after dinner
+about the various collections I had visited that morning, on my saying
+that fearful as I was, at all times, of praising any picture, lest I
+should draw upon myself the connoisseur's sneer for my pains, I would
+yet, to _him_, venture to own that I had seen a picture at Milan
+which--"The Hagar!" he exclaimed, eagerly interrupting me; and it was in
+fact this very picture I was about to mention as having wakened in me,
+by the truth of its expression, more real emotion than any I had yet
+seen among the chefs-d'oeuvre of Venice. It was with no small degree of
+pride and pleasure I now discovered that my noble friend had felt
+equally with myself the affecting mixture of sorrow and reproach with
+which the woman's eyes tell the whole story in that picture.
+
+On the second evening of my stay, Lord Byron having, as before, left us
+for La Mira, I most willingly accepted the offer of Mr. Scott to
+introduce me to the conversazioni of the two celebrated ladies, with
+whose names, as leaders of Venetian fashion, the tourists to Italy have
+made every body acquainted. To the Countess A * *'s parties Lord Byron
+had chiefly confined himself during the first winter he passed at
+Venice; but the tone of conversation at these small meetings being much
+too learned for his tastes, he was induced, the following year, to
+discontinue his attendance at them, and chose, in preference, the less
+erudite, but more easy, society of the Countess B * *. Of the sort of
+learning sometimes displayed by the "blue" visitants at Madame A * *'s,
+a circumstance mentioned by the noble poet himself may afford some idea.
+The conversation happening to turn, one evening, upon the statue of
+Washington, by Canova, which had been just shipped off for the United
+States, Madame A * *, who was then engaged in compiling a Description
+Raisonnee of Canova's works, and was anxious for information respecting
+the subject of this statue, requested that some of her learned guests
+would detail to her all they knew of him. This task a Signor * * (author
+of a book on Geography and Statistics) undertook to perform, and, after
+some other equally sage and authentic details, concluded by informing
+her that "Washington was killed in a duel by Burke."--"What," exclaimed
+Lord Byron, as he stood biting his lips with impatience during this
+conversation, "what, in the name of folly, are you all thinking
+of?"--for he now recollected the famous duel between Hamilton and
+Colonel Burr, whom, it was evident, this learned worthy had confounded
+with Washington and Burke!
+
+In addition to the motives easily conceivable for exchanging such a
+society for one that offered, at least, repose from such erudite
+efforts, there was also another cause more immediately leading to the
+discontinuance of his visits to Madame A * *. This lady, who has been
+sometimes honoured with the title of "The De Stael of Italy," had
+written a book called "Portraits," containing sketches of the characters
+of various persons of note; and it being her intention to introduce Lord
+Byron into this assemblage, she had it intimated to his Lordship that an
+article in which his portraiture had been attempted was to appear in a
+new edition she was about to publish of her work. It was expected, of
+course, that this intimation would awaken in him some desire to see the
+sketch; but, on the contrary, he was provoking enough not to manifest
+the least symptoms of curiosity. Again and again was the same hint, with
+as little success, conveyed; till, at length, on finding that no
+impression could be produced in this manner, a direct offer was made, in
+Madame A * *'s own name, to submit the article to his perusal. He could
+now contain himself no longer. With more sincerity than politeness, he
+returned for answer to the lady, that he was by no means ambitious of
+appearing in her work; that, from the shortness, as well as the distant
+nature of their acquaintance, it was impossible she could have qualified
+herself to be his portrait-painter, and that, in short, she could not
+oblige him more than by committing the article to the flames.
+
+Whether the tribute thus unceremoniously treated ever met the eyes of
+Lord Byron, I know not; but he could hardly, I think, had he seen it,
+have escaped a slight touch of remorse at having thus spurned from him a
+portrait drawn in no unfriendly spirit, and, though affectedly
+expressed, seizing some of the less obvious features of his
+character,--as, for instance, that diffidence so little to be expected
+from a career like his, with the discriminating niceness of a female
+hand. The following are extracts from this Portrait:--
+
+
+ "'Toi, dont le monde encore ignore le vrai nom,
+ Esprit mysterieux, Mortel, Ange, ou Demon,
+ Qui que tu sois, Byron, bon ou fatal genie,
+ J'aime de tes conceits la sauvage harmonie.'
+ LAMARTINE.
+
+"It would be to little purpose to dwell upon the mere beauty of a
+countenance in which the expression of an extraordinary mind was so
+conspicuous. What serenity was seated on the forehead, adorned with the
+finest chestnut hair, light, curling, and disposed with such art, that
+the art was hidden in the imitation of most pleasing nature! What
+varied expression in his eyes! They were of the azure colour of the
+heavens, from which they seemed to derive their origin. His teeth, in
+form, in colour, in transparency, resembled pearls; but his cheeks were
+too delicately tinged with the hue of the pale rose. His neck, which he
+was in the habit of keeping uncovered as much as the usages of society
+permitted, seemed to have been formed in a mould, and was very white.
+His hands were as beautiful as if they had been the works of art. His
+figure left nothing to be desired, particularly by those who found
+rather a grace than a defect in a certain light and gentle undulation of
+the person when he entered a room, and of which you hardly felt tempted
+to enquire the cause. Indeed it was scarcely perceptible,--the clothes
+he wore were so long.
+
+"He was never seen to walk through the streets of Venice, nor along the
+pleasant banks of the Brenta, where he spent some weeks of the summer;
+and there are some who assert that he has never seen, excepting from a
+window, the wonders of the 'Piazza di San Marco;'--so powerful in him
+was the desire of not showing himself to be deformed in any part of his
+person. I, however, believe that he has often gazed on those wonders,
+but in the late and solitary hour, when the stupendous edifices which
+surrounded him, illuminated by the soft and placid light of the moon,
+appeared a thousand times more lovely.
+
+"His face appeared tranquil like the ocean on a fine spring morning;
+but, like it, in an instant became changed into the tempestuous and
+terrible, if a passion, (a passion did I say?) a thought, a word,
+occurred to disturb his mind. His eyes then lost all their sweetness,
+and sparkled so that it became difficult to look on them. So rapid a
+change would not have been thought possible; but it was impossible to
+avoid acknowledging that the natural state of his mind was the
+tempestuous.
+
+"What delighted him greatly one day annoyed him the next; and whenever
+he appeared constant in the practice of any habits, it arose merely from
+the indifference, not to say contempt, in which he held them all:
+whatever they might be, they were not worthy that he should occupy his
+thoughts with them. His heart was highly sensitive, and suffered itself
+to be governed in an extraordinary degree by sympathy; but his
+imagination carried him away, and spoiled every thing. He believed in
+presages, and delighted in the recollection that he held this belief in
+common with Napoleon. It appeared that, in proportion as his
+intellectual education was cultivated, his moral education was
+neglected, and that he never suffered himself to know or observe other
+restraints than those imposed by his inclinations. Nevertheless, who
+could believe that he had a constant, and almost infantine timidity, of
+which the evidences were so apparent as to render its existence
+indisputable, notwithstanding the difficulty experienced in associating
+with Lord Byron a sentiment which had the appearance of modesty?
+Conscious as he was that, wherever he presented himself, all eyes were
+fixed on him, and all lips, particularly those of the women, were opened
+to say, 'There he is, that is Lord Byron,'--he necessarily found
+himself in the situation of an actor obliged to sustain a character, and
+to render an account, not to others (for about them he gave himself no
+concern), but to himself, of his every action and word. This occasioned
+him a feeling of uneasiness which was obvious to every one.
+
+"He remarked on a certain subject (which in 1814 was the topic of
+universal discourse) that 'the world was worth neither the trouble taken
+in its conquest, nor the regret felt at its loss,' which saying (if the
+worth of an expression could ever equal that of many and great actions)
+would almost show the thoughts and feelings of Lord Byron to be more
+stupendous and unmeasured than those of him respecting whom he spoke.
+
+"His gymnastic exercises were sometimes violent, and at others almost
+nothing. His body, like his spirit, readily accommodated itself to all
+his inclinations. During an entire winter, he went out every morning
+alone to row himself to the island of Armenians, (a small island
+situated in the midst of a tranquil lake, and distant from Venice about
+half a league,) to enjoy the society of those learned and hospitable
+monks, and to learn their difficult language; and, in the evening,
+entering again into his gondola, he went, but only for a couple of
+hours, into company. A second winter, whenever the water of the lake was
+violently agitated, he was observed to cross it, and landing on the
+nearest _terra firma_, to fatigue at least two horses with riding.
+
+"No one ever heard him utter a word of French, although he was
+perfectly conversant with that language. He hated the nation and its
+modern literature; in like manner, he held the modern Italian literature
+in contempt, and said it possessed but one living author,--a restriction
+which I know not whether to term ridiculous, or false and injurious. His
+voice was sufficiently sweet and flexible. He spoke with much suavity,
+if not contradicted, but rather addressed himself to his neighbour than
+to the entire company.
+
+"Very little food sufficed him; and he preferred fish to flesh for this
+extraordinary reason, that the latter, he said, rendered him ferocious.
+He disliked seeing women eat; and the cause of this extraordinary
+antipathy must be sought in the dread he always had, that the notion he
+loved to cherish of their perfection and almost divine nature might be
+disturbed. Having always been governed by them, it would seem that his
+very self-love was pleased to take refuge in the idea of their
+excellence,--a sentiment which he knew how (God knows how) to reconcile
+with the contempt in which, shortly afterwards, almost with the
+appearance of satisfaction, he seemed to hold them. But contradictions
+ought not to surprise us in characters like Lord Byron's; and then, who
+does not know that the slave holds in detestation his ruler?
+
+"Lord Byron disliked his countrymen, but only because he knew that his
+morals were held in contempt by them. The English, themselves rigid
+observers of family duties, could not pardon him the neglect of his, nor
+his trampling on principles; therefore neither did he like being
+presented to them, nor did they, especially when they had their wives
+with them, like to cultivate his acquaintance. Still there was a strong
+desire in all of them to see him, and the women in particular, who did
+not dare to look at him but by stealth, said in an under voice, 'What a
+pity it is!' If, however, any of his compatriots of exalted rank and of
+high reputation came forward to treat him with courtesy, he showed
+himself obviously flattered by it, and was greatly pleased with such
+association. It seemed that to the wound which remained always open in
+his ulcerated heart such soothing attentions were as drops of healing
+balm, which comforted him.
+
+"Speaking of his marriage,--a delicate subject, but one still agreeable
+to him, if it was treated in a friendly voice,--he was greatly moved,
+and said it had been the innocent cause of all his errors and all his
+griefs. Of his wife he spoke with much respect and affection. He said
+she was an illustrious lady, distinguished for the qualities of her
+heart and understanding, and that all the fault of their cruel
+separation lay with himself. Now, was such language dictated by justice
+or by vanity? Does it not bring to mind the saying of Julius, that the
+wife of Caesar must not even be suspected? What vanity in that saying of
+Caesar! In fact, if it had not been from vanity, Lord Byron would have
+admitted this to no one. Of his young daughter, his dear Ada, he spoke
+with great tenderness, and seemed to be pleased at the great sacrifice
+he had made in leaving her to comfort her mother. The intense hatred he
+bore his mother-in-law, and a sort of Euryclea of Lady Byron, two women
+to whose influence he, in a great measure, attributed her estrangement
+from him,--demonstrated clearly how painful the separation was to him,
+notwithstanding some bitter pleasantries which occasionally occur in his
+writings against her also, dictated rather by rancour than by
+indifference."
+
+[Footnote 47: "Il Conte Guiccioli doveva per affari ritornare a Ravenna;
+lo stato della mia salute esiggeva che io ritornassi in vece a Venezia.
+Egli acconsenti dunque che Lord Byron, mi fosse compagno di viaggio.
+Partimmo da Bologna alli 15 di Sre.--visitammo insieme i Colli Euganei
+ed Arqua; scrivemmo i nostri nomi nel libro che si presenta a quelli che
+fanno quel pellegrinaggio. Ma sopra tali rimembranze di felicita non
+posso fermarmi, caro Signr. Moore; l'opposizione col presente e troppo
+forte, e se un anima benedetta nel pieno godimento di tutte le felicita
+celesti fosse mandata quaggiu e condannata a sopportare tutte le miserie
+della nostra terra non potrebbe sentire piu terribile contrasto fra il
+passato ed il presente di quello che io sento dacche quella terribile
+parola e giunta alle mie orecchie, dacche ho perduto la speranza di piu
+vedere quello di cui uno sguardo valeva per me piu di tutte le felicita
+della terra. Giunti a Venezia i medici mi ordinarono di respirare l'aria
+della campagna. Egli aveva una villa alla Mira,--la cedesse a me, e
+venne meco. La passammo l'autunno, e la ebbi il bene di fare la vostra
+conoscenza."--MS.]
+
+[Footnote 48: The title of Segretario is sometimes given, as in this
+case, to a head-servant or house-steward.]
+
+[Footnote 49: That this was the case with Milton is acknowledged by
+Richardson, who admired both Milton and the Arts too warmly to make such
+an admission upon any but valid grounds. "He does not appear," says this
+writer, "to have much regarded what was done with the pencil; no, not
+even when in Italy, in Rome, in the Vatican. Neither does it seem
+Sculpture was much esteemed by him." After an authority like this, the
+theories of Hayley and others, with respect to the impressions left upon
+Milton's mind by the works of art he had seen in Italy, are hardly worth
+a thought. Though it may be conceded that Dante was an admirer of the
+Arts, his recommendation of the Apocalypse to Giotto, as a source of
+subjects for the pencil, shows, at least, what indifferent judges poets
+are, in general, of the sort of fancies fittest to be embodied by the
+painter.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From the time of his misunderstanding with Madame A * * *, the visits of
+the noble poet were transferred to the house of the other great rallying
+point of Venetian society, Madame B * * *,--a lady in whose manners,
+though she had long ceased to be young, there still lingered much of
+that attaching charm, which a youth passed in successful efforts to
+please seldom fails to leave behind. That those powers of pleasing, too,
+were not yet gone, the fidelity of, at least, one devoted admirer
+testified; nor is she supposed to have thought it impossible that Lord
+Byron himself might yet be linked on at the end of that long chain of
+lovers, which had, through so many years, graced the triumphs of her
+beauty. If, however, there could have been, in any case, the slightest
+chance of such a conquest, she had herself completely frustrated it by
+introducing her distinguished visitor to Madame Guiccioli,--a step by
+which she at last lost, too, even the ornament of his presence at her
+parties, as in consequence of some slighting conduct, on her part,
+towards his "Dama," he discontinued his attendance at her evening
+assemblies, and at the time of my visit to Venice had given up society
+altogether.
+
+I could soon collect, from the tone held respecting his conduct at
+Madame B * * *'s, how subversive of all the morality of intrigue they
+considered the late step of which he had been guilty in withdrawing his
+acknowledged "Amica" from the protection of her husband, and placing
+her, at once, under the same roof with himself. "You must really (said
+the hostess herself to me) scold your friend;--till this unfortunate
+affair, he conducted himself _so_ well!"--a eulogy on his previous moral
+conduct which, when I reported it the following day to my noble host,
+provoked at once a smile and sigh from his lips.
+
+The chief subject of our conversation, when alone, was his marriage, and
+the load of obloquy which it had brought upon him. He was most anxious
+to know the worst that had been alleged of his conduct; and as this was
+our first opportunity of speaking together on the subject, I did not
+hesitate to put his candour most searchingly to the proof, not only by
+enumerating the various charges I had heard brought against him by
+others, but by specifying such portions of these charges as I had been
+inclined to think not incredible myself. To all this he listened with
+patience, and answered with the most unhesitating frankness, laughing to
+scorn the tales of unmanly outrage related of him, but, at the same
+time, acknowledging that there had been in his conduct but too much to
+blame and regret, and stating one or two occasions, during his domestic
+life, when he had been irritated into letting "the breath of bitter
+words" escape him,--words, rather those of the unquiet spirit that
+possessed him than his own, and which he now evidently remembered with
+a degree of remorse and pain which might well have entitled them to be
+forgotten by others.
+
+It was, at the same time, manifest, that, whatever admissions he might
+be inclined to make respecting his own delinquencies, the inordinate
+measure of the punishment dealt out to him had sunk deeply into his
+mind, and, with the usual effect of such injustice, drove him also to be
+unjust himself;--so much so, indeed, as to impute to the quarter, to
+which he now traced all his ill fate, a feeling of fixed hostility to
+himself, which would not rest, he thought, even at his grave, but
+continue to persecute his memory as it was now embittering his life. So
+strong was this impression upon him, that during one of our few
+intervals of seriousness, he conjured me, by our friendship, if, as he
+both felt and hoped, I should survive him, not to let unmerited censure
+settle upon his name, but, while I surrendered him up to condemnation,
+where he deserved it, to vindicate him where aspersed.
+
+How groundless and wrongful were these apprehensions, the early death
+which he so often predicted and sighed for has enabled us, unfortunately
+but too soon, to testify. So far from having to defend him against any
+such assailants, an unworthy voice or two, from persons more injurious
+as friends than as enemies, is all that I find raised in hostility to
+his name; while by none, I am inclined to think, would a generous
+amnesty over his grave be more readily and cordially concurred in than
+by her, among whose numerous virtues a forgiving charity towards
+himself was the only one to which she had not yet taught him to render
+justice.
+
+I have already had occasion to remark, in another part of this work,
+that with persons who, like Lord Byron, live centred in their own
+tremulous web of sensitiveness, those friends of whom they see least,
+and who, therefore, least frequently come in collision with them in
+those every-day realities from which such natures shrink so morbidly,
+have proportionately a greater chance of retaining a hold on their
+affections. There is, however, in long absence from persons of this
+temperament, another description of risk hardly less, perhaps, to be
+dreaded. If the station a friend holds in their hearts is, in near
+intercourse with them, in danger from their sensitiveness, it is almost
+equally, perhaps, at the mercy of their too active imaginations during
+absence. On this very point, I recollect once expressing my
+apprehensions to Lord Byron, in a passage of a letter addressed to him
+but a short time before his death, of which the following is, as nearly
+as I can recall it, the substance:--"When _with_ you, I feel _sure_ of
+you; but, at a distance, one is often a little afraid of being made the
+victim, all of a sudden, of some of those fanciful suspicions, which,
+like meteoric stones, generate themselves (God knows how) in the upper
+regions of your imagination, and come clattering down upon our heads,
+some fine sunny day, when we are least expecting such an invasion."
+
+In writing thus to him, I had more particularly in recollection a fancy
+of this kind respecting myself, which he had, not long before my present
+visit to him at Venice, taken into his head. In a ludicrous, and now,
+perhaps, forgotten publication of mine, giving an account of the
+adventures of an English family in Paris, there had occurred the
+following description of the chief hero of the tale:--
+
+ "A fine, sallow, sublime sort of Werter-faced man,
+ With mustachios which gave (what we read of so oft)
+ The dear Corsair expression, half savage, half soft,--
+ As hyaenas in love may be fancied to look, or
+ A something between Abelard and old Blucher."
+
+On seeing this doggrel, my noble friend,--as I might, indeed, with a
+little more thought, have anticipated,--conceived the notion that I
+meant to throw ridicule on his whole race of poetic heroes, and
+accordingly, as I learned from persons then in frequent intercourse with
+him, flew out into one of his fits of half humorous rage against me.
+This he now confessed himself, and, in laughing over the circumstance
+with me, owned that he had even gone so far as, in his first moments of
+wrath, to contemplate some little retaliation for this perfidious hit at
+his heroes. "But when I recollected," said he, "what pleasure it would
+give the whole tribe of blockheads and blues to see you and me turning
+out against each other, I gave up the idea." He was, indeed, a striking
+instance of what may be almost invariably observed, that they who best
+know how to wield the weapon of ridicule themselves, are the most alive
+to its power in the hands of others. I remember, one day,--in the year
+1813, I think,--as we were conversing together about critics and their
+influence on the public. "For my part," he exclaimed, "I don't care what
+they say of me, so they don't quiz me."--"Oh, you need not fear
+that,"--I answered, with something, perhaps, of a half suppressed smile
+on my features,--"nobody could quiz _you_"--"_You could_, you villain!"
+he replied, clenching his hand at me, and looking, at the same time,
+with comic earnestness into my face.
+
+Before I proceed any farther with my own recollections, I shall here
+take the opportunity of extracting some curious particulars respecting
+the habits and mode of life of my friend while at Venice, from an
+account obligingly furnished me by a gentleman who long resided in that
+city, and who, during the greater part of Lord Byron's stay, lived on
+terms of the most friendly intimacy with him.
+
+"I have often lamented that I kept no notes of his observations during
+our rides and aquatic excursions. Nothing could exceed the vivacity and
+variety of his conversation, or the cheerfulness of his manner. His
+remarks on the surrounding objects were always original: and most
+particularly striking was the quickness with which he availed himself of
+every circumstance, however trifling in itself, and such as would have
+escaped the notice of almost any other person, to carry his point in
+such arguments as we might chance to be engaged in. He was feelingly
+alive to the beauties of nature, and took great interest in any
+observations, which, as a dabbler in the arts, I ventured to make upon
+the effects of light and shadow, or the changes produced in the colour
+of objects by every variation in the atmosphere.
+
+"The spot where we usually mounted our horses had been a Jewish
+cemetery; but the French, during their occupation of Venice, had thrown
+down the enclosures, and levelled all the tombstones with the ground, in
+order that they might not interfere with the fortifications upon the
+Lido, under the guns of which it was situated. To this place, as it was
+known to be that where he alighted from his gondola and met his horses,
+the curious amongst our country people, who were anxious to obtain a
+glimpse of him, used to resort; and it was amusing in the extreme to
+witness the excessive coolness with which ladies, as well as gentlemen,
+would advance within a very few paces of him, eyeing him, some with
+their glasses, as they would have done a statue in a museum, or the wild
+beasts at Exeter 'Change. However flattering this might be to a man's
+vanity, Lord Byron, though he bore it very patiently, expressed himself,
+as I believe he really was, excessively annoyed at it.
+
+"I have said that our usual ride was along the sea-shore, and that the
+spot where we took horse, and of course dismounted, had been a cemetery.
+It will readily be believed, that some caution was necessary in riding
+over the broken tombstones, and that it was altogether an awkward place
+for horses to pass. As the length of our ride was not very great,
+scarcely more than six miles in all, we seldom rode fast, that we might
+at least prolong its duration; and enjoy as much as possible the
+refreshing air of the Adriatic. One day, as we were leisurely returning
+homewards, Lord Byron, all at once, and without saying any thing to me,
+set spurs to his horse and started off at full gallop, making the
+greatest haste he could to get to his gondola. I could not conceive what
+fit had seized him, and had some difficulty in keeping even within a
+reasonable distance of him, while I looked around me to discover, if I
+were able, what could be the cause of his unusual precipitation. At
+length I perceived at some distance two or three gentlemen, who were
+running along the opposite side of the island nearest the Lagoon,
+parallel with him, towards his gondola, hoping to get there in time to
+see him alight; and a race actually took place between them, he
+endeavouring to outstrip them. In this he, in fact, succeeded, and,
+throwing himself quickly from his horse, leapt into his gondola, of
+which he hastily closed the blinds, ensconcing himself in a corner so as
+not to be seen. For my own part, not choosing to risk my neck over the
+ground I have spoken of, I followed more leisurely as soon as I came
+amongst the gravestones, but got to the place of embarkation just at the
+same moment with my curious countrymen, and in time to witness their
+disappointment at having had their run for nothing. I found him exulting
+in his success in outstripping them. He expressed in strong terms his
+annoyance at what he called their impertinence, whilst I could not but
+laugh at his impatience, as well as at the mortification of the
+unfortunate pedestrians, whose eagerness to see him, I said, was, in my
+opinion, highly flattering to him. That, he replied, depended on the
+feeling with which they came; and he had not the vanity to believe that
+they were influenced by any admiration of his character or of his
+abilities, but that they were impelled merely by idle curiosity. Whether
+it was so or not, I cannot help thinking that if they had been of the
+other sex, he would not have been so eager to escape from their
+observation, as in that case he would have repaid them glance for
+glance.
+
+"The curiosity that was expressed by all classes of travellers to see
+him, and the eagerness with which they endeavoured to pick up any
+anecdotes of his mode of life, were carried to a length which will
+hardly be credited. It formed the chief subject of their enquiries of
+the gondoliers who conveyed them from terra firma to the floating city;
+and these people, who are generally loquacious, were not at all backward
+in administering to the taste and humours of their passengers, relating
+to them the most extravagant and often unfounded stories. They took care
+to point out the house where he lived, and to give such hints of his
+movements as might afford them an opportunity of seeing him. Many of the
+English visiters, under pretext of seeing his house, in which there were
+no paintings of any consequence, nor, besides himself, any thing worthy
+of notice, contrived to obtain admittance through the cupidity of his
+servants, and with the most barefaced impudence forced their way even
+into his bedroom, in the hopes of seeing him. Hence arose, in a great
+measure, his bitterness towards them, which he has expressed in a note
+to one of his poems, on the occasion of some unfounded remark made upon
+him by an anonymous traveller in Italy; and it certainly appears well
+calculated to foster that cynicism which prevails in his latter works
+more particularly, and which, as well as the misanthropical expressions
+that occur in those which first raised his reputation, I do not believe
+to have been his natural feeling. Of this I am certain, that I never
+witnessed greater kindness than in Lord Byron.
+
+"The inmates of his family were all extremely attached to him, and would
+have endured any thing on his account. He was indeed culpably lenient to
+them; for even when instances occurred of their neglecting their duty,
+or taking an undue advantage of his good-nature, he rather bantered than
+spoke seriously to them upon it, and could not bring himself to
+discharge them, even when he had threatened to do so. An instance
+occurred within my knowledge of his unwillingness to act harshly towards
+a tradesman whom he had materially assisted, not only by lending him
+money, but by forwarding his interest in every way that he could.
+Notwithstanding repeated acts of kindness on Lord Byron's part, this man
+robbed and cheated him in the most barefaced manner; and when at length
+Lord Byron was induced to sue him at law for the recovery of his money,
+the only punishment he inflicted upon him, when sentence against him was
+passed, was to put him in prison for one week, and then to let him out
+again, although his debtor had subjected him to a considerable
+additional expense, by dragging him into all the different courts of
+appeal, and that he never at last recovered one halfpenny of the money
+owed to him. Upon this subject he writes to me from Ravenna, 'If * * is
+in (prison), let him out; if out, put him in for a week, merely for a
+lesson, and give him a good lecture.'
+
+"He was also ever ready to assist the distressed, and he was most
+unostentatious in his charities: for besides considerable sums which he
+gave away to applicants at his own house, he contributed largely by
+weekly and monthly allowances to persons whom he had never seen, and
+who, as the money reached them by other hands, did not even know who was
+their benefactor. One or two instances might be adduced where his
+charity certainly bore an appearance of ostentation; one particularly,
+when he sent fifty louis d'or to a poor printer whose house had been
+burnt to the ground, and all his property destroyed; but even this was
+not unattended with advantage; for it in a manner compelled the Austrian
+authorities to do something for the poor sufferer, which I have no
+hesitation in saying they would not have done otherwise; and I attribute
+it entirely to the publicity of his donation, that they allowed the man
+the use of an unoccupied house belonging to the government until he
+could rebuild his own, or re-establish his business elsewhere. Other
+instances might be perhaps discovered where his liberalities proceeded
+from selfish, and not very worthy motives[50]; but these are rare, and
+it would be unjust in the extreme to assume them as proofs of his
+character."
+
+It has been already mentioned that, in writing to my noble friend to
+announce my coming, I had expressed a hope that he would be able to go
+on with me to Rome; and I had the gratification of finding, on my
+arrival, that he was fully prepared to enter into this plan. On becoming
+acquainted, however, with all the details of his present situation, I so
+far sacrificed my own wishes and pleasure as to advise strongly that he
+should remain at La Mira. In the first place, I saw reason to apprehend
+that his leaving Madame Guiccioli at this crisis might be the means of
+drawing upon him the suspicion of neglecting, if not actually deserting,
+a young person who had just sacrificed so much to her devotion for him,
+and whose position, at this moment, between the Count and Lord Byron, it
+required all the generous prudence of the latter to shield from shame or
+fall. There had just occurred too, as it appeared to me, a most
+favourable opening for the retrieval of, at least, the imprudent part of
+the transaction, by replacing the lady instantly under her husband's
+protection, and thus enabling her still to retain that station in
+society which, in such society, nothing but such imprudence could have
+endangered.
+
+This latter hope had been suggested by a letter he one day showed me,
+(as we were dining together alone, at the well-known Pellegrino,) which
+had that morning been received by the Contessa from her husband, and the
+chief object of which was--_not_ to express any censure of her conduct,
+but to suggest that she should prevail upon her noble admirer to
+transfer into his keeping a sum of 1000_l._, which was then lying, if I
+remember right, in the hands of Lord Byron's banker at Ravenna, but
+which the worthy Count professed to think would be more advantageously
+placed in his own. Security, the writer added, would be given, and five
+per cent. interest allowed; as to accept of the sum on any other terms
+he should hold to be an "avvilimento" to him. Though, as regarded the
+lady herself, who has since proved, by a most noble sacrifice, how
+perfectly disinterested were her feelings throughout[51], this trait of
+so wholly opposite a character in her lord must have still further
+increased her disgust at returning to him, yet so important did it seem,
+as well for her friend's sake as her own, to retrace, while there was
+yet time, their last imprudent step, that even the sacrifice of this
+sum, which I saw would materially facilitate such an arrangement, did
+not appear to me by any means too high a price to pay for it. On this
+point, however, my noble friend entirely differed with me; and nothing
+could be more humorous and amusing than the manner in which, in his
+newly assumed character of a lover of money, he dilated on the many
+virtues of a thousand pounds, and his determination not to part with a
+single one of them to Count Guiccioli. Of his confidence, too, in his
+own power of extricating himself from this difficulty he spoke with
+equal gaiety and humour; and Mr. Scott, who joined our party after
+dinner, having taken the same view of the subject as I did, he laid a
+wager of two sequins with that gentleman, that, without any such
+disbursement, he would yet bring all right again, and "save the lady and
+the money too."
+
+It is indeed, certain, that he had at this time taken up the whim (for
+it hardly deserves a more serious name) of minute and constant
+watchfulness over his expenditure; and, as most usually happens, it was
+with the increase of his means that this increased sense of the value of
+money came. The first symptom I saw of this new fancy of his was the
+exceeding joy which he manifested on my presenting to him a rouleau of
+twenty Napoleons, which Lord K * *d, to whom he had, on some occasion,
+lent that sum, had intrusted me with, at Milan, to deliver into his
+hands. With the most joyous and diverting eagerness, he tore open the
+paper, and, in counting over the sum, stopped frequently to congratulate
+himself on the recovery of it.
+
+Of his household frugalities I speak but on the authority of others; but
+it is not difficult to conceive that, with a restless spirit like his,
+which delighted always in having something to contend with, and which,
+but a short time before, "for want," as he said, "of something craggy to
+break upon," had tortured itself with the study of the Armenian
+language, he should, in default of all better excitement, find a sort of
+stir and amusement in the task of contesting, inch by inch, every
+encroachment of expense, and endeavouring to suppress what he himself
+calls
+
+ "That climax of all earthly ills,
+ The inflammation of our weekly bills."
+
+In truth, his constant recurrence to the praise of avarice in Don Juan,
+and the humorous zest with which he delights to dwell on it, shows how
+new-fangled, as well as how far from serious, was his adoption of this
+"good old-gentlemanly vice." In the same spirit he had, a short time
+before my arrival at Venice, established a hoarding-box, with a slit in
+the lid, into which he occasionally put sequins, and, at stated periods,
+opened it to contemplate his treasures. His own ascetic style of living
+enabled him, as far as himself was concerned, to gratify this taste for
+economy in no ordinary degree,--his daily bill of fare, when the
+Margarita was his companion, consisting, I have been assured, of but
+four beccafichi, of which the Fornarina eat three, leaving even him
+hungry.
+
+That his parsimony, however (if this new phasis of his ever-shifting
+character is to be called by such a name), was very far from being of
+that kind which Bacon condemns, as "withholding men from works of
+liberality," is apparent from all that is known of his munificence, at
+this very period,--some particulars of which, from a most authentic
+source, have just been cited, proving amply that while, for the
+indulgence of a whim, he kept one hand closed, he gave free course to
+his generous nature by dispensing lavishly from the other. It should be
+remembered, too, that as long as money shall continue to be one of the
+great sources of power, so long will they who seek influence over their
+fellow-men attach value to it as an instrument; and the more lowly they
+are inclined to estimate the disinterestedness of the human heart, the
+more available and precious will they consider the talisman that gives
+such power over it. Hence, certainly, it is not among those who have
+thought highest of mankind that the disposition to avarice has most
+generally displayed itself. In Swift the love of money was strong and
+avowed; and to Voltaire the same propensity was also frequently
+imputed,--on about as sufficient grounds, perhaps, as to Lord Byron.
+
+On the day preceding that of my departure from Venice, my noble host, on
+arriving from La Mira to dinner, told me, with all the glee of a
+schoolboy who had been just granted a holiday, that, as this was my last
+evening, the Contessa had given him leave to "make a night of it," and
+that accordingly he would not only accompany me to the opera, but we
+should sup together at some cafe (as in the old times) afterwards.
+Observing a volume in his gondola, with a number of paper marks between
+the leaves, I enquired of him what it was?--"Only a book," he answered,
+"from which I am trying to _crib_, as I do wherever I can[52];--and
+that's the way I get the character of an original poet." On taking it up
+and looking into it, I exclaimed, "Ah, my old friend,
+Agathon!"[53]--"What!" he cried, archly, "you have been beforehand with
+me there, have you?"
+
+Though in imputing to himself premeditated plagiarism, he was, of
+course, but jesting, it was, I am inclined to think, his practice, when
+engaged in the composition of any work, to excite thus his vein by the
+perusal of others, on the same subject or plan, from which the slightest
+hint caught by his imagination, as he read, was sufficient to kindle
+there such a train of thought as, but for that spark, had never been
+awakened, and of which he himself soon forgot the source. In the present
+instance, the inspiration he sought was of no very elevating
+nature,--the anti-spiritual doctrines of the Sophist in this Romance[54]
+being what chiefly, I suspect, attracted his attention to its pages, as
+not unlikely to supply him with fresh argument and sarcasm for those
+depreciating views of human nature and its destiny, which he was now,
+with all the wantonness of unbounded genius, enforcing in Don Juan.
+
+Of this work he was, at the time of my visit to him, writing the third
+Canto, and before dinner, one day, read me two or three hundred lines of
+it;--beginning with the stanzas "Oh Wellington," &c. which at that time
+formed the opening of this third Canto, but were afterwards reserved for
+the commencement of the ninth. My opinion of the poem, both as regarded
+its talent and its mischief, he had already been made acquainted with,
+from my having been one of those,--his Committee, as he called us,--to
+whom, at his own desire, the manuscript of the two first Cantos had been
+submitted, and who, as the reader has seen, angered him not a little by
+deprecating the publication of it. In a letter which I, at that time,
+wrote to him on the subject, after praising the exquisite beauty of the
+scenes between Juan and Haidee, I ventured to say, "Is it not odd that
+the same licence which, in your early Satire, you blamed _me_ for being
+guilty of on the borders of my twentieth year, you are now yourself
+(with infinitely greater power, and therefore infinitely greater
+mischief) indulging in _after_ thirty!"
+
+Though I now found him, in full defiance of such remonstrances,
+proceeding with this work, he had yet, as his own letters prove, been so
+far influenced by the general outcry against his poem, as to feel the
+zeal and zest with which he had commenced it considerably abated,--so
+much so, as to render, ultimately, in his own opinion, the third and
+fourth Cantos much inferior in spirit to the two first. So sensitive,
+indeed,--in addition to his usual abundance of this quality,--did he, at
+length, grow on the subject, that when Mr. W. Bankes, who succeeded me,
+as his visiter, happened to tell him, one day, that he had heard a Mr.
+Saunders (or some such name), then resident at Venice, declare that, in
+his opinion, "Don Juan was all Grub Street," such an effect had this
+disparaging speech upon his mind, (though coming from a person who, as
+he himself would have it, was "nothing but a d----d salt-fish seller,")
+that, for some time after, by his own confession to Mr. Bankes, he could
+not bring himself to write another line of the poem; and, one morning,
+opening a drawer where the neglected manuscript lay, he said to his
+friend, "Look here--this is all Mr. Saunders's 'Grub Street.'"
+
+To return, however, to the details of our last evening together at
+Venice. After a dinner with Mr. Scott at the Pellegrino, we all went,
+rather late, to the opera, where the principal part in the Baccanali di
+Roma was represented by a female singer, whose chief claim to
+reputation, according to Lord Byron, lay in her having _stilettoed_ one
+of her favourite lovers. In the intervals between the singing he pointed
+out to me different persons among the audience, to whom celebrity of
+various sorts, but, for the most part, disreputable, attached; and of
+one lady who sat near us, he related an anecdote, which, whether new or
+old, may, as creditable to Venetian facetiousness, be worth, perhaps,
+repeating. This lady had, it seems, been pronounced by Napoleon the
+finest woman in Venice; but the Venetians, not quite agreeing with this
+opinion of the great man, contented themselves with calling her "La
+Bella _per Decreto_,"--adding (as the Decrees always begin with the word
+"Considerando"), "Ma _senza_ il Considerando."
+
+From the opera, in pursuance of our agreement to "make a night of it,"
+we betook ourselves to a sort of _cabaret_ in the Place of St. Mark, and
+there, within a few yards of the Palace of the Doges, sat drinking hot
+brandy punch, and laughing over old times, till the clock of St. Mark
+struck the second hour of the morning. Lord Byron then took me in his
+gondola, and, the moon being in its fullest splendour, he made the
+gondoliers row us to such points of view as might enable me to see
+Venice, at that hour, to advantage. Nothing could be more solemnly
+beautiful than the whole scene around, and I had, for the first time,
+the Venice of my dreams before me. All those meaner details which so
+offend the eye by day were now softened down by the moonlight into a
+sort of visionary indistinctness; and the effect of that silent city of
+palaces, sleeping, as it were, upon the waters, in the bright stillness
+of the night, was such as could not but affect deeply even the least
+susceptible imagination. My companion saw that I was moved by it, and
+though familiar with the scene himself, seemed to give way, for the
+moment, to the same strain of feeling; and, as we exchanged a few
+remarks suggested by that wreck of human glory before us, his voice,
+habitually so cheerful, sunk into a tone of mournful sweetness, such as
+I had rarely before heard from him, and shall not easily forget. This
+mood, however, was but of the moment; some quick turn of ridicule soon
+carried him off into a totally different vein, and at about three
+o'clock in the morning, at the door of his own palazzo, we parted,
+laughing, as we had met;--an agreement having been first made that I
+should take an early dinner with him next day at his villa, on my road
+to Ferrara.
+
+Having employed the morning of the following day in completing my round
+of sights at Venice,--taking care to visit specially "that picture by
+Giorgione," to which the poet's exclamation, "_such_ a woman!"[55] will
+long continue to attract all votaries of beauty,--I took my departure
+from Venice, and, at about three o'clock, arrived at La Mira. I found my
+noble host waiting to receive me, and, in passing with him through the
+hall, saw his little Allegra, who, with her nursery maid, was standing
+there as if just returned from a walk. To the perverse fancy he had for
+falsifying his own character, and even imputing to himself faults the
+most alien to his nature, I have already frequently adverted, and had,
+on this occasion, a striking instance of it. After I had spoken a
+little, in passing, to the child, and made some remark on its beauty, he
+said to me,--"Have you any notion--but I suppose _you_ have--of what
+they call the parental feeling? For myself, I have not the least." And
+yet, when that child died, in a year or two afterwards, he who now
+uttered this artificial speech was so overwhelmed by the event, that
+those who were about him at the time actually trembled for his reason!
+
+A short time before dinner he left the room, and in a minute or two
+returned, carrying in his hand a white leather bag. "Look here," he
+said, holding it up--"this would be worth something to Murray, though
+_you_, I dare say, would not give sixpence for it."--"What is it?" I
+asked.--"My Life and Adventures," he answered. On hearing this, I raised
+my hands in a gesture of wonder. "It is not a thing," he continued,
+"that can be published during my lifetime, but you may have it--if you
+like--there, do whatever you please with it." In taking the bag, and
+thanking him most warmly, I added, "This will make a nice legacy for my
+little Tom, who shall astonish the latter days of the nineteenth century
+with it." He then added, "You may show it to any of our friends you
+think worthy of it:"--and this is, nearly word for word, the whole of
+what passed between us on the subject.
+
+At dinner we were favoured with the presence of Madame Guiccioli, who
+was so obliging as to furnish me, at Lord Byron's suggestion, with a
+letter of introduction to her brother, Count Gamba, whom it was
+probable, they both thought, I should meet at Rome. This letter I never
+had an opportunity of presenting; and as it was left open for me to
+read, and was, the greater part of it, I have little doubt, dictated by
+my noble friend, I may venture, without impropriety, to give an extract
+from it here;--premising that the allusion to the "Castle," &c. refers
+to some tales respecting the cruelty of Lord Byron to his wife, which
+the young Count had heard, and, at this time, implicitly believed. After
+a few sentences of compliment to the bearer, the letter proceeds:--"He
+is on his way to see the wonders of Rome, and there is no one, I am
+sure, more qualified to enjoy them. I shall be gratified and obliged by
+your acting, as far as you can, as his guide. He is a friend of Lord
+Byron's, and much more accurately acquainted with his history than those
+who have related it to you. He will accordingly describe to you, if you
+ask him, _the shape, the dimensions_, and whatever else you may please
+to require, of _that Castle in which he keeps imprisoned a young and
+innocent wife_, &c. &c. My dear Pietro, whenever you feel inclined to
+laugh, do send two lines of answer to your sister, who loves and ever
+will love you with the greatest tenderness.--Teresa Guiccioli."[56]
+
+After expressing his regret that I had not been able to prolong my stay
+at Venice, my noble friend said, "At least, I think, you might spare a
+day or two to go with me to Arqua. I should like," he continued,
+thoughtfully, "to visit that tomb with you:"--then, breaking off into
+his usual gay tone; "a pair of poetical pilgrims--eh, Tom, what say
+you?"--That I should have declined this offer, and thus lost the
+opportunity of an excursion which would have been remembered, as a
+bright dream, through all my after-life, is a circumstance I never can
+think of without wonder and self-reproach. But the main design on which
+I had then set my mind of reaching Rome, and, if possible, Naples,
+within the limited period which circumstances allowed, rendered me far
+less alive than I ought to have been to the preciousness of the episode
+thus offered to me.
+
+When it was time for me to depart, he expressed his intention to
+accompany me a few miles; and, ordering his horses to follow, proceeded
+with me in the carriage as far as Stra, where for the last time--how
+little thinking it was to be the last!--I bade my kind and admirable
+friend farewell.
+
+[Footnote 50: The writer here, no doubt, alludes to such questionable
+liberalities as those exercised towards the husbands of his two
+favourites, Madame S * * and the Fornarina.]
+
+[Footnote 51: The circumstance here alluded to may be most clearly,
+perhaps, communicated to my readers through the medium of the following
+extract from a letter which Mr. Barry (the friend and banker of Lord
+Byron) did me the favour of addressing to me, soon after his Lordship's
+death:--"When Lord Byron went to Greece, he gave me orders to advance
+money to Madame G * *; but that lady would never consent to receive any.
+His Lordship had also told me that he meant to leave his will in my
+hands, and that there would be a bequest in it of 10,000_l._ to Madame G
+* *. He mentioned this circumstance also to Lord Blessington. When the
+melancholy news of his death reached me, I took for granted that this
+will would be found among the sealed papers he had left with me; but
+there was no such instrument. I immediately then wrote to Madame G * *,
+enquiring if she knew any thing concerning it, and mentioning, at the
+same time, what his Lordship had said is to the legacy. To this the lady
+replied, that he had frequently spoken to her on the same subject, but
+that she had always cut the conversation short, as it was a topic she by
+no means liked to hear him speak upon. In addition, she expressed a wish
+that no such will as I had mentioned would be found; as her
+circumstances were already sufficiently independent, and the world might
+put a wrong construction on her attachment, should it appear that her
+fortunes were, in any degree, bettered by it."]
+
+[Footnote 52: This will remind the reader of Moliere's avowal in
+speaking of wit:--"C'est mon bien, et je le prends partout ou je le
+trouve."]
+
+[Footnote 53: The History of Agathon, by Wieland.]
+
+[Footnote 54: Between Wieland, the author of this Romance, and Lord
+Byron, may be observed some of those generic points of resemblance which
+it is so interesting to trace in the characters of men of genius. The
+German poet, it is said, never perused any work that made a strong
+impression upon him, without being stimulated to commence one, himself,
+on the same topic and plan; and in Lord Byron the imitative principle
+was almost equally active,--there being few of his poems that might not,
+in the same manner, be traced to the strong impulse given to his
+imagination by the perusal of some work that had just before interested
+him. In the history, too, of their lives and feelings, there was a
+strange and painful coincidence,--the revolution that took place in all
+Wieland's opinions, from the Platonism and romance of his youthful days,
+to the material and Epicurean doctrines that pervaded all his maturer
+works, being chiefly, it is supposed, brought about by the shock his
+heart had received from a disappointment of its affections in early
+life. Speaking of the illusion of this first passion, in one of his
+letters, he says,--"It is one for which no joys, no honours, no gifts of
+fortune, not even wisdom itself can afford an equivalent, and which,
+when it has once vanished, returns no more."]
+
+[Footnote 55:
+
+ "'Tis but a portrait of his son and wife,
+ And self; but such a woman! love in life!"
+ BEPPO, Stanza xii.
+
+This seems, by the way, to be an incorrect description of the picture,
+as, according to Vasari and others, Giorgione never was married, and
+died young.]
+
+[Footnote 56: "Egli viene per vedere le meraviglie di questa Citta, e
+sono certa che nessuno meglio di lui saprebbe gustarle. Mi sara grato
+che vi facciate sua guida come potrete, e voi poi me ne avrete obbligo.
+Egli e amico de Lord Byron--sa la sua storia assai piu precisamente di
+quelli che a voi la raccontarono. Egli dunque vi raccontera se lo
+interrogherete _la forma, le dimensioni_, e tuttocio che vi piacera del
+_Castello ove tiene imprigionata una giovane innocente sposa_, &c. &c.
+Mio caro Pietro, quando ti sei bene sfogato a ridere, allora rispondi
+due righe alla tua sorella, che t' ama e t' amera sempre colla maggiore
+tenerezza."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 341. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "October 22. 1819.
+
+ "I am glad to hear of your return, but I do not know how to
+ congratulate you--unless you think differently of Venice from what
+ I think now, and you thought always. I am, besides, about to renew
+ your troubles by requesting you to be judge between Mr. E * * * and
+ myself in a small matter of imputed peculation and irregular
+ accounts on the part of that phoenix of secretaries. As I knew that
+ you had not parted friends, at the same time that _I_ refused for
+ my own part any judgment but _yours_, I offered him his choice of
+ any person, the _least_ scoundrel native to be found in Venice, as
+ his own umpire; but he expressed himself so convinced of your
+ impartiality, that he declined any but _you_. This is in his
+ favour.--The paper within will explain to you the default in his
+ accounts. You will hear his explanation, and decide if it so please
+ you. I shall not appeal from the decision.
+
+ "As he complained that his salary was insufficient, I determined to
+ have his accounts examined, and the enclosed was the result.--It is
+ all in black and white with documents, and I have despatched
+ Fletcher to explain (or rather to perplex) the matter.
+
+ "I have had much civility and kindness from Mr. Dorville during
+ your journey, and I thank him accordingly.
+
+ "Your letter reached me at your departure[57], and displeased me
+ very much:--not that it might not be true in its statement and kind
+ in its intention, but you have lived long enough to know how
+ useless all such representations ever are and must be in cases
+ where the passions are concerned. To reason with men in such a
+ situation is like reasoning with a drunkard in his cups--the only
+ answer you will get from him is, that he is sober, and you are
+ drunk.
+
+ "Upon that subject we will (if you like) be silent. You might only
+ say what would distress me without answering any purpose whatever;
+ and I have too many obligations to you to answer you in the same
+ style. So that you should recollect that you have also that
+ advantage over me. I hope to see you soon.
+
+ "I suppose you know that they said at Venice, that I was arrested
+ at Bologna as a _Carbonaro_--story about as true as their usual
+ conversation. Moore has been here--I lodged him in my house at
+ Venice, and went to see him daily; but I could not at that time
+ quit La Mira entirely. You and I were not very far from meeting in
+ Switzerland. With my best respects to Mrs. Hoppner, believe me ever
+ and truly, &c.
+
+ "P.S. Allegra is here in good health and spirits--I shall keep her
+ with me till I go to England, which will perhaps be in the spring.
+ It has just occurred to me that you may not perhaps like to
+ undertake the office of judge between Mr. E. and your humble
+ servant.--Of course, as Mr. Liston (the comedian, not the
+ ambassador) says, '_it is all hoptional_;' but I have no other
+ resource. I do not wish to find him a rascal, if it can be avoided,
+ and would rather think him guilty of carelessness than cheating.
+ The case is this--can I, or not, give him a character for
+ _honesty_?--It is not my intention to continue him in my service."
+
+[Footnote 57: Mr. Hoppner, before his departure from Venice for
+Switzerland, had, with all the zeal of a true friend, written a letter
+to Lord Byron, entreating him "to leave Ravenna while yet he had a whole
+skin, and urging him not to risk the safety of a person he appeared so
+sincerely attached to--as well as his own--for the gratification of a
+momentary passion, which could only be a source of regret to both
+parties." In the same letter Mr. Hoppner informed him of some reports he
+had heard lately at Venice, which, though possibly, he said, unfounded,
+had much increased his anxiety respecting the consequences of the
+connection formed by him.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 342. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "October 25. 1819.
+
+ "You need not have made any excuses about the letter: I never said
+ but that you might, could, should, or would have reason. I merely
+ described my own state of inaptitude to listen to it at that time,
+ and in those circumstances. Besides, you did not speak from your
+ _own_ authority--but from what you said you had heard. Now my blood
+ boils to hear an Italian speaking ill of another Italian, because,
+ though they lie in particular, they speak truth in general by
+ speaking ill at all;--and although they know that they are trying
+ and wishing to lie, they do not succeed, merely because they can
+ say nothing so bad of each other, that it _may_ not, and must not
+ be true, from the atrocity of their long debased national
+ character.[58]
+
+ "With regard to E., you will perceive a most irregular, extravagant
+ account, without proper documents to support it. He demanded an
+ increase of salary, which made me suspect him; he supported an
+ outrageous extravagance of expenditure, and did not like the
+ dismission of the cook; he never complained of him--as in duty
+ bound--at the time of his robberies. I can only say, that the house
+ expense is now under _one half_ of what it then was, as he himself
+ admits. He charged for a comb _eighteen_ francs,--the real price
+ was _eight_. He charged a passage from Fusina for a person named
+ Iambelli, who paid it _herself_, as she will prove if necessary. He
+ fancies, or asserts himself, the victim of a domestic complot
+ against him;--accounts are accounts--prices are prices;--let him
+ make out a fair detail. _I_ am not prejudiced against him--on the
+ contrary, I supported him against the complaints of his wife, and
+ of his former master, at a time when I could have crushed him like
+ an earwig; and if he is a scoundrel, he is the greatest of
+ scoundrels, an ungrateful one. The truth is, probably, that he
+ thought I was leaving Venice, and determined to make the most of
+ it. At present he keeps bringing in _account after account_, though
+ he had always money in hand--as I believe you know my system was
+ never to allow longer than a week's bills to run. Pray read him
+ this letter--I desire nothing to be concealed against which he may
+ defend himself.
+
+ "Pray how is your little boy? and how are you?--I shall be up in
+ Venice very soon, and we will be bilious together. I hate the place
+ and all that it inherits.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+[Footnote 58: "This language" (says Mr. Hoppner, in some remarks upon
+the above letter) "is strong, but it was the language of prejudice; and
+he was rather apt thus to express the feelings of the moment, without
+troubling himself to consider how soon he might be induced to change
+them. He was at this time so sensitive on the subject of Madame * *,
+that, merely because some persons had disapproved of her conduct, he
+declaimed in the above manner against the whole nation. I never"
+(continues Mr. Hoppner) "was partial to Venice; but disliked it almost
+from the first month of my residence there. Yet I experienced more
+kindness in that place than I ever met with in any country, and
+witnessed acts of generosity and disinterestedness such as rarely are
+met with elsewhere."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 343. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "October 28. 1819.
+
+ "I have to thank you for your letter, and your compliment to Don
+ Juan. I said nothing to you about it, understanding that it is a
+ sore subject with the moral reader, and has been the cause of a
+ great row; but I am glad you like it. I will say nothing about the
+ shipwreck, except that I hope you think it is as nautical and
+ technical as verse could admit in the octave measure.
+
+ "The poem has _not sold well_, so Murray says--'but the best
+ judges, &c. say, &c.' so says that worthy man. I have never seen it
+ in print. The third Canto is in advance about one hundred stanzas;
+ but the failure of the two first has weakened my _estro_, and it
+ will neither be so good as the two former, nor completed, unless I
+ get a little more _riscaldato_ in its behalf. I understand the
+ outcry was beyond every thing.--Pretty cant for people who read Tom
+ Jones, and Roderick Random, and the Bath Guide, and Ariosto, and
+ Dryden, and Pope--to say nothing of Little's Poems! Of course I
+ refer to the _morality_ of these works, and not to any pretension
+ of mine to compete with them in any thing but decency. I hope yours
+ is the Paris edition, and that you did not pay the London price. I
+ have seen neither except in the newspapers.
+
+ "Pray make my respects to Mrs. H., and take care of your little
+ boy. All my household have the fever and ague, except Fletcher,
+ Allegra, and my_sen_ (as we used to say in Nottinghamshire), and
+ the horses, and Mutz, and Moretto. In the beginning of November,
+ perhaps sooner, I expect to have the pleasure of seeing you. To-day
+ I got drenched by a thunder-storm, and my horse and groom too, and
+ his horse all bemired up to the middle in a cross-road. It was
+ summer at noon, and at five we were bewintered; but the lightning
+ was sent perhaps to let us know that the summer was not yet over.
+ It is queer weather for the 27th October.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 344. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, October 29. 1819.
+
+ "Yours of the 15th came yesterday. I am sorry that you do not
+ mention a large letter addressed to _your care_ for Lady Byron,
+ from me, at Bologna, two months ago. Pray tell me, was this letter
+ received and forwarded?
+
+ "You say nothing of the vice-consulate for the Ravenna patrician,
+ from which it is to be inferred that the thing will not be done.
+
+ "I had written about a hundred stanzas of a _third_ Canto to Don
+ Juan, but the reception of the two first is no encouragement to you
+ nor me to proceed.
+
+ "I had also written about 600 lines of a poem, the Vision (or
+ Prophecy) of Dante, the subject a view of Italy in the ages down to
+ the present--supposing Dante to speak in his own person, previous
+ to his death, and embracing all topics in the way of prophecy, like
+ Lycophron's Cassandra; but this and the other are both at a
+ stand-still for the present.
+
+ "I gave Moore, who is gone to Rome, my Life in MS., in
+ seventy-eight folio sheets, brought down to 1816. But this I put
+ into his hands for _his_ care, as he has some other MSS. of mine--a
+ Journal kept in 1814, &c. Neither are for publication during my
+ life; but when I am cold you may do what you please. In the mean
+ time, if you like to read them you may, and show them to anybody
+ you like--I care not.
+
+ "The Life is _Memoranda_, and not _Confessions_ I have left out all
+ my _loves_ (except in a general way), and many other of the most
+ important things (because I must not compromise other people), so
+ that it is like the play of Hamlet--'the part of Hamlet omitted by
+ particular desire.' But you will find many opinions, and some fun,
+ with a detailed account of my marriage, and its consequences, as
+ true as a party concerned can make such account, for I suppose we
+ are all prejudiced.
+
+ "I have never read over this Life since it was written, so that I
+ know not exactly what it may repeat or contain. Moore and I passed
+ some merry days together.
+
+ "I probably must return for business, or in my way to America.
+ Pray, did you get a letter for Hobhouse, who will have told you the
+ contents? I understand that the Venezuelan commissioners had orders
+ to treat with emigrants; now I want to go there. I should not make
+ a bad South-American planter, and I should take my natural
+ daughter, Allegra, with me, and settle. I wrote, at length, to
+ Hobhouse, to get information from Perry, who, I suppose, is the
+ best topographer and trumpeter of the new republicans. Pray write.
+
+ "Yours ever.
+
+ "P.S. Moore and I did nothing but laugh. He will tell you of 'my
+ whereabouts,' and all my proceedings at this present; they are as
+ usual. You should not let those fellows publish false 'Don Juans;'
+ but do not put _my name_, because I mean to cut R----ts up like a
+ gourd, in the preface, if I continue the poem."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 345. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "October 29. 1819.
+
+ "The Ferrara story is of a piece with all the rest of the Venetian
+ manufacture,--you may judge. I only changed horses there since I
+ wrote to you, after my visit in June last. '_Convent_' and '_carry
+ off_', quotha! and '_girl_.' I should like to know _who_ has been
+ carried off, except poor dear _me_. I have been more ravished
+ myself than anybody since the Trojan war; but as to the arrest and
+ its causes, one is as true as the other, and I can account for the
+ invention of neither. I suppose it is some confusion of the tale of
+ the F * * and of Me. Guiccioli, and half a dozen more; but it is
+ useless to unravel the web, when one has only to brush it away. I
+ shall settle with Master E. who looks very blue at your
+ _in-decision_, and swears that he is the best arithmetician in
+ Europe; and so I think also, for he makes out two and two to be
+ five.
+
+ "You may see me next week. I have a horse or two more (five in
+ all), and I shall repossess myself of Lido, and I will rise
+ earlier, and we will go and shake our livers over the beach, as
+ heretofore, if you like--and we will make the Adriatic roar again
+ with our hatred of that now empty oyster-shell, without its pearl,
+ the city of Venice.
+
+ "Murray sent me a letter yesterday: the impostors have published
+ _two_ new _third_ Cantos of _Don Juan_;--the devil take the
+ impudence of some blackguard bookseller or other _therefor_!
+ Perhaps I did not make myself understood; he told me the sale had
+ been great, 1200 out of 1500 quarto, I believe (which is nothing
+ after selling 13,000 of the Corsair in one day); but that the 'best
+ judges,' &c. had said it was very fine, and clever, and
+ particularly good English, and poetry, and all those consolatory
+ things, which are not, however, worth a single copy to a
+ bookseller: and as to the author, of course I am in a d----ned
+ passion at the bad taste of the times, and swear there is nothing
+ like posterity, who, of course, must know more of the matter than
+ their grandfathers. There has been an eleventh commandment to the
+ women not to read it, and, what is still more extraordinary, they
+ seem not to have broken it. But that can be of little import to
+ them, poor things, for the reading or non-reading a book will never
+ * * * *.
+
+ "Count G. comes to Venice next week, and I am requested to consign
+ his wife to him, which shall be done. What you say of the long
+ evenings at the Mira, or Venice, reminds me of what Curran said to
+ Moore:--'So I hear you have married a pretty woman, and a very good
+ creature, too--an excellent creature. Pray--um! _how do you pass
+ your evenings?_' It is a devil of a question that, and perhaps as
+ easy to answer with a wife as with a mistress.
+
+ "If you go to Milan, pray leave at least a _Vice-Consul_--the only
+ vice that will ever be wanting in Venice. D'Orville is a good
+ fellow. But you shall go to England in the spring with me, and
+ plant Mrs. Hoppner at Berne with her relations for a few months. I
+ wish you had been here (at Venice, I mean, not the Mira) when Moore
+ was here--we were very merry and tipsy. He _hated_ Venice, by the
+ way, and swore it was a sad place.[59]
+
+ "So Madame Albrizzi's death is in danger--poor woman! Moore told me
+ that at Geneva they had made a devil of a story of the
+ Fornaretta:--'Young lady seduced!--subsequent abandonment!--leap
+ into the Grand Canal!'--and her being in the 'hospital of _fous_ in
+ consequence!' I should like to know who was nearest being made
+ '_fou_,' and be d----d to them I Don't you think me in the
+ interesting character of a very ill used gentleman? I hope your
+ little boy is well. Allegrina is flourishing like a pomegranate
+ blossom. Yours," &c.
+
+[Footnote 59: I beg to say that this report of my opinion of Venice is
+coloured somewhat too deeply by the feelings of the reporter.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 346. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, November 8. 1819.
+
+ "Mr. Hoppner has lent me a copy of 'Don Juan,' Paris edition, which
+ he tells me is read in Switzerland by clergymen and ladies with
+ considerable approbation. In the second Canto, you must alter the
+ 49th stanza to
+
+ "'Twas twilight, and the sunless day went down
+ Over the waste of waters, like a veil
+ Which if withdrawn would but disclose the frown
+ Of one whose hate is mask'd but to assail;
+ Thus to their hopeless eyes the night was shown,
+ And grimly darkled o'er their faces pale
+ And the dim desolate deep; twelve days had Fear
+ Been their familiar, and now Death was here.
+
+ "I have been ill these eight days with a tertian fever, caught in
+ the country on horseback in a thunderstorm. Yesterday I had the
+ fourth attack: the two last were very smart, the first day as well
+ as the last being preceded by vomiting. It is the fever of the
+ place and the season. I feel weakened, but not unwell, in the
+ intervals, except headach and lassitude.
+
+ "Count Guiccioli has arrived in Venice, and has presented his
+ spouse (who had preceded him two months for her health and the
+ prescriptions of Dr. Aglietti) with a paper of conditions,
+ regulations of hours and conduct, and morals, &c. &c. &c. which he
+ insists on her accepting, and she persists in refusing. I am
+ expressly, it should seem, excluded by this treaty, as an
+ indispensable preliminary; so that they are in high dissension, and
+ what the result may be I know not, particularly as they are
+ consulting friends.
+
+ "To-night, as Countess Guiccioli observed me poring over 'Don
+ Juan,' she stumbled by mere chance on the 137th stanza of the first
+ Canto, and asked me what it meant. I told her, 'Nothing--but "your
+ husband is coming."' As I said this in Italian, with some emphasis,
+ she started up in a fright, and said, '_Oh, my God, is_ he
+ _coming_?' thinking it was _her own_, who either was or ought to
+ have been at the theatre. You may suppose we laughed when she found
+ out the mistake. You will be amused, as I was;--it happened not
+ three hours ago.
+
+ "I wrote to you last week, but have added nothing to the third
+ Canto since my fever, nor to 'The Prophecy of Dante.' Of the former
+ there are about 100 octaves done; of the latter about 500
+ lines--perhaps more. Moore saw the third Juan, as far as it then
+ went. I do not know if my fever will let me go on with either, and
+ the tertian lasts, they say, a good while. I had it in Malta on my
+ way home, and the malaria fever in Greece the year before that. The
+ Venetian is not very fierce, but I was delirious one of the nights
+ with it, for an hour or two, and, on my senses coming back, found
+ Fletcher sobbing on one side of the bed, and La Contessa
+ Guiccioli[60] weeping on the other; so that I had no want of
+ attendance. I have not yet taken any physician, because, though I
+ think they may relieve in chronic disorders, such as gout and the
+ like, &c. &c. &c. (though they can't cure them)--just as surgeons
+ are necessary to set bones and tend wounds--yet I think fevers
+ quite out of their reach, and remediable only by diet and nature.
+
+ "I don't like the taste of bark, but I suppose that I must take it
+ soon.
+
+ "Tell Rose that somebody at Milan (an Austrian, Mr. Hoppner says)
+ is answering his book. William Bankes is in quarantine at Trieste.
+ I have not lately heard from you. Excuse this paper: it is long
+ paper shortened for the occasion. What folly is this of Carlile's
+ trial? why let him have the honours of a martyr? it will only
+ advertise the books in question. Yours, &c.
+
+ "P.S. As I tell you that the Guiccioli business is on the eve of
+ exploding in one way or the other, I will just add that, without
+ attempting to influence the decision of the Contessa, a good deal
+ depends upon it. If she and her husband make it up, you will,
+ perhaps, see me in England sooner than you expect. If not, I shall
+ retire with her to France or America, change my name, and lead a
+ quiet provincial life. All this may seem odd, but I have got the
+ poor girl into a scrape; and as neither her birth, nor her rank,
+ nor her connections by birth or marriage are inferior to my own, I
+ am in honour bound to support her through. Besides, she is a very
+ pretty woman--ask Moore--and not yet one and twenty.
+
+ "If she gets over this and I get over my tertian, I will, perhaps,
+ look in at Albemarle Street, some of these days, _en passant_ to
+ Bolivar."
+
+[Footnote 60: The following curious particulars of his delirium are
+given by Madame Guiccioli:--"At the beginning of winter Count Guiccioli
+came from Ravenna to fetch me. When he arrived, Lord Byron was ill of a
+fever, occasioned by his having got wet through;--a violent storm having
+surprised him while taking his usual exercise on horseback. He had been
+delirious the whole night, and I had watched continually by his bedside.
+During his delirium he composed a good many verses, and ordered his
+servant to write them down from his dictation. The rhythm of these
+verses was quite correct, and the poetry itself had no appearance of
+being the work of a delirious mind. He preserved them for some time
+after he got well, and then burned them."--"Sul cominciare dell' inverno
+il Conte Guiccioli venne a prendermi per ricondurmi a Ravenna. Quando
+egli giunse Ld. Byron era ammalato di febbri prese per essersi bagnato
+avendolo sorpreso un forte temporale mentre faceva l' usato suo
+esercizio a cavallo. Egli aveva delirato tutta la notte, ed io aveva
+sempre vegliato presso al suo letto. Nel suo delirio egli compose molti
+versi che ordino al suo domestico di scrivere sotto la sua dittatura. La
+misura dei versi era esatissima, e la poesia pure non pareva opera di
+una mente in delirio. Egli la conservo lungo tempo dopo restabilito--poi
+l' abbruccio."
+
+I have been informed, too, that, during his ravings at this time, he was
+constantly haunted by the idea of his mother-in-law,--taking every one
+that came near him for her, and reproaching those about him for letting
+her enter his room.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 347. TO MR. BANKES.
+
+ "Venice, November 20. 1819.
+
+ "A tertian ague which has troubled me for some time, and the
+ indisposition of my daughter, have prevented me from replying
+ before to your welcome letter. I have not been ignorant of your
+ progress nor of your discoveries, and I trust that you are no worse
+ in health from your labours. You may rely upon finding every body
+ in England eager to reap the fruits of them; and as you have done
+ more than other men, I hope you will not limit yourself to saying
+ less than may do justice to the talents and time you have bestowed
+ on your perilous researches. The first sentence of my letter will
+ have explained to you why I cannot join you at Trieste. I was on
+ the point of setting out for England (before I knew of your
+ arrival) when my child's illness has made her and me dependent on a
+ Venetian Proto-Medico.
+
+ "It is now seven years since you and I met;--which time you have
+ employed better for others and more honourably for yourself than I
+ have done.
+
+ "In England you will find considerable changes, public and
+ private,--you will see some of our old college contemporaries
+ turned into lords of the Treasury, Admiralty, and the like,--others
+ become reformers and orators,--many settled in life, as it is
+ called,--and others settled in death; among the latter, (by the
+ way, not our fellow collegians,) Sheridan, Curran, Lady Melbourne,
+ Monk Lewis, Frederick Douglas, &c. &c. &c.; but you will still find
+ Mr. * * living and all his family, as also * * * * *.
+
+ "Should you come up this way, and I am still here, you need not be
+ assured how glad I shall be to see you; I long to hear some part
+ from you, of that which I expect in no long time to see. At length
+ you have had better fortune than any traveller of equal enterprise
+ (except Humboldt), in returning safe; and after the fate of the
+ Brownes, and the Parkes, and the Burckhardts, it is hardly less
+ surprise than satisfaction to get you back again.
+
+ "Believe me ever
+
+ "And very affectionately yours,
+
+ "BYRON."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 348. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, December 4. 1819.
+
+ "You may do as you please, but you are about a hopeless experiment.
+ Eldon will decide against you, were it only that my name is in the
+ record. You will also recollect that if the publication is
+ pronounced against, on the grounds you mention, as _indecent and
+ blasphemous_, that _I_ lose all right in my daughter's
+ _guardianship_ and _education_, in short, all paternal authority,
+ and every thing concerning her, except * * * * * * * * It was so
+ decided in Shelley's case, because he had written Queen Mab, &c.
+ &c. However, you can ask the lawyers, and do as you like: I do not
+ inhibit you trying the question; I merely state one of the
+ consequences to me. With regard to the copyright, it is hard that
+ you should pay for a nonentity: I will therefore refund it, which I
+ can very well do, not having spent it, nor begun upon it; and so we
+ will be quits on that score. It lies at my banker's.
+
+ "Of the Chancellor's law I am no judge; but take up Tom Jones, and
+ read his Mrs. Waters and Molly Seagrim; or Prior's Hans Carvel and
+ Paulo Purganti: Smollett's Roderick Random, the chapter of Lord
+ Strutwell, and many others; Peregrine Pickle, the scene of the
+ Beggar Girl; Johnson's _London_, for coarse expressions; for
+ instance, the words '* *,' and '* *;' Anstey's Bath Guide, the
+ 'Hearken, Lady Betty, hearken;'--take up, in short, Pope, Prior,
+ Congreve, Dryden, Fielding, Smollett, and let the counsel select
+ passages, and what becomes of _their_ copyright, if his Wat Tyler
+ decision is to pass into a precedent? I have nothing more to say:
+ you must judge for yourselves.
+
+ "I wrote to you some time ago. I have had a tertian ague; my
+ daughter Allegra has been ill also, and I have been almost obliged
+ to run away with a married woman; but with some difficulty, and
+ many internal struggles, I reconciled the lady with her lord, and
+ cured the fever of the child with bark, and my own with cold water.
+ I think of setting out for England by the Tyrol in a few days, so
+ that I could wish you to direct your next letter to Calais. Excuse
+ my writing in great haste and late in the morning, or night,
+ whichever you please to call it. The third Canto of 'Don Juan' is
+ completed, in about two hundred stanzas; very decent, I believe,
+ but do not know, and it is useless to discuss until it be
+ ascertained if it may or may not be a property.
+
+ "My present determination to quit Italy was unlooked for; but I
+ have explained the reasons in letters to my sister and Douglas
+ Kinnaird, a week or two ago. My progress will depend upon the snows
+ of the Tyrol, and the health of my child, who is at present quite
+ recovered; but I hope to get on well, and am
+
+ "Yours ever and truly.
+
+ "P.S. Many thanks for your letters, to which you are not to
+ consider this as an answer, but as an acknowledgment."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The struggle which, at the time of my visit to him, I had found Lord
+Byron so well disposed to make towards averting, as far as now lay in
+his power, some of the mischievous consequences which, both to the
+object of his attachment and himself, were likely to result from their
+connection, had been brought, as the foregoing letters show, to a crisis
+soon after I left him. The Count Guiccioli, on his arrival at Venice,
+insisted, as we have seen, that his lady should return with him; and,
+after some conjugal negotiations, in which Lord Byron does not appear to
+have interfered, the young Contessa consented reluctantly to accompany
+her lord to Ravenna, it being first covenanted that, in future, all
+communication between her and her lover should cease.
+
+"In a few days after this," says Mr. Hoppner, in some notices of his
+noble friend with which he has favoured me, "he returned to Venice, very
+much out of spirits, owing to Madame Guiccioli's departure, and out of
+humour with every body and every thing around him. We resumed our rides
+at the Lido; and I did my best not only to raise his spirits, but to
+make him forget his absent mistress, and to keep him to his purpose of
+returning to England. He went into no society; and having no longer any
+relish for his former occupation, his time, when he was not writing,
+hung heavy enough on hand."
+
+The promise given by the lovers not to correspond was, as all parties
+must have foreseen, soon violated; and the letters Lord Byron addressed
+to the lady, at this time, though written in a language not his own, are
+rendered frequently even eloquent by the mere force of the feeling that
+governed him--a feeling which could not have owed its fuel to fancy
+alone, since now that reality had been so long substituted, it still
+burned on. From one of these letters, dated November 25th, I shall so
+far presume upon the discretionary power vested in me, as to lay a short
+extract or two before the reader--not merely as matters of curiosity,
+but on account of the strong evidence they afford of the struggle
+between passion and a sense of right that now agitated him.
+
+"You are," he says, "and ever will be, my first thought. But, at this
+moment, I am in a state most dreadful, not knowing which way to
+decide;--on the one hand, fearing that I should compromise you for ever,
+by my return to Ravenna and the consequences of such a step, and, on the
+other, dreading that I shall lose both you and myself, and all that I
+have ever known or tasted of happiness, by never seeing you more. I pray
+of you, I implore you to be comforted, and to believe that I cannot
+cease to love you but with my life." [61] In another part he says, "I go
+to save you, and leave a country insupportable to me without you. Your
+letters to F * * and myself do wrong to my motives--but you will yet see
+your injustice. It is not enough that I must leave you--from motives of
+which ere long you will be convinced--it is not enough that I must fly
+from Italy, with a heart deeply wounded, after having passed all my days
+in solitude since your departure, sick both in body and mind--but I must
+also have to endure your reproaches without answering and without
+deserving them. Farewell! in that one word is comprised the death of my
+happiness." [62]
+
+He had now arranged every thing for his departure for England, and had
+even fixed the day, when accounts reached him from Ravenna that the
+Contessa was alarmingly ill;--her sorrow at their separation having so
+much preyed upon her mind, that even her own family, fearful of the
+consequences, had withdrawn all opposition to her wishes, and now, with
+the sanction of Count Guiccioli himself, entreated her lover to hasten
+to Ravenna. What was he, in this dilemma, to do? Already had he
+announced his coming to different friends in England, and every dictate,
+he felt, of prudence and manly fortitude urged his departure. While thus
+balancing between duty and inclination, the day appointed for his
+setting out arrived; and the following picture, from the life, of his
+irresolution on the occasion, is from a letter written by a female
+friend of Madame Guiccioli, who was present at the scene:--"He was ready
+dressed for the journey, his gloves and cap on, and even his little cane
+in his hand. Nothing was now waited for but his coming down
+stairs,--his boxes being already all on board the gondola. At this
+moment, my Lord, by way of pretext, declares, that if it should strike
+one o'clock before every thing was in order (his arms being the only
+thing not yet quite ready), he would not go that day. The hour strikes,
+and he remains!"[63]
+
+The writer adds, "it is evident he has not the heart to go;" and the
+result proved that she had not judged him wrongly. The very next day's
+tidings from Ravenna decided his fate, and he himself, in a letter to
+the Contessa, thus announces the triumph which she had achieved. "F * *
+* will already have told you, _with her accustomed sublimity_, that Love
+has gained the victory. I could not summon up resolution enough to leave
+the country where you are, without, at least, once more seeing you. On
+_yourself_, perhaps, it will depend, whether I ever again shall leave
+you. Of the rest we shall speak when we meet. You ought, by this time,
+to know which is most conducive to your welfare, my presence or my
+absence. For myself, I am a citizen of the world--all countries are
+alike to me. You have ever been, since our first acquaintance, _the sole
+object of my thoughts_. My opinion was, that the best course I could
+adopt, both for your peace and that of all your family, would have been
+to depart and go far, _far_ away from you;--since to have been near and
+not approach you would have been, for me, impossible. You have however
+decided that I am to return to Ravenna. I shall accordingly return--and
+shall _do_--and _be_ all that you wish. I cannot say more.[64]
+
+On quitting Venice he took leave of Mr. Hoppner in a short but cordial
+letter, which I cannot better introduce than by prefixing to it the few
+words of comment with which this excellent friend of the noble poet has
+himself accompanied it:--"I need not say with what painful feeling I
+witnessed the departure of a person who, from the first day of our
+acquaintance, had treated me with unvaried kindness, reposing a
+confidence in me which it was beyond the power of my utmost efforts to
+deserve; admitting me to an intimacy which I had no right to claim, and
+listening with patience, and the greatest good temper, to the
+remonstrances I ventured to make upon his conduct."
+
+[Footnote 61: "Tu sei, e sarai sempre mio primo pensier. Ma in questo
+momento sono in un' stato orribile non sapendo cosa decidere;--temendo,
+da una parte, comprometterti in eterno col mio ritorno a Ravenna, e
+colle sue consequenze; e, dal' altra perderti, e me stesso, e tutto quel
+che ho conosciuto o gustato di felicita, nel non vederti piu. Ti prego,
+ti supplico calmarti, e credere che non posso cessare ad amarti che
+colla vita."]
+
+[Footnote 62: "Io parto, per _salvarti_, e lascio un paese divenuto
+insopportabile senza di te. Le tue lettere alla F * *, ed anche a me
+stesso fanno torto ai miei motivi; ma col tempo vedrai la tua
+ingiustizia. Tu parli del dolor--io lo sento, ma mi mancano le parole.
+Non basta lasciarti per dei motivi dei quali tu eri persuasa (non molto
+tempo fa)--non basta partire dall' Italia col cuore lacerato, dopo aver
+passato tutti i giorni dopo la tua partenza nella solitudine, ammalato
+di corpo e di anima--ma ho anche a sopportare i tuoi rimproveri, senza
+replicarti, e senza meritarli. Addio--in quella parola e compresa la
+morte _di_ mia felicita."
+
+The close of this last sentence exhibits one of the very few instances
+of incorrectness that Lord Byron falls into in these letters;--the
+proper construction being "_della_ mia felicita."]
+
+[Footnote 63: "Egli era tutto vestito di viaggio coi guanti fra le mani,
+col suo bonnet, e persino colla piccola sua canna; non altro aspettavasi
+che egli scendesse le scale, tutti i bauli erano in barca. Milord fa la
+pretesta che se suona un ora dopo il mezzodi e che non sia ogni cosa
+all' ordine (poiche le armi sole non erano in pronto) egli non
+partirebbe piu per quel giorno. L'ora suona ed egli resta."]
+
+[Footnote 64: "La F * * ti avra detta, _colla sua solita sublimita_, che
+l'Amor ha vinto. Io non ho potuto trovare forza di anima per lasciare il
+paese dove tu sei, senza vederti almeno un' altra volta:--forse
+dipendera da _te_ se mai ti lascio piu. Per il resto parleremo. Tu
+dovresti adesso sapere cosa sara piu convenevole al tuo ben essere la
+mia presenza o la mia lontananza. Io sono cittadino del mondo--tutti i
+paesi sono eguali per me. Tu sei stata sempre (dopo che ci siamo
+conosciuti) _l'unico oggetto di miei_ pensieri. Credeva che il miglior
+partito per la pace tua e la pace di tua famiglia fosse il mio partire,
+e andare ben _lontano_; poiche stare vicino e non avvicinarti sarebbe
+per me impossible. Ma tu hai deciso che io debbo ritornare a
+Ravenna--tornaro--e faro--e saro cio die tu vuoi. Non posso dirti di
+piu."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 349. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "My dear Hoppner,
+
+ "Partings are but bitter work at best, so that I shall not venture
+ on a second with you. Pray make my respects to Mrs. Hoppner, and
+ assure her of my unalterable reverence for the singular goodness of
+ her disposition, which is not without its reward even in this
+ world--for those who are no great believers in human virtues would
+ discover enough in her to give them a better opinion of their
+ fellow-creatures and--what is still more difficult--of themselves,
+ as being of the same species, however inferior in approaching its
+ nobler models. Make, too, what excuses you can for my omission of
+ the ceremony of leave-taking. If we all meet again, I will make my
+ humblest apology; if not, recollect that I wished you all well;
+ and, if you can, forget that I have given you a great deal of
+ trouble.
+
+ "Yours," &c. &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 350. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Venice, December 10. 1819.
+
+ "Since I last wrote, I have changed my mind, and shall not come to
+ England. The more I contemplate, the more I dislike the place and
+ the prospect. You may, therefore, address to me as usual _here_,
+ though I mean to go to another city. I have finished the third
+ Canto of Don Juan, but the things I have read and heard discourage
+ all further publication--at least for the present. You may try the
+ copy question, but you'll lose it: the cry is up, and cant is up. I
+ should have no objection to return the price of the copyright, and
+ have written to Mr. Kinnaird by this post on the subject. Talk with
+ him.
+
+ "I have not the patience, nor do I feel interest enough in the
+ question, to contend with the fellows in their own slang; but I
+ perceive Mr. Blackwood's Magazine and one or two others of your
+ missives have been hyperbolical in their praise, and diabolical in
+ their abuse. I like and admire W * *n, and _he_ should not have
+ indulged himself in such outrageous licence.[65] It is overdone and
+ defeats itself. What would he say to the grossness without passion
+ and the misanthropy without feeling of Gulliver's Travels?--When he
+ talks of Lady's Byron's business, he talks of what he knows nothing
+ about; and you may tell him that no one can more desire a public
+ investigation of that affair than I do.
+
+ "I sent home by Moore (_for_ Moore only, who has my Journal also)
+ my Memoir written up to 1816, and I gave him leave to show it to
+ whom he pleased, but _not to publish_, on any account. You may
+ read it, and you may let W * *n read it, if he likes--not for his
+ _public_ opinion, but his private; for I like the man, and care
+ very little about his Magazine. And I could wish Lady B. herself to
+ read it, that she may have it in her power to mark any thing
+ mistaken or mis-stated; as it may probably appear after my
+ extinction, and it would be but fair she should see it,--that is to
+ say, herself willing.
+
+ "Perhaps I may take a journey to you in the spring; but I _have_
+ been ill and _am_ indolent and indecisive, because few things
+ interest me. These fellows first abused me for being gloomy, and
+ now they are wroth that I am, or attempted to be, facetious. I have
+ got such a cold and headach that I can hardly see what I
+ scrawl:--the winters here are as sharp as needles. Some time ago, I
+ wrote to you rather fully about my Italian affairs; at present I
+ can say no more except that you shall hear further by and by.
+
+ "Your Blackwood accuses me of treating women harshly: it may be so,
+ but I have been their martyr; my whole life has been sacrificed
+ _to_ them and _by_ them. I mean to leave Venice in a few days, but
+ you will address your letters _here_ as usual. When I fix
+ elsewhere, you shall know."
+
+[Footnote 65: This is one of the many mistakes into which his distance
+from the scene of literary operations led him. The gentleman, to whom
+the hostile article in the Magazine is here attributed, has never,
+either then or since, written upon the subject of the noble poet's
+character or genius, without giving vent to a feeling of admiration as
+enthusiastic as it is always eloquently and powerfully expressed.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Soon after this letter to Mr. Murray he set out for Ravenna, from which
+place we shall find his correspondence for the next year and a half
+dated. For a short time after his arrival, he took up his residence at
+an inn; but the Count Guiccioli having allowed him to hire a suite of
+apartments in the Palazzo Guiccioli itself, he was once more lodged
+under the same roof with the Countess Guiccioli.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 351. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "Ravenna, Dec. 31. 1819.
+
+ "I have been here this week, and was obliged to put on my armour
+ and go the night after my arrival to the Marquis Cavalli's, where
+ there were between two and three hundred of the best company I have
+ seen in Italy,--more beauty, more youth, and more diamonds among
+ the women than have been seen these fifty years in the
+ Sea-Sodom.[66] I never saw such a difference between two places of
+ the same latitude, (or platitude, it is all one,)--music, dancing,
+ and play, all in the same _salle_. The G.'s object appeared to be
+ to parade her foreign friend as much as possible, and, faith, if
+ she seemed to glory in so doing, it was not for me to be ashamed of
+ it. Nobody seemed surprised;--all the women, on the contrary, were,
+ as it were, delighted with the excellent example. The vice-legate,
+ and all the other vices, were as polite as could be;--and I, who
+ had acted on the reserve, was fairly obliged to take the lady under
+ my arm, and look as much like a cicisbeo as I could on so short a
+ notice,--to say nothing of the embarrassment of a cocked hat and
+ sword, much more formidable to me than ever it will be to the
+ enemy.
+
+ "I write in great haste--do you answer as hastily. I can understand
+ nothing of all this; but it seems as if the G. had been presumed to
+ be _planted_, and was determined to show that she was
+ not,--_plantation_, in this hemisphere, being the greatest moral
+ misfortune. But this is mere conjecture, for I know nothing about
+ it--except that every body are very kind to her, and not
+ discourteous to me. Fathers, and all relations, quite agreeable.
+
+ "Yours ever,
+
+ "B.
+
+ "P.S. Best respects to Mrs. H.
+
+ "I would send the _compliments_ of the season; but the season
+ itself is so complimentary with snow and rain that I wait for
+ sunshine."
+
+[Footnote 66:
+
+ "Gehenna of the waters! thou Sea-Sodom!"
+ MARINO FALIERO.
+]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 352. TO MR. MOORE.
+
+ "January 2. 1320.
+
+ "My dear Moore,
+
+ "'To-day it is my wedding day;
+ And all the folks would stare,
+ If wife should dine at Edmonton,
+ And I should dine at Ware.'
+
+ Or _thus_:
+
+ "Here's a happy new year! but with reason,
+ I beg you'll permit me to say--
+ Wish me many returns of the _season_,
+ But as _few_ as you please of the _day_.
+
+ "My this present writing is to direct you that, if _she chooses_,
+ she may see the MS. Memoir in your possession. I wish her to have
+ fair play, in all cases, even though it will not be published till
+ after my decease. For this purpose, it were but just that Lady B.
+ should know what is there said of her and hers, that she may have
+ full power to remark on or respond to any part or parts, as may
+ seem fitting to herself. This is fair dealing, I presume, in all
+ events.
+
+ "To change the subject, are you in England? I send you an epitaph
+ for Castlereagh. * * * * * Another for Pitt:--
+
+ "With death doom'd to grapple
+ Beneath this cold slab, he
+ Who lied in the Chapel
+ Now lies in the Abbey.
+
+ "The gods seem to have made me poetical this day:--
+
+ "In digging up your bones, Tom Paine,
+ Will. Cobbett has done well:
+ You visit him on earth again,
+ He'll visit you in hell.
+
+ Or,
+
+ "You come to him on earth again,
+ He'll go with you to hell.
+
+ "Pray let not these versiculi go forth with my name, except among
+ the initiated, because my friend H. has foamed into a reformer,
+ and, I greatly fear, will subside into Newgate; since the
+ Honourable House, according to Galignani's Reports of Parliamentary
+ Debates, are menacing a prosecution to a pamphlet of his. I shall
+ be very sorry to hear of any thing but good for him, particularly
+ in these miserable squabbles; but these are the natural effects of
+ taking a part in them.
+
+ "For my own part I had a sad scene since you went. Count Gu. came
+ for his wife, and _none_ of those consequences which Scott
+ prophesied ensued. There was no damages, as in England, and so
+ Scott lost his wager. But there was a great scene, for she would
+ not, at first, go back with him--at least, she _did_ go back with
+ him; but he insisted, reasonably enough, that all communication
+ should be broken off between her and me. So, finding Italy very
+ dull, and having a fever tertian, I packed up my valise, and
+ prepared to cross the Alps; but my daughter fell ill, and detained
+ me.
+
+ "After her arrival at Ravenna, the Guiccioli fell ill again too;
+ and at last, her father (who had, all along, opposed the liaison
+ most violently till now) wrote to me to say that she was in such a
+ state that _he_ begged me to come and see her,--and that her
+ husband had acquiesced, in consequence of her relapse, and that
+ _he_ (her father) would guarantee all this, and that there would be
+ no farther scenes in consequence between them, and that I should
+ not be compromised in any way. I set out soon after, and have been
+ here ever since. I found her a good deal altered, but getting
+ better:--_all_ this comes of reading Corinna.
+
+ "The Carnival is about to begin, and I saw about two or three
+ hundred people at the Marquis Cavalli's the other evening, with as
+ much youth, beauty, and diamonds among the women, as ever averaged
+ in the like number. My appearance in waiting on the Guiccioli was
+ considered as a thing of course. The Marquis is her uncle, and
+ naturally considered me as her relation.
+
+ "The paper is out, and so is the letter. Pray write. Address to
+ Venice, whence the letters will be forwarded. Yours, &c. B."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 353. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "Ravenna, January 20. 1820.
+
+ "I have not decided any thing about remaining at Ravenna. I may
+ stay a day, a week, a year, all my life; but all this depends upon
+ what I can neither see nor foresee. I came because I was called,
+ and will go the moment that I perceive what may render my departure
+ proper. My attachment has neither the blindness of the beginning,
+ nor the microscopic accuracy of the close to such liaisons; but
+ 'time and the hour' must decide upon what I do. I can as yet say
+ nothing, because I hardly know any thing beyond what I have told
+ you.
+
+ "I wrote to you last post for my movables, as there is no getting a
+ lodging with a chair or table here ready; and as I have already
+ some things of the sort at Bologna which I had last summer there
+ for my daughter, I have directed them to be moved; and wish the
+ like to be done with those of Venice, that I may at least get out
+ of the 'Albergo Imperiale,' which _is imperial_ in all true sense
+ of the epithet. Buffini may be paid for his poison. I forgot to
+ thank you and Mrs. Hoppner for a whole treasure of toys for Allegra
+ before our departure; it was very kind, and we are very grateful.
+
+ "Your account of the weeding of the Governor's party is very
+ entertaining. If you do not understand the consular exceptions, I
+ do; and it is right that a man of honour, and a woman of probity,
+ should find it so, particularly in a place where there are not 'ten
+ righteous.' As to nobility--in England none are strictly noble but
+ peers, not even peers' sons, though titled by courtesy; nor knights
+ of the garter, unless of the peerage, so that Castlereagh himself
+ would hardly pass through a foreign herald's ordeal till the death
+ of his father.
+
+ "The snow is a foot deep here. There is a theatre, and opera,--the
+ Barber of Seville. Balls begin on Monday next. Pay the porter for
+ never looking after the gate, and ship my chattels, and let me
+ know, or let Castelli let me know, how my law-suits go on--but fee
+ him only in proportion to his success. Perhaps we may meet in the
+ spring yet, if you are for England. I see H * * has got into a
+ scrape, which does not please me; he should not have gone so deep
+ among those men without calculating the consequences. I used to
+ think myself the most imprudent of all among my friends and
+ acquaintances, but almost begin to doubt it.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 354. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "Ravenna, January 31. 1820.
+
+ "You would hardly have been troubled with the removal of my
+ furniture, but there is none to be had nearer than Bologna, and I
+ have been fain to have that of the rooms which I fitted up for my
+ daughter there in the summer removed here. The expense will be at
+ least as great of the land carriage, so that you see it was
+ necessity, and not choice. Here they get every thing from Bologna,
+ except some lighter articles from Forli or Faenza.
+
+ "If Scott is returned, pray remember me to him, and plead laziness
+ the whole and sole cause of my not replying:--dreadful is the
+ exertion of letter-writing. The Carnival here is less boisterous,
+ but we have balls and a theatre. I carried Bankes to both, and he
+ carried away, I believe, a much more favourable impression of the
+ society here than of that of Venice,--recollect that I speak of the
+ _native_ society only.
+
+ "I am drilling very hard to learn how to double a shawl, and should
+ succeed to admiration if I did not always double it the wrong side
+ out; and then I sometimes confuse and bring away two, so as to put
+ all the Servanti out, besides keeping their _Servite_ in the cold
+ till every body can get back their property. But it is a dreadfully
+ moral place, for you must not look at anybody's wife except your
+ neighbour's,--if you go to the next door but one, you are scolded,
+ and presumed to be perfidious. And then a relazione or an amicizia
+ seems to be a regular affair of from five to fifteen years, at
+ which period, if there occur a widowhood, it finishes by a
+ sposalizio; and in the mean time it has so many rules of its own
+ that it is not much better. A man actually becomes a piece of
+ female property,--they won't let their Serventi marry until there
+ is a vacancy for themselves. I know two instances of this in one
+ family here.
+
+ "To-night there was a ----[67] Lottery after the opera; it is an
+ odd ceremony. Bankes and I took tickets of it, and buffooned
+ together very merrily. He is gone to Firenze. Mrs. J * * should
+ have sent you my postscript; there was no occasion to have bored
+ you in person. I never interfere in anybody's squabbles,--she may
+ scratch your face herself.
+
+ "The weather here has been dreadful--snow several feet--a _fiume_,
+ broke down a bridge, and flooded heaven knows how many _campi_;
+ then rain came--and it is still thawing--so that my saddle-horses
+ have a sinecure till the roads become more practicable. Why did
+ Lega give away the goat? a blockhead--I must have him again.
+
+ "Will you pay Missiaglia and the Buffo Buffini of the Gran
+ Bretagna? I heard from Moore, who is at Paris; I had previously
+ written to him in London, but he has not yet got my letter,
+ apparently.
+
+ "Believe me," &c.
+
+[Footnote 67: The word here, being under the seal, is illegible.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 355. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, February 7. 1820.
+
+ "I have had no letter from you these two months; but since I came
+ here in December, 1819, I sent you a letter for Moore, who is God
+ knows _where_--in Paris or London, I presume. I have copied and
+ cut the third Canto of Don Juan _into two_, because it was too
+ long; and I tell you this beforehand, because in case of any
+ reckoning between you and me, these two are only to go for one, as
+ this was the original form, and, in fact, the two together are not
+ longer than one of the first: so remember that I have not made this
+ division to _double_ upon _you_; but merely to suppress some
+ tediousness in the aspect of the thing. I should have served you a
+ pretty trick if I had sent you, for example, cantos of 50 stanzas
+ each.
+
+ "I am translating the first Canto of Pulci's Morgante Maggiore, and
+ have half done it; but these last days of the Carnival confuse and
+ interrupt every thing.
+
+ "I have not yet sent off the Cantos, and have some doubt whether
+ they ought to be published, for they have not the spirit of the
+ first. The outcry has not frightened but it has _hurt_ me, and I
+ have not written _con amore_ this time. It is very decent, however,
+ and as dull as 'the last new comedy.'
+
+ "I think my translations of Pulci will make you stare. It must be
+ put by the original, stanza for stanza, and verse for verse; and
+ you will see what was permitted in a Catholic country and a bigoted
+ age to a churchman, on the score of religion;--and so tell those
+ buffoons who accuse me of attacking the Liturgy.
+
+ "I write in the greatest haste, it being the hour of the Corso, and
+ I must go and buffoon with the rest. My daughter Allegra is just
+ gone with the Countess G. in Count G.'s coach and six to join the
+ cavalcade, and I must follow with all the rest of the Ravenna
+ world. Our old Cardinal is dead, and the new one not appointed yet;
+ but the masquing goes on the same, the vice-legate being a good
+ governor. We have had hideous frost and snow, but all is mild
+ again.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 356. TO MR. BANKES.
+
+ "Ravenna, February 19. 1820.
+
+ "I have room for you in the house here, as I had in Venice, if you
+ think fit to make use of it; but do not expect to find the same
+ gorgeous suite of tapestried halls. Neither dangers nor tropical
+ heats have ever prevented your penetrating wherever you had a mind
+ to it, and why should the snow now?--Italian snow--fie on it!--so
+ pray come. Tita's heart yearns for you, and mayhap for your silver
+ broad pieces; and your playfellow, the monkey, is alone and
+ inconsolable.
+
+ "I forget whether you admire or tolerate red hair, so that I rather
+ dread showing you all that I have about me and around me in this
+ city. Come, nevertheless,--you can pay Dante a morning visit, and I
+ will undertake that Theodore and Honoria will be most happy to see
+ you in the forest hard by. We Goths, also, of Ravenna, hope you
+ will not despise our arch-Goth, Theodoric. I must leave it to these
+ worthies to entertain you all the fore part of the day, seeing that
+ I have none at all myself--the lark that rouses me from my
+ slumbers, being an afternoon bird. But, then, all your evenings,
+ and as much as you can give me of your nights, will be mine. Ay!
+ and you will find me eating flesh, too, like yourself or any other
+ cannibal, except it be upon Fridays. Then, there are more Cantos
+ (and be d----d to them) of what the courteous reader, Mr. S----,
+ calls Grub Street, in my drawer, which I have a little scheme to
+ commit to your charge for England; only I must first cut up (or cut
+ down) two aforesaid Cantos into three, because I am grown base and
+ mercenary, and it is an ill precedent to let my Mecaenas, Murray,
+ get too much for his money. I am busy, also, with
+ Pulci--translating--servilely translating, stanza for stanza, and
+ line for line--two octaves every night,--the same allowance as at
+ Venice.
+
+ "Would you call at your banker's at Bologna, and ask him for some
+ letters lying there for me, and burn them?--or I will--so do not
+ burn them, but bring them,--and believe me ever and very
+ affectionately Yours,
+
+ "BYRON.
+
+ "P.S. I have a particular wish to hear from yourself something
+ about Cyprus, so pray recollect all that you can.--Good night."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 357. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, February 21. 1820.
+
+ "The bull-dogs will be very agreeable. I have only those of this
+ country, who, though good, have not the tenacity of tooth and
+ stoicism in endurance of my canine fellow-citizens: then pray send
+ them by the readiest conveyance--perhaps best by sea. Mr. Kinnaird
+ will disburse for them, and deduct from the amount on your
+ application or that of Captain Tyler.
+
+ "I see the good old King is gone to his place. One can't help being
+ sorry, though blindness, and age, and insanity, are supposed to be
+ drawbacks on human felicity; but I am not at all sure that the
+ latter, at least, might not render him happier than any of his
+ subjects.
+
+ "I have no thoughts of coming to the coronation, though I should
+ like to see it, and though I have a right to be a puppet in it; but
+ my division with Lady Byron, which has drawn an equinoctial line
+ between me and mine in all other things, will operate in this also
+ to prevent my being in the same procession.
+
+ "By Saturday's post I sent you four packets, containing Cantos
+ third and fourth. Recollect that these two cantos reckon only as
+ _one_ with you and me, being, in fact, the third canto cut into
+ two, because I found it too long. Remember this, and don't imagine
+ that there could be any other motive. The whole is about 225
+ stanzas, more or less, and a lyric of 96 lines, so that they are no
+ longer than the first _single_ cantos: but the truth is, that I
+ made the first too long, and should have cut those down also had I
+ thought better. Instead of saying in future for so many cantos, say
+ so many stanzas or pages: it was Jacob Tonson's way, and certainly
+ the best; it prevents mistakes. I might have sent you a dozen
+ cantos of 40 stanzas each,--those of 'The Minstrel' (Beattie's) are
+ no longer,--and ruined you at once, if you don't suffer as it is.
+ But recollect that you are not _pinned down_ to any thing you say
+ in a letter, and that, calculating even these two cantos as _one_
+ only (which they were and are to be reckoned), you are not bound by
+ your offer. Act as may seem fair to all parties.
+
+ "I have finished my translation of the first Canto of 'The Morgante
+ Maggiore' of Pulci, which I will transcribe and send. It is the
+ parent, not only of Whistlecraft, but of all jocose Italian poetry.
+ You must print it side by side with the original Italian, because I
+ wish the reader to judge of the fidelity: it is stanza for stanza,
+ and often line for line, if not word for word.
+
+ "You ask me for a volume of manners, &c. on Italy. Perhaps I am in
+ the case to know more of them than most Englishmen, because I have
+ lived among the natives, and in parts of the country where
+ Englishmen never resided before (I speak of Romagna and this place
+ particularly); but there are many reasons why I do not choose to
+ treat in print on such a subject. I have lived in their houses and
+ in the heart of their families, sometimes merely as 'amico di
+ casa,' and sometimes as 'amico di cuore' of the Dama, and in
+ neither case do I feel myself authorised in making a book of them.
+ Their moral is not your moral; their life is not your life; you
+ would not understand it; it is not English, nor French, nor German,
+ which you would all understand. The conventual education, the
+ cavalier servitude, the habits of thought and living are so
+ entirely different, and the difference becomes so much more
+ striking the more you live intimately with them, that I know not
+ how to make you comprehend a people who are at once temperate and
+ profligate, serious in their characters and buffoons in their
+ amusements, capable of impressions and passions, which are at once
+ _sudden_ and _durable_ (what you find in no other nation), and who
+ actually have no society (what we would call so), as you may see by
+ their comedies; they have no real comedy, not even in Goldoni, and
+ that is because they have no society to draw it from.
+
+ "Their conversazioni are not society at all. They go to the theatre
+ to talk, and into company to hold their tongues. The _women_ sit in
+ a circle, and the men gather into groups, or they play at dreary
+ faro, or 'lotto reale,' for small sums. Their academic are concerts
+ like our own, with better music and more form. Their best things
+ are the carnival balls and masquerades, when every body runs mad
+ for six weeks. After their dinners and suppers they make extempore
+ verses and buffoon one another; but it is in a humour which you
+ would not enter into, ye of the north.
+
+ "In their houses it is better. I should know something of the
+ matter, having had a pretty general experience among their women,
+ from the fisherman's wife up to the Nobil Dama, whom I serve. Their
+ system has its rules, and its fitnesses, and its decorums, so as to
+ be reduced to a kind of discipline or game at hearts, which admits
+ few deviations, unless you wish to lose it. They are extremely
+ tenacious, and jealous as furies, not permitting their lovers even
+ to marry if they can help it, and keeping them always close to them
+ in public as in private, whenever they can. In short, they transfer
+ marriage to adultery, and strike the _not_ out of that commandment.
+ The reason is, that they marry for their parents, and love for
+ themselves. They exact fidelity from a lover as a debt of honour,
+ while they pay the husband as a tradesman, that is, not at all. You
+ hear a person's character, male or female, canvassed not as
+ depending on their conduct to their husbands or wives, but to their
+ mistress or lover. If I wrote a quarto, I don't know that I could
+ do more than amplify what I have here noted. It is to be observed
+ that while they do all this, the greatest outward respect is to be
+ paid to the husbands, not only by the ladies, but by their
+ Serventi--particularly if the husband serves no one himself (which
+ is not often the case, however); so that you would often suppose
+ them relations--the Servente making the figure of one adopted into
+ the family. Sometimes the ladies run a little restive and elope, or
+ divide, or make a scene: but this is at starting, generally, when
+ they know no better, or when they fall in love with a foreigner, or
+ some such anomaly,--and is always reckoned unnecessary and
+ extravagant.
+
+ "You enquire after Dante's Prophecy: I have not done more than six
+ hundred lines, but will vaticinate at leisure.
+
+ "Of the bust I know nothing. No cameos or seals are to be cut here
+ or elsewhere that I know of, in any good style. Hobhouse should
+ write himself to Thorwaldsen: the bust was made and paid for three
+ years ago.
+
+ "Pray tell Mrs. Leigh to request Lady Byron to urge forward the
+ transfer from the funds. I wrote to Lady Byron on business this
+ post, addressed to the care of Mr. D. Kinnaird."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 358. TO MR. BANKES.
+
+ "Ravenna, February 26. 1820.
+
+ "Pulci and I are waiting for you with impatience; but I suppose we
+ must give way to the attraction of the Bolognese galleries for a
+ time. I know nothing of pictures myself, and care almost as little:
+ but to me there are none like the Venetian--above all, Giorgione. I
+ remember well his Judgment of Solomon in the Mariscalchi in
+ Bologna. The real mother is beautiful, exquisitely beautiful. Buy
+ her, by all means, if you can, and take her home with you: put her
+ in safety: for be assured there are troublous times brewing for
+ Italy; and as I never could keep out of a row in my life, it will
+ be my fate, I dare say, to be over head and ears in it; but no
+ matter, these are the stronger reasons for coming to see me soon.
+
+ "I have more of Scott's novels (for surely they are Scott's) since
+ we met, and am more and more delighted. I think that I even prefer
+ them to his poetry, which (by the way) I redde for the first time
+ in my life in your rooms in Trinity College.
+
+ "There are some curious commentaries on Dante preserved here,
+ which you should see. Believe me ever, faithfully and most
+ affectionately, yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 359. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, March 1. 1820.
+
+ "I sent you by last post the translation of the first Canto of the
+ Morgante Maggiore, and wish you to ask Rose about the word
+ 'sbergo,' _i.e._ 'usbergo,' which I have translated _cuirass_. I
+ suspect that it means _helmet_ also. Now, if so, which of the
+ senses is best accordant with the text? I have adopted cuirass, but
+ will be amenable to reasons. Of the natives, some say one, and some
+ t'other: but they are no great Tuscans in Romagna. However, I will
+ ask Sgricci (the famous improvisatore) to-morrow, who is a native
+ of Arezzo. The Countess Guiccioli who is reckoned a very cultivated
+ young lady, and the dictionary, say _cuirass_. I have written
+ cuirass, but _helmet_ runs in my head nevertheless--and will run in
+ verse very well, whilk is the principal point. I will ask the Sposa
+ Spina Spinelli, too, the Florentine bride of Count Gabriel Rusponi,
+ just imported from Florence, and get the sense out of somebody.
+
+ "I have just been visiting the new Cardinal, who arrived the day
+ before yesterday in his legation. He seems a good old gentleman,
+ pious and simple, and not quite like his predecessor, who was a
+ bon-vivant, in the worldly sense of the words.
+
+ "Enclosed is a letter which I received some time ago from Dallas.
+ It will explain itself. I have not answered it. This comes of doing
+ people good. At one time or another (including copyrights) this
+ person has had about fourteen hundred pounds of my money, and he
+ writes what he calls a posthumous work about me, and a scrubby
+ letter accusing me of treating him ill, when I never did any such
+ thing. It is true that I left off letter-writing, as I have done
+ with almost everybody else; but I can't see how that was misusing
+ him.
+
+ "I look upon his epistle as the consequence of my not sending him
+ another hundred pounds, which he wrote to me for about two years
+ ago, and which I thought proper to withhold, he having had his
+ share, methought, of what I could dispone upon others.
+
+ "In your last you ask me after my articles of domestic wants; I
+ believe they are as usual: the bull-dogs, magnesia, soda-powders,
+ tooth-powders, brushes, and every thing of the kind which are here
+ unattainable. You still ask me to return to England: alas! to what
+ purpose? You do not know what you are requiring. Return I must,
+ probably, some day or other (if I live), sooner or later; but it
+ will not be for pleasure, nor can it end in good. You enquire after
+ my health and SPIRITS in large letters: my health can't be very
+ bad, for I cured myself of a sharp tertian ague, in three weeks,
+ with cold water, which had held my stoutest gondolier for months,
+ notwithstanding all the bark of the apothecary,--a circumstance
+ which surprised Dr. Aglietti, who said it was a proof of great
+ stamina, particularly in so epidemic a season. I did it out of
+ dislike to the taste of bark (which I can't bear), and succeeded,
+ contrary to the prophecies of every body, by simply taking nothing
+ at all. As to _spirits_, they are unequal, now high, now low, like
+ other people's I suppose, and depending upon circumstances.
+
+ "Pray send me W. Scott's new novels. What are their names and
+ characters? I read some of his former ones, at least once a day,
+ for an hour or so. The last are too hurried: he forgets
+ Ravenswood's name, and calls him _Edgar_ and then _Norman_; and
+ Girder, the cooper, is styled now _Gilbert_, and now _John_; and he
+ don't make enough of Montrose; but Dalgetty is excellent, and so is
+ Lucy Ashton, and the b----h her mother. What is _Ivanhoe_? and what
+ do you call his other? are there _two_? Pray make him write at
+ least two a year: I like no reading so well.
+
+ "The editor of the Bologna Telegraph has sent me a paper with
+ extracts from Mr. Mulock's (his name always reminds me of Muley
+ Moloch of Morocco) 'Atheism answered,' in which there is a long
+ eulogium of my poesy, and a great 'compatimento' for my misery. I
+ never could understand what they mean by accusing me of irreligion.
+ However, they may have it their own way. This gentleman seems to be
+ my great admirer, so I take what he says in good part, as he
+ evidently intends kindness, to which I can't accuse myself of being
+ invincible.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 360. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, March 5. 1820.
+
+ "In case, in your country, you should not readily lay hands on the
+ Morgante Maggiore, I send you the original text of the first Canto,
+ to correspond with the translation which I sent you a few days ago.
+ It is from the Naples edition in quarto of 1732,--_dated Florence_,
+ however, by a trick of _the trade_, which you, as one of the allied
+ sovereigns of the profession, will perfectly understand without any
+ further spiegazione.
+
+ "It is strange that here nobody understands the real precise
+ meaning of 'sbergo,' or 'usbergo[68],' an old Tuscan word, which I
+ have rendered _cuirass_ (but am not sure it is not _helmet_). I
+ have asked at least twenty people, learned and ignorant, male and
+ female, including poets, and officers civil and military. The
+ dictionary says _cuirass_, but gives no authority; and a female
+ friend of mine says _positively cuirass_, which makes me doubt the
+ fact still more than before. Ginguene says 'bonnet de fer,' with
+ the usual superficial decision of a Frenchman, so that I can't
+ believe him: and what between the dictionary, the Italian woman,
+ and the Frenchman, there's no trusting to a word they say. The
+ context, too, which should decide, admits equally of either
+ meaning, as you will perceive. Ask Rose, Hobhouse, Merivale, and
+ Foscolo, and vote with the majority. Is Frere a good Tuscan? if he
+ be, bother him too. I have tried, you see, to be as accurate as I
+ well could. This is my third or fourth letter, or packet, within
+ the last twenty days."
+
+[Footnote 68: It has been suggested to me that usbergo is obviously the
+same as hauberk, habergeon, &c. all from the German _halsberg_, or
+covering of the neck.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 361. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, March 14. 1820.
+
+ "Enclosed is Dante's Prophecy--Vision--or what not.[69] Where I
+ have left more than one reading (which I have done often), you may
+ adopt that which Gifford, Frere, Rose, and Hobhouse, and others of
+ your Utican Senate think the best or least bad. The preface will
+ explain all that is explicable. These are but the four first
+ cantos: if approved, I will go on.
+
+ "Pray mind in printing; and let some good Italian scholar correct
+ the Italian quotations.
+
+ "Four days ago I was overturned in an open carriage between the
+ river and a steep bank:--wheels dashed to pieces, slight bruises,
+ narrow escape, and all that; but no harm done, though coachman,
+ foot-man, horses, and vehicle, were all mixed together like
+ macaroni. It was owing to bad driving, as I say; but the coachman
+ swears to a start on the part of the horses. We went against a post
+ on the verge of a steep bank, and capsized. I usually go out of
+ the town in a carriage, and meet the saddle horses at the bridge;
+ it was in going there that we boggled; but I got my ride, as usual,
+ after the accident. They say here it was all owing to St. Antonio
+ of Padua, (serious, I assure you,)--who does thirteen miracles a
+ day,--that worse did not come of it. I have no objection to this
+ being his fourteenth in the four-and-twenty-hours. He presides over
+ overturns and all escapes therefrom, it seems: and they dedicate
+ pictures, &c. to him, as the sailors once did to Neptune, after
+ 'the high Roman fashion.'
+
+ "Yours, in haste."
+
+[Footnote 69: There were in this Poem, originally, three lines of
+remarkable strength and severity, which, as the Italian poet against
+whom they were directed was then living, were omitted in the
+publication. I shall here give them from memory.
+
+ "The prostitution of his Muse and wife,
+ Both beautiful, and both by him debased,
+ Shall salt his bread and give him means of life."
+]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 362. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, March 20. 1820.
+
+ "Last post I sent you 'The Vision of Dante,'--four first Cantos.
+ Enclosed you will find, _line for line_, in _third rhyme_ (_terza
+ rima_), of which your British blackguard reader as yet understands
+ nothing, Fanny of Rimini. You know that she was born here, and
+ married, and slain, from Gary, Boyd, and such people. I have done
+ it into _cramp_ English, line for line, and rhyme for rhyme, to try
+ the possibility. You had best append it to the poems already sent
+ by last three posts. I shall not allow you to play the tricks you
+ did last year, with the prose you _post_-scribed to Mazeppa, which
+ I sent to you _not_ to be published, if not in a periodical
+ paper,--and there you tacked it, without a word of explanation. If
+ this is published, publish it _with the original_, and _together_
+ with the _Pulci_ translation, _or_ the _Dante imitation_. I suppose
+ you have both by now, and the _Juan_ long before.
+
+ "FRANCESCA OF RIMINI.
+
+ "_Translation from the Inferno of Dante, Canto 5th._
+
+ "'The land where I was born sits by the seas,
+ Upon that shore to which the Po descends,
+ With all his followers, in search of peace.
+ Love, which the gentle heart soon apprehends,
+ Seized him for the fair person which was ta'en
+ From me, and me even yet the mode offends.
+ Love, who to none beloved to love again
+ Remits, seized me with wish to please, so strong,
+ That, as thou seest, yet, yet it doth remain.
+ Love to one death conducted us along,
+ But Caina waits for him our life who ended:'
+ These were the accents utter'd by her tongue,--
+ Since first I listen'd to these souls offended,
+ I bow'd my visage and so kept it till--
+
+ {_then_}
+ 'What think'st thou?' said the bard; { when } I unbended,
+ And recommenced: 'Alas! unto such ill
+ How many sweet thoughts, what strong ecstasies
+ Led these their evil fortune to fulfil!'
+ And then I turn'd unto their side my eyes,
+ And said, 'Francesca, thy sad destinies
+ Have made me sorrow till the tears arise.
+ But tell me, in the season of sweet sighs,
+ By what and how thy Love to Passion rose,
+ So as his dim desires to recognise?'
+ Then she to me: 'The greatest of all woes
+ {_recall to mind_}
+ Is to { remind us of } our happy days
+ {_this_}
+ In misery, and { that } thy teacher knows.
+
+ But if to learn our passion's first root preys
+ Upon thy spirit with such sympathy,
+ { _relate_ }
+ I will {do[70] even} as he who weeps and says.--
+ We read one day for pastime, seated nigh,
+ Of Lancilot, how Love enchain'd him too.
+ We were alone, quite unsuspiciously,
+ But oft our eyes met, and our cheeks in hue
+ All o'er discolour'd by that reading were;
+ { _overthrew_ }
+ But one point only wholly {us o'erthrew;}
+ { _desired_ }
+ When we read the {long-sighed-for} smile of her,
+ {_a fervent_}
+ To be thus kiss'd by such { devoted } lover,
+ He who from me can be divided ne'er
+ Kiss'd my mouth, trembling in the act all over.
+ Accursed was the book and he who wrote!
+ That day no further leaf we did uncover.--
+ While thus one Spirit told us of their lot,
+ The other wept, so that with pity's thralls
+ I swoon'd as if by death I had been smote,
+ And fell down even as a dead body falls.'"
+
+
+[Footnote 70: "In some of the editions, it is, 'diro,' in others
+'faro;'--an essential difference between 'saying' and 'doing,' which I
+know not how to decide. Ask Foscolo. The d----d editions drive me mad."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 363. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, March 23. 1820.
+
+ "I have received your letter of the 7th. Besides the four packets
+ you have already received, I have sent the Pulci a few days after,
+ and since (a few days ago) the four first Cantos of Dante's
+ Prophecy, (the best thing I ever wrote, if it be not
+ _unintelligible_,) and by last post a literal translation, word for
+ word (versed like the original), of the episode of Francesca of
+ Rimini. I want to hear what you think of the new Juans, and the
+ translations, and the Vision. They are all things that are, or
+ ought to be, very different from one another.
+
+ "If you choose to make a print from the Venetian, you may; but she
+ don't correspond at all to the character you mean her to represent.
+ On the contrary, the Contessa G. does (except that she is fair),
+ and is much prettier than the Fornarina; but I have no picture of
+ her except a miniature, which is very ill done; and, besides, it
+ would not be proper, on any account whatever, to make such a use of
+ it, even if you had a copy.
+
+ "Recollect that the two new Cantos only count with us for one. You
+ may put the Pulci and Dante together: perhaps that were best. So
+ you have put your name to Juan, after all your panic. You are a
+ rare fellow. I must now put myself in a passion to continue my
+ prose. Yours," &c.
+
+ "I have caused write to Thorwaldsen. Pray be careful in sending my
+ daughter's picture--I mean, that it be not hurt in the carriage,
+ for it is a journey rather long and jolting."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 364. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, March 28. 1820.
+
+ "Enclosed is a 'Screed of Doctrine' for you, of which I will
+ trouble you to acknowledge the receipt by next post. Mr. Hobhouse
+ must have the correction of it for the press. You may show it first
+ to whom you please.
+
+ "I wish to know what became of my two Epistles from St. Paul
+ (translated from the Armenian three years ago and more), and of the
+ letter to R----ts of last autumn, which you never have attended to?
+ There are two packets with this.
+
+ "P.S. I have some thoughts of publishing the 'Hints from Horace,'
+ written ten years ago[71],--if Hobhouse can rummage them out of my
+ papers left at his father's,--with some omissions and alterations
+ previously to be made when I see the proofs."
+
+[Footnote 71: When making the observations which occur in the early part
+of this work, on the singular preference given by the noble author to the
+"Hints from Horace," I was not aware of the revival of this strange
+predilection, which (as it appears from the above letter, and, still more
+strongly, from some that follow) took place so many years after, in the
+full maturity of his powers and taste. Such a delusion is hardly
+conceivable, and can only, perhaps, be accounted for by that tenaciousness
+of early opinions and impressions by which his mind, in other respects so
+versatile, was characterised.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 365. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, March 29. 1820.
+
+ "Herewith you will receive a note (enclosed) on Pope, which you
+ will find tally with a part of the text of last post. I have at
+ last lost all patience with the atrocious cant and nonsense about
+ Pope, with which our present * *s are overflowing, and am
+ determined to make such head against it as an individual can, by
+ prose or verse; and I will at least do it with good will. There is
+ no bearing it any longer; and if it goes on, it will destroy what
+ little good writing or taste remains amongst us. I hope there are
+ still a few men of taste to second me; but if not, I'll battle it
+ alone, convinced that it is in the best cause of English
+ literature.
+
+ "I have sent you so many packets, verse and prose, lately, that you
+ will be tired of the postage, if not of the perusal. I want to
+ answer some parts of your last letter, but I have not time, for I
+ must 'boot and saddle,' as my Captain Craigengelt (an officer of
+ the old Napoleon Italian army) is in waiting, and my groom and
+ cattle to boot.
+
+ "You have given me a screed of metaphor and what not about _Pulci_,
+ and manners, and 'going without clothes, like our Saxon ancestors.'
+ Now, the _Saxons did not go without clothes_; and, in the next
+ place, they are not my ancestors, nor yours either; for mine were
+ Norman, and yours, I take it by your name, were _Gael_. And, in the
+ next, I differ from you about the 'refinement' which has banished
+ the comedies of Congreve. Are not the comedies of _Sheridan_? acted
+ to the thinnest houses? I know (as _ex-committed_) that 'The School
+ for Scandal' was the worst stock piece upon record. I also know
+ that Congreve gave up writing because Mrs. Centlivre's balderdash
+ drove his comedies off. So it is not decency, but stupidity, that
+ does all this; for Sheridan is as decent a writer as need be, and
+ Congreve no worse than Mrs. Centlivre, of whom Wilks (the actor)
+ said, 'not only her play would be damned, but she too.' He alluded
+ to 'A Bold Stroke for a Wife.' But last, and most to the purpose,
+ Pulci is _not_ an _indecent_ writer--at least in his first Canto,
+ as you will have perceived by this time.
+
+ "You talk of _refinement_:--are you all _more_ moral? are you _so_
+ moral? No such thing. _I_ know what the world is in England, by my
+ own proper experience of the best of it--at least of the loftiest;
+ and I have described it every where as it is to be found in all
+ places.
+
+ "But to return. I should like to see the _proofs_ of mine answer,
+ because there will be something to omit or to alter. But pray let
+ it be carefully printed. When convenient let me have an answer.
+
+ "Yours."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 366. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "Ravenna, March 31. 1820.
+
+ "Ravenna continues much the same as I described it. Conversazioni
+ all Lent, and much better ones than any at Venice. There are small
+ games at hazard, that is, faro, where nobody can point more than a
+ shilling or two;--other card-tables, and as much talk and coffee as
+ you please. Every body does and says what they please; and I do not
+ recollect any disagreeable events, except being three times falsely
+ accused of flirtation, and once being robbed of six sixpences by a
+ nobleman of the city, a Count * * *. I did not suspect the
+ illustrious delinquent; but the Countess V * * * and the Marquis L
+ * * * told me of it directly, and also that it was a way he had, of
+ filching money when he saw it before him; but I did not ax him for
+ the cash, but contented myself with telling him that if he did it
+ again, I should anticipate the law.
+
+ "There is to be a theatre in April, and a fair, and an opera, and
+ another opera in June, besides the fine weather of nature's giving,
+ and the rides in the Forest of Pine. With my best respects to Mrs.
+ Hoppner, believe me ever, &c. BYRON.
+
+ "P.S. Could you give me an item of what books remain at Venice? I
+ don't want them, but want to know whether the few that are not here
+ are there, and were not lost by the way. I hope and trust you have
+ got all your wine safe, and that it is drinkable. Allegra is
+ prettier, I think, but as obstinate as a mule, and as ravenous as a
+ vulture: health good, to judge of the complexion--temper tolerable,
+ but for vanity and pertinacity. She thinks herself handsome, and
+ will do as she pleases."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 367. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, April 9. 1820.
+
+ "In the name of all the devils in the printing-office, why don't
+ you write to acknowledge the receipt of the second, third, and
+ fourth packets, viz. the Pulci translation and original, the
+ _Danticles_, the Observations on, &c.? You forget that you keep me
+ in hot water till I know whether they are arrived, or if I must
+ have the bore of re-copying.
+
+ "Have you gotten the cream of translations, Francesca of Rimini,
+ from the Inferno? Why, I have sent you a warehouse of trash within
+ the last month, and you have no sort of feeling about you: a
+ pastry-cook would have had twice the gratitude, and thanked me at
+ least for the quantity.
+
+ "To make the letter heavier, I enclose you the Cardinal Legate's
+ (our Campeius) circular for his conversazione this evening. It is
+ the anniversary of the Pope's _tiara_-tion, and all polite
+ Christians, even of the Lutheran creed, must go and be civil. And
+ there will be a circle, and a faro-table, (for shillings, that is,
+ they don't allow high play,) and all the beauty, nobility, and
+ sanctity of Ravenna present. The Cardinal himself is a very
+ good-natured little fellow, bishop of Muda, and legate here,--a
+ decent believer in all the doctrines of the church. He has kept his
+ housekeeper these forty years * * * *; but is reckoned a pious man,
+ and a moral liver.
+
+ "I am not quite sure that I won't be among you this autumn, for I
+ find that business don't go on--what with trustees and lawyers--as
+ it should do, 'with all deliberate speed.' They differ about
+ investments in Ireland.
+
+ "Between the devil and deep sea,
+ Between the lawyer and trustee,
+
+ I am puzzled; and so much time is lost by my not being upon the
+ spot, what with answers, demurs, rejoinders, that it may be I must
+ come and look to it; for one says do, and t'other don't, so that I
+ know not which way to turn: but perhaps they can manage without
+ me.
+
+ "Yours, &c.
+
+ "P.S. I have begun a tragedy on the subject of Marino Faliero, the
+ Doge of Venice; but you sha'n't see it these six years, if you
+ don't acknowledge my packets with more quickness and precision.
+ _Always write, if but a line_, by return of post, when any thing
+ arrives, which is not a mere letter.
+
+ "Address direct to Ravenna; it saves a week's time, and much
+ postage."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 368. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, April 16. 1820.
+
+ "Post after post arrives without bringing any acknowledgment from
+ you of the different packets (excepting the first) which I sent
+ within the last two months, all of which ought to be arrived long
+ ere now; and as they were announced in other letters, you ought at
+ least to say whether they are come or not. You are not expected to
+ write frequent, or long letters, as your time is much occupied; but
+ when parcels that have cost some pains in the composition, and
+ great trouble in the copying, are sent to you, I should at least be
+ put out of suspense, by the immediate acknowledgment, per return of
+ post, addressed _directly_ to _Ravenna_. I am naturally--knowing
+ what continental posts are--anxious to hear that they are arrived;
+ especially as I loathe the task of copying so much, that if there
+ was a human being that could copy my blotted MSS. he should have
+ all they can ever bring for his trouble. All I desire is two lines,
+ to say, such a day I received such a packet. There are at least six
+ unacknowledged. This is neither kind nor courteous.
+
+ "I have, besides, another reason for desiring you to be speedy,
+ which is, that there is THAT brewing in Italy which will speedily
+ cut off all security of communication, and set all your
+ Anglo-travellers flying in every direction, with their usual
+ fortitude in foreign tumults. The Spanish and French affairs have
+ set the Italians in a ferment; and no wonder: they have been too
+ long trampled on. This will make a sad scene for your exquisite
+ traveller, but not for the resident, who naturally wishes a people
+ to redress itself. I shall, if permitted by the natives, remain to
+ see what will come of it, and perhaps to take a turn with them,
+ like Dugald Dalgetty and his horse, in case of business; for I
+ shall think it by far the most interesting spectacle and moment in
+ existence, to see the Italians send the barbarians of all nations
+ back to their own dens. I have lived long enough among them to feel
+ more for them as a nation than for any other people in existence.
+ But they want union, and they want principle; and I doubt their
+ success. However, they will try, probably, and if they do, it will
+ be a good cause. No Italian can hate an Austrian more than I do:
+ unless it be the English, the Austrians seem to me the most
+ obnoxious race under the sky.
+
+ "But I doubt, if any thing be done, it won't be so quietly as in
+ Spain. To be sure, revolutions are not to be made with rose-water,
+ where there are foreigners as masters.
+
+ "Write while you can; for it is but the toss up of a paul that
+ there will not be a row that will somewhat retard the mail by and
+ by.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 369. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "Ravenna, April 18. 1820.
+
+ "I have caused write to Siri and Willhalm to send with Vincenza, in
+ a boat, the camp-beds and swords left in their care when I quitted
+ Venice. There are also several pounds of Mantons best powder in a
+ Japan case; but unless I felt sure of getting it away from V.
+ without seizure, I won't have it ventured. I can get it in here, by
+ means of an acquaintance in the customs, who has offered to get it
+ ashore for me; but should like to be certiorated of its safety in
+ leaving Venice. I would not lose it for its weight in gold--there
+ is none such in Italy, as I take it to be.
+
+ "I wrote to you a week or so ago, and hope you are in good plight
+ and spirits. Sir Humphry Davy is here, and was last night at the
+ Cardinal's. As I had been there last Sunday, and yesterday was
+ warm, I did not go, which I should have done, if I had thought of
+ meeting the man of chemistry. He called this morning, and I shall
+ go in search of him at Corso time. I believe to-day, being Monday,
+ there is no great conversazione, and only the family one at the
+ Marchese Cavalli's, where I go as a relation sometimes, so that,
+ unless he stays a day or two, we should hardly meet in public.
+
+ "The theatre is to open in May for the fair, if there is not a row
+ in all Italy by that time,--the Spanish business has set them all a
+ constitutioning, and what will be the end, no one knows--it is also
+ necessary thereunto to have a beginning.
+
+ "Yours, &c.
+
+ "P.S. My benediction to Mrs. Hoppner. How is your little boy?
+ Allegra is growing, and has increased in good looks and obstinacy."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 370. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, April 23. 1820.
+
+ "The proofs don't contain the _last_ stanzas of Canto second, but
+ end abruptly with the 105th stanza.
+
+ "I told you long ago that the new Cantos[72] were _not_ good, and I
+ also _told you a reason_. Recollect, I do not oblige you to publish
+ them; you may suppress them, if you like, but I can alter nothing.
+ I have erased the six stanzas about those two impostors * * * *
+ (which I suppose will give you great pleasure), but I can do no
+ more. I can neither recast, nor replace; but I give you leave to
+ put it all into the fire, if you like, or _not_ to publish, and I
+ think that's sufficient.
+
+ "I told you that I wrote on with no good will--that I had been,
+ _not_ frightened, but _hurt_ by the outcry, and, besides, that when
+ I wrote last November, I was ill in body, and in very great
+ distress of mind about some private things of my own; but you would
+ have it: so I sent it to you, and to make it lighter, cut it in
+ two--but I can't piece it together again. I can't cobble: I must
+ 'either make a spoon or spoil a horn,'--and there's an end; for
+ there's no remeid: but I leave you free will to suppress the whole,
+ if you like it.
+
+ "About the _Morgante Maggiore, I won't have a line omitted_. It may
+ circulate, or it may not; but all the criticism on earth sha'n't
+ touch a line, unless it be because it is badly translated. Now you
+ say, and I say, and others say, that the translation is a good one;
+ and so it shall go to press as it is. Pulci must answer for his own
+ irreligion: I answer for the translation only.
+
+ "Pray let Mr. Hobhouse look to the Italian next time in the proofs:
+ this time, while I am scribbling to you, they are corrected by one
+ who passes for the prettiest woman in Romagna, and even the
+ Marches, as far as Ancona, be the other who she may.
+
+ "I am glad you like my answer to your enquiries about Italian
+ society. It is fit you should like _something_, and be d----d to
+ you.
+
+ "My love to Scott. I shall think higher of knighthood ever after
+ for his being dubbed. By the way, he is the first poet titled for
+ his talent in Britain: it has happened abroad before now; but on
+ the Continent titles are universal and worthless. Why don't you
+ send me Ivanhoe and the Monastery? I have never written to Sir
+ Walter, for I know he has a thousand things, and I a thousand
+ nothings, to do; but I hope to see him at Abbotsford before very
+ long, and I will sweat his claret for him, though Italian
+ abstemiousness has made my brain but a shilpit concern for a Scotch
+ sitting 'inter pocula.' I love Scott, and Moore, and all the better
+ brethren; but I hate and abhor that puddle of water-worms whom you
+ have taken into your troop.
+
+ "Yours, &c.
+
+ "P.S. You say that _one half_ is very good: you are _wrong_; for,
+ if it were, it would be the finest poem in existence. _Where_ is
+ the poetry of which _one half_ is good? is it the _AEneid_? is it
+ _Milton's_? is it _Dryden's_? is it any one's except _Pope's_ and
+ _Goldsmith's_, of which _all_ is good? and yet these two last are
+ the poets your pond poets would explode. But if _one half_ of the
+ two new Cantos be good in your opinion, what the devil would you
+ have more? No--no; no poetry is _generally_ good--only by fits and
+ starts--and you are lucky to get a sparkle here and there. You
+ might as well want a midnight _all stars_ as rhyme all perfect.
+
+ "We are on the verge of a _row_ here. Last night they have
+ overwritten all the city walls with 'Up with the republic!' and
+ 'Death to the Pope!' &c. &c. This would be nothing in London, where
+ the walls are privileged. But here it is a different thing: they
+ are not used to such fierce political inscriptions, and the police
+ is all on the alert, and the Cardinal glares pale through all his
+ purple.
+
+ "April 24. 1820. 8 o'clock, P.M.
+
+ "The police have been, all noon and after, searching for the
+ inscribers, but have caught none as yet. They must have been all
+ night about it, for the 'Live republics--Death to Popes and
+ Priests,' are innumerable, and plastered over all the palaces: ours
+ has plenty. There is 'Down with the Nobility,' too; they are down
+ enough already, for that matter. A very heavy rain and wind having
+ come on, I did not go out and 'skirr the country;' but I shall
+ mount to-morrow, and take a canter among the peasantry, who are a
+ savage, resolute race, always riding with guns in their hands. I
+ wonder they don't suspect the serenaders, for they play on the
+ guitar here all night, as in Spain, to their mistresses.
+
+ "Talking of politics, as Caleb Quotem says, pray look at the
+ _conclusion_ of my Ode on _Waterloo_, written in the year 1815,
+ and, comparing it with the Duke de Berri's catastrophe in 1820,
+ tell me if I have not as good a right to the character of '_Vates_'
+ in both senses of the word, as Fitzgerald and Coleridge?
+
+ "'Crimson tears will follow yet--'
+
+ and have not they?
+
+ "I can't pretend to foresee what will happen among you Englishers
+ at this distance, but I vaticinate a row in Italy; in whilk case, I
+ don't know that I won't have a finger in it. I dislike the
+ Austrians, and think the Italians infamously oppressed; and if they
+ begin, why, I will recommend 'the erection of a sconce upon
+ Drumsnab,' like Dugald Dalgetty."
+
+[Footnote 72: Of Don Juan.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 371. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, May 8. 1820.
+
+ "From your not having written again, an intention which your letter
+ of the 7th ultimo indicated, I have to presume that the 'Prophecy
+ of Dante' has not been found more worthy than its predecessors in
+ the eyes of your illustrious synod. In that case, you will be in
+ some perplexity; to end which, I repeat to you, that you are not to
+ consider yourself as bound or pledged to publish any thing because
+ it is _mine_, but always to act according to your own views, or
+ opinions, or those of your friends; and to be sure that you will in
+ no degree offend me by 'declining the article,' to use a technical
+ phrase. The _prose_ observations on John Wilson's attack, I do not
+ intend for publication at this time; and I send a copy of verses to
+ Mr. Kinnaird (they were written last year on crossing the Po) which
+ must _not_ be published either. I mention this, because it is
+ probable he may give you a copy. Pray recollect this, as they are
+ mere verses of society, and written upon private feelings and
+ passions. And, moreover, I can't consent to any mutilations or
+ omissions of _Pulci_: the original has been ever free from such in
+ Italy, the capital of Christianity, and the translation may be so
+ in England; though you will think it strange that they should have
+ allowed such _freedom_ for many centuries to the Morgante, while
+ the other day they confiscated the whole translation of the fourth
+ Canto of Childe Harold, and have persecuted Leoni, the
+ translator--so he writes me, and so I could have told him, had he
+ consulted me before his publication. This shows how much more
+ politics interest men in these parts than religion. Half a dozen
+ invectives against tyranny confiscate Childe Harold in a month; and
+ eight and twenty cantos of quizzing monks and knights, and church
+ government, are let loose for centuries. I copy Leoni's account.
+
+ "'Non ignorera forse che la mia versione del 4 deg. Canto del Childe
+ Harold fu confiscata in ogni parte: ed io stesso ho dovuto soffrir
+ vessazioni altrettanto ridicole quanto illiberaii, ad arte che
+ alcuni versi fossero esclusi dalla censura. Ma siccome il divieto
+ non fa d'ordinario che accrescere la curiosita cos! quel carme
+ sull' Italia e ricercato piu che mai, e penso di farlo ristampare
+ in Inghil-terra senza nulla escludere. Sciagurata condizione di
+ questa mia patria! se patria si puo chiamare una terra cosi
+ avvilita dalla fortuna, dagli uomini, da se medesima.'
+
+ "Rose will translate this to you. Has he had his letter? I enclosed
+ it to you months ago.
+
+ "This intended piece of publication I shall dissuade him from, or
+ he may chance to see the inside of St. Angelo's. The last sentence
+ of his letter is the common and pathetic sentiment of all his
+ countrymen.
+
+ "Sir Humphry Davy was here last fortnight, and I was in his company
+ in the house of a very pretty Italian lady of rank, who, by way of
+ displaying her learning in presence of the great chemist, then
+ describing his fourteenth ascension to Mount Vesuvius, asked 'if
+ there was not a similar volcano in _Ireland_?' My only notion of an
+ Irish volcano consisted of the lake of Killarney, which I naturally
+ conceived her to mean; but, on second thoughts, I divined that she
+ alluded to _Ice_land and to Hecla--and so it proved, though she
+ sustained her volcanic topography for some time with all the
+ amiable pertinacity of 'the feminie.' She soon after turned to me
+ and asked me various questions about Sir Humphry's philosophy, and
+ I explained as well as an oracle his skill in gasen safety lamps,
+ and ungluing the Pompeian MSS. 'But what do you call him?' said
+ she. 'A great chemist,' quoth I. 'What can he do?' repeated the
+ lady. 'Almost any thing,' said I. 'Oh, then, mio caro, do pray beg
+ him to give me something to dye my eyebrows black. I have tried a
+ thousand things, and the colours all come off; and besides, they
+ don't grow; can't he invent something to make them grow?' All this
+ with the greatest earnestness; and what you will be surprised at,
+ she is neither ignorant nor a fool, but really well educated and
+ clever. But they speak like children, when first out of their
+ convents; and, after all, this is better than an English
+ blue-stocking.
+
+ "I did not tell Sir Humphry of this last piece of philosophy, not
+ knowing how he might take it. Davy was much taken with Ravenna, and
+ the PRIMITIVE _Italianism_ of the people, who are unused to
+ foreigners: but he only stayed a day.
+
+ "Send me Scott's novels and some news.
+
+ "P.S. I have begun and advanced into the second act of a tragedy
+ on the subject of the Doge's conspiracy (_i.e._ the story of Marino
+ Faliero); but my present feeling is so little encouraging on such
+ matters, that I begin to think I have mined my talent out, and
+ proceed in no great phantasy of finding a new vein.
+
+ "P.S. I sometimes think (if the Italians don't rise) of coming over
+ to England in the autumn after the coronation, (at which I would
+ not appear, on account of my family schism,) but as yet I can
+ decide nothing. The place must be a great deal changed since I left
+ it, now more than four years ago."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 372. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, May 20. 1820.
+
+ "Murray, my dear, make my respects to Thomas Campbell, and tell him
+ from me, with faith and friendship, three things that he must right
+ in his poets: Firstly, he says Anstey's Bath Guide characters are
+ taken from Smollett. 'Tis impossible:--the Guide was published in
+ 1766, and Humphrey Clinker in 1771--_dunque_, 'tis Smollett who has
+ taken from Anstey. Secondly, he does not know to whom Cowper
+ alludes, when he says that there was one who 'built a church to
+ _God_, and then blasphemed his name:' it was 'Deo erexit
+ _Voltaire_' to whom that maniacal Calvinist and coddled poet
+ alludes. Thirdly, he misquotes and spoils a passage from
+ Shakspeare, 'to gild refined gold, to paint the lily,' &c.; for
+ _lily_ he puts rose, and bedevils in more words than one the whole
+ quotation.
+
+ "Now, Tom is a fine fellow; but he should be correct; for the first
+ is an _injustice_ (to Anstey), the second an _ignorance_, and the
+ third a _blunder_. Tell him all this, and let him take it in good
+ part; for I might have rammed it into a review and rowed
+ him--instead of which, I act like a Christian.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 373. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, May 20. 1820.
+
+ "First and foremost, you must forward my letter to _Moore_ dated 2d
+ _January_, which I said you might open, but desired you _to
+ forward_. Now, you should really not forget these little things,
+ because they do mischief among friends. You are an excellent man, a
+ great man, and live among great men, but do pray recollect your
+ absent friends and authors.
+
+ "In the first place, _your packets_; then a letter from Kinnaird,
+ on the most urgent business; another from Moore, about a
+ communication to Lady Byron of importance; a fourth from the mother
+ of Allegra; and, fifthly, at Ravenna, the Countess G. is on the eve
+ of being separated. But the Italian public are on her side,
+ particularly the women,--and the men also, because they say that
+ _he_ had no business to take the business up now after a year of
+ toleration. All her relations (who are numerous, high in rank, and
+ powerful) are furious _against him_ for his conduct. I am warned to
+ be on my guard, as he is very capable of employing _sicarii_--this
+ is Latin as well as Italian, so you can understand it; but I have
+ arms, and don't mind them, thinking that I could pepper his
+ ragamuffins, if they don't come unawares, and that, if they do, one
+ may as well end that way as another; and it would besides serve
+ _you_ as an advertisement:--
+
+ "Man may escape from rope or gun, &c.
+ But he who takes woman, woman, woman, &c.
+
+ "Yours.
+
+ "P.S. I have looked over the press, but heaven knows how. Think
+ what I have on hand and the post going out to-morrow. Do you
+ remember the epitaph on Voltaire?
+
+ "'Ci-git l'enfant gate,' &c.
+
+ "'Here lies the spoilt child
+ Of the world which he spoil'd.'
+
+ The original is in Grimm and Diderot, &c. &c. &c."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 374. TO MR. MOORE.
+
+ "Ravenna, May 24. 1820.
+
+ "I wrote to you a few days ago. There is also a letter of January
+ last for you at Murray's, which will explain to you why I am here.
+ Murray ought to have forwarded it long ago. I enclose you an
+ epistle from a countrywoman of yours at Paris, which has moved my
+ entrails. You will have the goodness, perhaps, to enquire into the
+ truth of her story, and I will help her as far as I can,--though
+ not in the useless way she proposes. Her letter is evidently
+ unstudied, and so natural, that the orthography is also in a state
+ of nature.
+
+ "Here is a poor creature, ill and solitary, who thinks, as a last
+ resource, of translating you or me into French! Was there ever such
+ a notion? It seems to me the consummation of despair. Pray enquire,
+ and let me know, and, if you could draw a bill on me _here_ for a
+ few hundred francs, at your banker's, I will duly honour it,--that
+ is, if she is not an impostor.[73] If not, let me know, that I may
+ get something remitted by my banker Longhi, of Bologna, for I have
+ no correspondence myself, at Paris: but tell her she must not
+ translate;--if she does, it will be the height of ingratitude.
+
+ "I had a letter (not of the same kind, but in French and flattery)
+ from a Madame Sophie Gail, of Paris, whom I take to be the spouse
+ of a Gallo-Greek of that name. Who is she? and what is she? and how
+ came she to take an interest in my _poeshie_ or its author? If you
+ know her, tell her, with my compliments, that, as I only _read_
+ French, I have not answered her letter; but would have done so in
+ Italian, if I had not thought it would look like an affectation. I
+ have just been scolding my monkey for tearing the seal of her
+ letter, and spoiling a mock book, in which I put rose leaves. I had
+ a civet-cat the other day, too; but it ran away, after scratching
+ my monkey's cheek, and I am in search of it still. It was the
+ fiercest beast I ever saw, and like * * in the face and manner.
+
+ "I have a world of things to say; but, as they are not come to a
+ _denouement_, I don't care to begin their history till it is wound
+ up. After you went, I had a fever, but got well again without bark.
+ Sir Humphry Davy was here the other day, and liked Ravenna very
+ much. He will tell you any thing you may wish to know about the
+ place and your humble servitor.
+
+ "Your apprehensions (arising from Scott's) were unfounded. There
+ are _no damages_ in this country, but there will probably be a
+ separation between them, as her family, which is a principal one,
+ by its connections, are very much against _him_, for the whole of
+ his conduct;--and he is old and obstinate, and she is young and a
+ woman, determined to sacrifice every thing to her affections. I
+ have given her the best advice, viz. to stay with him,--pointing
+ out the state of a separated woman, (for the priests won't let
+ lovers live openly together, unless the husband sanctions it,) and
+ making the most exquisite moral reflections,--but to no purpose.
+ She says, 'I will stay with him, if he will let you remain with me.
+ It is hard that I should be the only woman in Romagna who is not to
+ have her Amico; but, if not, I will not live with him; and as for
+ the consequences, love, &c. &c. &c.'--you know how females reason
+ on such occasions.
+
+ "He says he has let it go on till he can do so no longer. But he
+ wants her to stay, and dismiss me; for he doesn't like to pay back
+ her dowry and to make an alimony. Her relations are rather for the
+ separation, as they detest him,--indeed, so does every body. The
+ populace and the women are, as usual, all for those who are in the
+ wrong, viz. the lady and her lover. I should have retreated, but
+ honour, and an erysipelas which has attacked her, prevent me,--to
+ say nothing of love, for I love her most entirely, though not
+ enough to persuade her to sacrifice every thing to a frenzy. 'I see
+ how it will end; she will be the sixteenth Mrs. Shuffleton.'
+
+ "My paper is finished, and so must this letter.
+
+ "Yours ever, B.
+
+ "P.S. I regret that you have not completed the Italian Fudges.
+ Pray, how come you to be still in Paris? Murray has four or five
+ things of mine in hand--the new Don Juan, which his back-shop synod
+ don't admire;--a translation of the first Canto of Pulci's Morgante
+ Maggiore, excellent;--short ditto from Dante, not so much approved;
+ the Prophecy of Dante, very grand and worthy, &c. &c. &c.;--a
+ furious prose answer to Blackwood's Observations on Don Juan, with
+ a savage Defence of Pope--likely to make a row. The opinions above
+ I quote from Murray and his Utican senate;--you will form your own,
+ when you see the things.
+
+ "You will have no great chance of seeing me, for I begin to think
+ I must finish in Italy. But, if you come my way, you shall have a
+ tureen of macaroni. Pray tell me about yourself, and your intents.
+
+ "My trustees are going to lend Earl Blessington sixty thousand
+ pounds (at six per cent.) on a Dublin mortgage. Only think of my
+ becoming an Irish absentee!"
+
+[Footnote 73: According to his desire, I waited upon this young lady,
+having provided myself with a rouleau of fifteen or twenty Napoleons to
+present to her from his Lordship; but, with a very creditable spirit, my
+young countrywoman declined the gift, saying that Lord Byron had
+mistaken the object of her application to him, which was to request
+that, by allowing her to have the sheets of some of his works before
+publication, he would enable her to prepare early translations for the
+French booksellers, and thus afford her the means of acquiring something
+towards a livelihood.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 375. TO MR. HOPPNER.
+
+ "Ravenna, May 25. 1820.
+
+ "A German named Ruppsecht has sent me, heaven knows why, several
+ Deutsche Gazettes, of all which I understand neither word nor
+ letter. I have sent you the enclosed to beg you to translate to me
+ some remarks, which appear to be _Goethe's upon_ Manfred--and if I
+ may judge by _two_ notes of _admiration_ (generally put after
+ something ridiculous by us) and the word '_hypocondrisch_,' are any
+ thing but favourable. I shall regret this, for I should have been
+ proud of Goethe's good word; but I sha'n't alter my opinion of him,
+ even though he should be savage.
+
+ "Will you excuse this trouble, and do me this favour?--Never
+ mind--soften nothing--I am literary proof--having had good and evil
+ said in most modern languages.
+
+ "Believe me," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 376. TO MR. MOORE.
+
+ "Ravenna, June 1. 1820,
+
+ "I have received a Parisian letter from W.W., which I prefer
+ answering through you, if that worthy be still at Paris, and, as
+ he says, an occasional visiter of yours. In November last he wrote
+ to me a well-meaning letter, stating, for some reasons of his own,
+ his belief that a re-union might be effected between Lady B. and
+ myself. To this I answered as usual; and he sent me a second
+ letter, repeating his notions, which letter I have never answered,
+ having had a thousand other things to think of. He now writes as if
+ he believed that he had offended me by touching on the topic; and I
+ wish you to assure him that I am not at all so,--but, on the
+ contrary, obliged by his good nature. At the same time acquaint him
+ the _thing is impossible. You know this_, as well as I,--and there
+ let it end.
+
+ "I believe that I showed you his epistle in autumn last. He asks me
+ if I have heard of _my_ 'laureat' at Paris[74],--somebody who has
+ written 'a most sanguinary Epitre' against me; but whether in
+ French, or Dutch, or on what score, I know not, and he don't
+ say,--except that (for my satisfaction) he says it is the best
+ thing in the fellow's volume. If there is any thing of the kind
+ that I _ought_ to know, you will doubtless tell me. I suppose it to
+ be something of the usual sort;--he says, he don't remember the
+ author's name.
+
+ "I wrote to you some ten days ago, and expect an answer at your
+ leisure.
+
+ "The separation business still continues, and all the world are
+ implicated, including priests and cardinals. The public opinion is
+ furious against _him_, because he ought to have cut the matter
+ short _at first_, and not waited twelve months to begin. He has
+ been trying at evidence, but can get none _sufficient_; for what
+ would make fifty divorces in England won't do here--there must be
+ the _most decided_ proofs.
+
+ "It is the first cause of the kind attempted in Ravenna for these
+ two hundred years; for, though they often separate, they assign a
+ different motive. You know that the continental incontinent are
+ more delicate than the English, and don't like proclaiming their
+ coronation in a court, even when nobody doubts it.
+
+ "All her relations are furious against him. The father has
+ challenged him--a superfluous valour, for he don't fight, though
+ suspected of two assassinations--one of the famous Monzoni of
+ Forli. Warning was given me not to take such long rides in the Pine
+ Forest without being on my guard; so I take my stiletto and a pair
+ of pistols in my pocket during my daily rides.
+
+ "I won't stir from this place till the matter is settled one way or
+ the other. She is as femininely firm as possible; and the opinion
+ is so much against him, that the _advocates_ decline to undertake
+ his cause, because they say that he is either a fool or a
+ rogue--fool, if he did not discover the liaison till now; and
+ rogue, if he did know it, and waited, for some bad end, to divulge
+ it. In short, there has been nothing like it since the days of
+ Guido di Polenta's family, in these parts.
+
+ "If the man has me taken off, like Polonius 'say, he made a good
+ end,'--for a melodrama. The principal security is, that he has not
+ the courage to spend twenty scudi--the average price of a
+ clean-handed bravo--otherwise there is no want of opportunity, for
+ I ride about the woods every evening, with one servant, and
+ sometimes an acquaintance, who latterly looks a little queer in
+ solitary bits of bushes.
+
+ "Good bye.--Write to yours ever," &c.
+
+[Footnote 74: M. Lamartine.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 377. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, June 7. 1820.
+
+ "Enclosed is something which will interest you, to wit, the opinion
+ of _the_ greatest man of Germany--perhaps of Europe--upon one of
+ the great men of your advertisements, (all 'famous hands,' as Jacob
+ Tonson used to say of his ragamuffins,)--in short, a critique of
+ _Goethe's_ upon _Manfred_. There is the original, an English
+ translation, and an Italian one; keep them all in your
+ archives,--for the opinions of such a man as Goethe, whether
+ favourable or not, are always interesting--and this is more so, as
+ favourable. His _Faust_ I never read, for I don't know German; but
+ Matthew Monk Lewis, in 1816, at Coligny, translated most of it to
+ me _viva voce_, and I was naturally much struck with it; but it was
+ the _Steinbach_ and the _Jungfrau_, and something else, much more
+ than Faustus, that made me write Manfred. The first scene, however,
+ and that of Faustus are very similar. Acknowledge this letter.
+
+ "Yours ever.
+
+ "P.S. I have received _Ivanhoe_;--_good_. Pray send me some
+ tooth-powder and tincture of myrrh, by _Waite_, &c. Ricciardetto
+ should have been _translated literally, or not at all_. As to
+ puffing _Whistlecraft_, it _won't_ do. I'll tell you why some day
+ or other. Cornwall's a poet, but spoilt by the detestable schools
+ of the day. Mrs. Hemans is a poet also, but too stiltified and
+ apostrophic,--and quite wrong. Men died calmly before the Christian
+ era, and since, without Christianity: witness the Romans, and,
+ lately, Thistlewood, Sandt, and Lovel--_men who ought to have been
+ weighed down with their crimes, even had they believed_. A deathbed
+ is a matter of nerves and constitution, and not of religion.
+ Voltaire was frightened, Frederick of Prussia not: Christians the
+ same, according to their strength rather than their creed. What
+ does H * * H * * mean by his stanza? which is octave got drunk or
+ gone mad. He ought to have his ears boxed with Thor's hammer for
+ rhyming so fantastically."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The following is the article from Goethe's "Kunst und Alterthum,"
+enclosed in this letter. The grave confidence with which the venerable
+critic traces the fancies of his brother poet to real persons and
+events, making no difficulty even of a double murder at Florence to
+furnish grounds for his theory, affords an amusing instance of the
+disposition so prevalent throughout Europe, to picture Byron as a man of
+marvels and mysteries, as well in his life as his poetry. To these
+exaggerated, or wholly false notions of him, the numerous fictions
+palmed upon the world of his romantic tours and wonderful adventures in
+places he never saw, and with persons that never existed[75], have, no
+doubt, considerably contributed; and the consequence is, so utterly out
+of truth and nature are the representations of his life and character
+long current upon the Continent, that it may be questioned whether the
+real "flesh and blood" hero of these pages,--the social,
+practical-minded, and, with all his faults and eccentricities, _English_
+Lord Byron,--may not, to the over-exalted imaginations of most of his
+foreign admirers, appear but an ordinary, unromantic, and prosaic
+personage.
+
+[Footnote 75: Of this kind are the accounts, filled with all sorts of
+circumstantial wonders, of his residence in the island of Mytilene;--his
+voyages to Sicily,--to Ithaca, with the Countess Guiccioli, &c. &c. But
+the most absurd, perhaps, of all these fabrications, are the stories
+told by Pouqueville, of the poet's religious conferences in the cell of
+Father Paul, at Athens; and the still more unconscionable fiction in
+which Rizo has indulged, in giving the details of a pretended theatrical
+scene, got up (according to this poetical historian) between Lord Byron
+and the Archbishop of Arta, at the tomb of Botzaris, in Missolonghi.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"GOETHE ON MANFRED.
+
+[1820.]
+
+"Byron's tragedy, Manfred, was to me a wonderful phenomenon, and one
+that closely touched me. This singular intellectual poet has taken my
+Faustus to himself, and extracted from it the strongest nourishment for
+his hypochondriac humour. He has made use of the impelling principles in
+his own way, for his own purposes, so that no one of them remains the
+same; and it is particularly on this account that I cannot enough admire
+his genius. The whole is in this way so completely formed anew, that it
+would be an interesting task for the critic to point out not only the
+alterations he has made, but their degree of resemblance with, or
+dissimilarity to, the original: in the course of which I cannot deny
+that the gloomy heat of an unbounded and exuberant despair becomes at
+last oppressive to us. Yet is the dissatisfaction we feel always
+connected with esteem and admiration.
+
+"We find thus in this tragedy the quintessence of the most astonishing
+talent born to be its own tormentor. The character of Lord Byron's life
+and poetry hardly permits a just and equitable appreciation. He has
+often enough confessed what it is that torments him. He has repeatedly
+pourtrayed it; and scarcely any one feels compassion for this
+intolerable suffering, over which he is ever laboriously ruminating.
+There are, properly speaking, two females whose phantoms for ever haunt
+him, and which, in this piece also, perform principal parts--one under
+the name of Astarte, the other without form or actual presence, and
+merely a voice. Of the horrid occurrence which took place with the
+former, the following is related:--When a bold and enterprising young
+man, he won the affections of a Florentine lady. Her husband discovered
+the amour, and murdered his wife; but the murderer was the same night
+found dead in the street, and there was no one on whom any suspicion
+could be attached. Lord Byron removed from Florence, and these spirits
+haunted him all his life after.
+
+"This romantic incident is rendered highly probable by innumerable
+allusions to it in his poems. As, for instance, when turning his sad
+contemplations inwards, he applies to himself the fatal history of the
+king of Sparta. It is as follows:--Pausanias, a Lacedemonian general,
+acquires glory by the important victory at Plataea, but afterwards
+forfeits the confidence of his countrymen through his arrogance,
+obstinacy, and secret intrigues with the enemies of his country. This
+man draws upon himself the heavy guilt of innocent blood, which attends
+him to his end; for, while commanding the fleet of the allied Greeks, in
+the Black Sea, he is inflamed with a violent passion for a Byzantine
+maiden. After long resistance, he at length obtains her from her
+parents, and she is to be delivered up to him at night. She modestly
+desires the servant to put out the lamp, and, while groping her way in
+the dark, she overturns it. Pausanias is awakened from his
+sleep--apprehensive of an attack from murderers, he seizes his sword,
+and destroys his mistress. The horrid sight never leaves him. Her shade
+pursues him unceasingly, and he implores for aid in vain from the gods
+and the exorcising priests.
+
+"That poet must have a lacerated heart who selects such a scene from
+antiquity, appropriates it to himself, and burdens his tragic image with
+it. The following soliloquy, which is overladen with gloom and a
+weariness of life, is, by this remark, rendered intelligible. We
+recommend it as an exercise to all friends of declamation. Hamlet's
+soliloquy appears improved upon here."[76]
+
+[Footnote 76: The critic here subjoins the soliloquy from Manfred,
+beginning "We are the fools of time and terror," in which the allusion
+to Pausanias occurs.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 378. TO MR. MOORE.
+
+ "Ravenna, June 9. 1820.
+
+ "Galignani has just sent me the Paris edition of your works (which
+ I wrote to order), and I am glad to see my old friends with a
+ French face. I have been skimming and dipping, in and over them,
+ like a swallow, and as pleased as one. It is the first time that I
+ had seen the Melodies without music; and, I don't know how, but I
+ can't read in a music-book--the crotchets confound the words in my
+ head, though I recollect them perfectly when _sung_. Music assists
+ my memory through the ear, not through the eye; I mean, that her
+ quavers perplex me upon paper, but they are a help when heard. And
+ thus I was glad to see the words without their borrowed robes;--to
+ my mind they look none the worse for their nudity.
+
+ "The biographer has made a botch of your life--calling your father
+ 'a _venerable old_ gentleman,' and prattling of 'Addison,' and
+ 'dowager countesses.' If that damned fellow was to _write my_ life,
+ I would certainly _take his_. And then, at the Dublin dinner, you
+ have 'made a speech' (do you recollect, at Douglas K.'s, 'Sir, he
+ made me a speech?') too complimentary to the 'living poets,' and
+ somewhat redolent of universal praise. _I_ am but too well off in
+ it, but * * *.
+
+ "You have not sent me any poetical or personal news of yourself.
+ Why don't you complete an Italian Tour of the Fudges? I have just
+ been turning over Little, which I knew by heart in 1803, being then
+ in my fifteenth summer. Heigho! I believe all the mischief I have
+ ever done, or sung, has been owing to that confounded book of
+ yours.
+
+ "In my last I told you of a cargo of 'Poeshie,' which I had sent to
+ M. at his own impatient desire;--and, now he has got it, he don't
+ like it, and demurs. Perhaps he is right. I have no great opinion
+ of any of my last shipment, except a translation from Pulci, which
+ is word for word, and verse for verse.
+
+ "I am in the third Act of a Tragedy; but whether it will be
+ finished or not, I know not: I have, at this present, too many
+ passions of my own on hand to do justice to those of the dead.
+ Besides the vexations mentioned in my last, I have incurred a
+ quarrel with the Pope's carabiniers, or gens d'armerie, who have
+ petitioned the Cardinal against my liveries, as resembling too
+ nearly their own lousy uniform. They particularly object to the
+ epaulettes, which all the world with us have on upon gala days. My
+ liveries are of the colours conforming to my arms, and have been
+ the family hue since the year 1066.
+
+ "I have sent a tranchant reply, as you may suppose; and have given
+ to understand that, if any soldados of that respectable corps
+ insult my servants, I will do likewise by their gallant commanders;
+ and I have directed my ragamuffins, six in number, who are
+ tolerably savage, to defend themselves, in case of aggression; and,
+ on holidays and gaudy days, I shall arm the whole set, including
+ myself, in case of accidents or treachery. I used to play pretty
+ well at the broad-sword, once upon a time, at Angelo's; but I
+ should like the pistol, our national buccaneer weapon, better,
+ though I am out of practice at present. However, I can 'wink and
+ hold out mine iron.' It makes me think (the whole thing does) of
+ Romeo and Juliet--'now, Gregory, remember thy _swashing_ blow.'
+
+ "All these feuds, however, with the Cavalier for his wife, and the
+ troopers for my liveries, are very tiresome to a quiet man, who
+ does his best to please all the world, and longs for fellowship and
+ good will. Pray write. I am yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 379. TO MR. MOORE.
+
+ "Ravenna, July 13. 1820.
+
+ "To remove or increase your Irish anxiety about my being 'in a
+ wisp[77],' I answer your letter forth-with; premising that, as I am
+ a '_Will_ of the wisp,' I may chance to flit out of it. But, first,
+ a word on the Memoir;--I have no objection, nay, I would rather
+ that _one_ correct copy was taken and deposited in honourable
+ hands, in case of accidents happening to the original; for you know
+ that I have none, and have never even _re_-read, nor, indeed,
+ _read_ at all what is there written; I only know that I wrote it
+ with the fullest intention to be 'faithful and true' in my
+ narrative, but _not_ impartial--no, by the Lord! I can't pretend to
+ be that, while I feel. But I wish to give every body concerned the
+ opportunity to contradict or correct me.
+
+ "I have no objection to any proper person seeing what is there
+ written,--seeing it was written, like every thing else, for the
+ purpose of being read, however much many writings may fail in
+ arriving at that object.
+
+ "With regard to 'the wisp,' the Pope has pronounced _their
+ separation_. The decree came yesterday from Babylon,--it was _she_
+ and _her friends_ who demanded it, on the grounds of her husband's
+ (the noble Count Cavalier's) extraordinary usage. _He_ opposed it
+ with all his might because of the alimony, which has been assigned,
+ with all her goods, chattels, carriage, &c. to be restored by him.
+ In Italy they can't divorce. He insisted on her giving me up, and
+ he would forgive every thing,--* * * * *
+ * * * * * * * * *
+ * * * * * * * But, in this
+ country, the very courts hold such proofs in abhorrence, the
+ Italians being as much more delicate in public than the English, as
+ they are more passionate in private.
+
+ "The friends and relatives, who are numerous and powerful, reply to
+ him--'_You_, yourself, are either fool or knave,--fool, if you did
+ not see the consequences of the approximation of these two young
+ persons,--knave, if you connive at it. Take your choice,--but don't
+ break out (after twelve months of the closest intimacy, under your
+ own eyes and positive sanction) with a scandal, which can only make
+ you ridiculous and her unhappy.'
+
+ "He swore that he thought our intercourse was purely amicable, and
+ that _I_ was more partial to him than to her, till melancholy
+ testimony proved the contrary. To this they answer, that 'Will of
+ _this_ wisp' was not an unknown person, and that 'clamosa Fama' had
+ not proclaimed the purity of my morals;--that _her_ brother, a year
+ ago, wrote from Rome to warn him that his wife would infallibly be
+ led astray by this ignis fatuus, unless he took proper measures,
+ all of which he neglected to take, &c. &c.
+
+ "Now he says that he encouraged my return to Ravenna, to see '_in
+ quanti piedi di acqua siamo_,' and he has found enough to drown him
+ in. In short,
+
+ "'Ce ne fut pas le tout; sa femme se plaignit--
+ Proces--La parente se joint en excuse et dit
+ Que du _Docteur_ venoit tout le mauvais menage;
+ Que cet homme etoit fou, que sa femme etoit sage.
+ On fit casser le mariage.'
+
+ It is but to let the women alone, in the way of conflict, for they
+ are sure to win against the field. She returns to her father's
+ house, and I can only see her under great restrictions--such is the
+ custom of the country. The relations behave very well:--I offered
+ any settlement, but they refused to accept it, and swear she
+ _shan't_ live with G. (as he has tried to prove her faithless), but
+ that he shall maintain her; and, in fact, a judgment to this
+ effect came yesterday. I am, of course, in an awkward situation
+ enough.
+
+ "I have heard no more of the carabiniers who protested against my
+ liveries. They are not popular, those same soldiers, and, in a
+ small row, the other night, one was slain, another wounded, and
+ divers put to flight, by some of the Romagnuole youth, who are
+ dexterous, and somewhat liberal of the knife. The perpetrators are
+ not discovered, but I hope and believe that none of my ragamuffins
+ were in it, though they are somewhat savage, and secretly armed,
+ like most of the inhabitants. It is their way, and saves sometimes
+ a good deal of litigation.
+
+ "There is a revolution at Naples. If so, it will probably leave a
+ card at Ravenna in its way to Lombardy.
+
+ "Your publishers seem to have used you like mine. M. has shuffled,
+ and almost insinuated that my last productions are _dull_. Dull,
+ sir!--damme, dull! I believe he is right. He begs for the
+ completion of my tragedy on Marino Faliero, none of which is yet
+ gone to England. The fifth act is nearly completed, but it is
+ dreadfully long--40 sheets of long paper of 4 pages each--about 150
+ when printed; but 'so full of pastime and prodigality' that I think
+ it will do.
+
+ "Pray send and publish your _Pome_ upon me; and don't be afraid of
+ praising me too highly. I shall pocket my blushes.
+
+ "'Not actionable!'--_Chantre d'enfer!_[78]--by * * that's 'a
+ speech,' and I won't put up with it. A pretty title to give a man
+ for doubting if there be any such place!
+
+ "So my Gail is gone--and Miss Mah_ony_ won't take _Mo_ney. I am
+ very glad of it--I like to be generous free of expense. But beg her
+ not to translate me.
+
+ "Oh, pray tell Galignani that I shall send him a screed of doctrine
+ if he don't be more punctual. Somebody _regularly detains two_, and
+ sometimes _four_, of his Messengers by the way. Do, pray, entreat
+ him to be more precise. News are worth money in this remote kingdom
+ of the Ostrogoths.
+
+ "Pray, reply. I should like much to share some of your Champagne
+ and La Fitte, but I am too Italian for Paris in general. Make
+ Murray send my letter to you--it is full of _epigrams_.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+[Footnote 77: An Irish phrase for being in a scrape.]
+
+[Footnote 78: The title given him by M. Lamartine, in one of his Poems.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the separation that had now taken place between Count Guiccioli and
+his wife, it was one of the conditions that the lady should, in future,
+reside under the paternal roof:--in consequence of which, Madame
+Guiccioli, on the 16th of July, left Ravenna and retired to a villa
+belonging to Count Gamba, about fifteen miles distant from that city.
+Here Lord Byron occasionally visited her--about once or twice, perhaps,
+in a month--passing the rest of his time in perfect solitude. To a mind
+like his, whose world was within itself, such a mode of life could have
+been neither new nor unwelcome; but to the woman, young and admired,
+whose acquaintance with the world and its pleasures had but just begun,
+this change was, it must be confessed, most sudden and trying. Count
+Guiccioli was rich, and, as a young wife, she had gained absolute power
+over him. She was proud, and his station placed her among the highest in
+Ravenna. They had talked of travelling to Naples, Florence, Paris,--and
+every luxury, in short, that wealth could command was at her disposal.
+
+All this she now voluntarily and determinedly sacrificed for Byron. Her
+splendid home abandoned--her relations all openly at war with her--her
+kind father but tolerating, from fondness, what he could not
+approve--she was now, upon a pittance of 200_l._ a year, living apart
+from the world, her sole occupation the task of educating herself for
+her illustrious friend, and her sole reward the few brief glimpses of
+him which their now restricted intercourse allowed. Of the man who could
+inspire and keep alive so devoted a feeling, it may be pronounced with
+confidence that he could not have been such as, in the freaks of his own
+wayward humour, he represented himself; while, on the lady's side, the
+whole history of her attachment goes to prove how completely an Italian
+woman, whether by nature or from her social position, is led to invert
+the usual course of such frailties among ourselves, and, weak in
+resisting the first impulses of passion, to reserve the whole strength
+of her character for a display of constancy and devotedness afterwards.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 380. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, July 17. 1820.
+
+ "I have received some books, and Quarterlies, and Edinburghs, for
+ all which I am grateful: they contain all I know of England, except
+ by Galignani's newspaper.
+
+ "The tragedy is completed, but now comes the task of copy and
+ correction. It is very long, (42 _sheets_ of long paper, of four
+ pages each,) and I believe must make more than 140 or 150 pages,
+ besides many historical extracts as notes, which I mean to append.
+ History is closely followed. Dr. Moore's account is in some
+ respects false, and in all foolish and flippant. _None_ of the
+ chronicles (and I have consulted Sanuto, Sandi, Navagero, and an
+ anonymous Siege of Zara, besides the histories of Laugier, Daru,
+ Sismondi, &c.) state, or even hint, that he begged his life; they
+ merely say that he did not deny the conspiracy. He was one of their
+ great men,--commanded at the siege of Zara,--beat 80,000
+ Hungarians, killing 8000, and at the same time kept the town he was
+ besieging in order,--took Capo d'Istria,--was ambassador at Genoa,
+ Rome, and finally Doge, where he fell for treason, in attempting to
+ alter the government, by what Sanuto calls a judgment on him for,
+ many years before (when Podesta and Captain of Treviso), having
+ knocked down a bishop, who was sluggish in carrying the host at a
+ procession. He 'saddles him,' as Thwackum did Square, 'with a
+ judgment;' but he does not mention whether he had been punished at
+ the time for what would appear very strange, even now, and must
+ have been still more so in an age of papal power and glory. Sanuto
+ says, that Heaven took away his senses for this buffet, and induced
+ him to conspire. 'Pero fu permesso che il Faliero perdette
+ l'intelletto,' &c.
+
+ "I do not know what your parlour-boarders will think of the Drama I
+ have founded upon this extraordinary event. The only similar one in
+ history is the story of Agis, King of Sparta, a prince _with_ the
+ commons against the aristocracy, and losing his life therefor. But
+ it shall be sent when copied.
+
+ "I should be glad to know why your Quarter_ing_ Reviewers, at the
+ close of 'The Fall of Jerusalem,' accuse me of Manicheism? a
+ compliment to which the sweetener of 'one of the mightiest spirits'
+ by no means reconciles me. The poem they review is very noble; but
+ could they not do justice to the writer without converting him into
+ my religious antidote? I am not a Manichean, nor an _Any_-chean. I
+ should like to know what harm my 'poeshies' have done? I can't tell
+ what people mean by making me a hobgoblin."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 381. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, August 31. 1820.
+
+ "I have '_put my soul_' into the tragedy (as you _if_ it); but you
+ know that there are d----d souls as well as tragedies. Recollect
+ that it is not a political play, though it may look like it: it is
+ strictly historical. Read the history and judge.
+
+ "Ada's picture is her mother's. I am glad of it--the mother made a
+ good daughter. Send me Gifford's opinion, and never mind the
+ Archbishop. I can neither send you away, nor give you a hundred
+ pistoles, nor a better taste: I send you a tragedy, and you ask for
+ 'facetious epistles;' a little like your predecessor, who advised
+ Dr. Prideaux to 'put some more humour into his Life of Mahomet.'
+
+ "Bankes is a wonderful fellow. There is hardly one of my school or
+ college contemporaries that has not turned out more or less
+ celebrated. Peel, Palmerstone, Bankes, Hobhouse, Tavistock, Bob
+ Mills, Douglas Kinnaird, &c. &c. have all talked and been talked
+ about.
+
+ "We are here going to fight a little next month, if the Huns don't
+ cross the Po, and probably if they do. I can't say more now. If any
+ thing happens, you have matter for a posthumous work, in MS.; so
+ pray be civil. Depend upon it, there will be savage work, if once
+ they begin here. The French courage proceeds from vanity, the
+ German from phlegm, the Turkish from fanaticism and opium, the
+ Spanish from pride, the English from coolness, the Dutch from
+ obstinacy, the Russian from insensibility, but the _Italian_ from
+ _anger_; so you'll see that they will spare nothing."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 382. TO MR. MOORE.
+
+ "Ravenna, August 31, 1820.
+
+ "D----n your 'mezzo cammin[79]'--you should say 'the prime of
+ life,' a much more consolatory phrase. Besides, it is not correct.
+ I was born in 1788, and consequently am but thirty-two. You are
+ mistaken on another point. The 'Sequin Box' never came into
+ requisition, nor is it likely to do so. It were better that it had,
+ for then a man is not _bound_, you know. As to reform, I did
+ reform--what would you have? 'Rebellion lay in his way, and he
+ found it.' I verily believe that nor you, nor any man of poetical
+ temperament, can avoid a strong passion of some kind. It is the
+ poetry of life. What should I have known or written, had I been a
+ quiet, mercantile politician, or a lord in waiting? A man must
+ travel, and turmoil, or there is no existence. Besides, I only
+ meant to be a Cavalier Servente, and had no idea it would turn out
+ a romance, in the Anglo fashion.
+
+ "However, I suspect I know a thing or two of Italy--more than Lady
+ Morgan has picked up in her posting. What do Englishmen know of
+ Italians beyond their museums and saloons--and some hack * *, _en
+ passant_? Now, I have lived in the heart of their houses, in parts
+ of Italy freshest and least influenced by strangers,--have seen and
+ become (_pars magna fui_) a portion of their hopes, and fears, and
+ passions, and am almost inoculated into a family. This is to see
+ men and things as they are.
+
+ "You say that I called you 'quiet [80]'--I don't recollect any
+ thing of the sort. On the contrary, you are always in scrapes.
+
+ "What think you of the Queen? I hear Mr. Hoby says, 'that it makes
+ him weep to see her, she reminds him so much of Jane Shore.'
+
+ "Mr. Hoby the bootmaker's heart is quite sore,
+ For seeing the Queen makes him think of Jane Shore;
+ And, in fact, * *
+
+ Pray excuse this ribaldry. What is your poem about? Write and tell
+ me all about it and you.
+
+ "Yours, &c.
+
+ "P.S. Did you write the lively quiz on Peter Bell? It has wit
+ enough to be yours, and almost too much to be any body else's now
+ going. It was in Galignani the other day or week."
+
+[Footnote 79: I had congratulated him upon arriving at what Dante calls
+the "mezzo cammin" of life, the age of thirty-three.]
+
+[Footnote 80: I had mistaken the concluding words of his letter of the
+9th of June.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 383. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, September 7. 1820.
+
+ "In correcting the proofs you must refer to the _manuscript_,
+ because there are in it various readings. Pray attend to this, and
+ choose what Gifford thinks best, Let me hear what he thinks of the
+ whole.
+
+ "You speak of Lady * *'s illness; she is not of those who die:--the
+ amiable only do; and those whose death would _do good_ live.
+ Whenever she is pleased to return, it may be presumed she will take
+ her 'divining rod' along with her: it may be of use to her at home,
+ as well as to the 'rich man' of the Evangelists.
+
+ "Pray do not let the papers paragraph me back to England. They may
+ say what they please, any loathsome abuse but that. Contradict it.
+
+ "My last letters will have taught you to expect an explosion here:
+ it was primed and loaded, but they hesitated to fire the train. One
+ of the cities shirked from the league. I cannot write more at large
+ for a thousand reasons. Our 'puir hill folk' offered to strike, and
+ raise the first banner, but Bologna paused; and now 'tis autumn,
+ and the season half over. 'O Jerusalem! Jerusalem!' The Huns are on
+ the Po; but if once they pass it on their way to Naples, all Italy
+ will be behind them. The dogs--the wolves--may they perish like the
+ host of Sennacherib! If you want to publish the Prophecy of Dante,
+ you never will have a better time."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 384. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, Sept. 11. 1820.
+
+ "Here is another historical _note_ for you. I want to be as near
+ truth as the drama can be.
+
+ "Last post I sent you a note fierce as Faliero himself[81], in
+ answer to a trashy tourist, who pretends that he could have been
+ introduced to me. Let me have a proof of it, that I may cut its
+ lava into some shape.
+
+ "What Gifford says is very consolatory (of the first act). English,
+ sterling _genuine English_, is a desideratum amongst you, and I am
+ glad that I have got so much left; though Heaven knows how I
+ retain it: I _hear_ none but from my valet, and his is
+ _Nottinghamshire_: and I _see_ none but in your new publications,
+ and theirs is _no_ language at all, but jargon. Even your * * * *
+ is terribly stilted and affected, with '_very, very_' so soft and
+ pamby.
+
+ "Oh! if ever I do come amongst you again, I will give you such a
+ 'Baviad and Maeviad!' not as good as the old, but even _better
+ merited_. There never was such a _set_ as your _ragamuffins_ (I
+ mean _not_ yours only, but every body's). What with the Cockneys,
+ and the Lakers, and the _followers_ of Scott, and Moore, and Byron,
+ you are in the very uttermost decline and degradation of
+ literature. I can't think of it without all the remorse of a
+ murderer. I wish that Johnson were alive again to crush them!"
+
+[Footnote 81: The angry note against English travellers appended to this
+tragedy, in consequence of an assertion made by some recent tourist,
+that he (or as it afterwards turned out, she) "had repeatedly declined
+an introduction to Lord Byron while in Italy."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 385. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, Sept. 14. 1820.
+
+ "What! not a line? Well, have it your own way.
+
+ "I wish you would inform Perry, that his stupid paragraph is the
+ cause of all my newspapers being stopped in Paris. The fools
+ believe me in your infernal country, and have not sent on their
+ gazettes, so that I know nothing of your beastly trial of the
+ Queen.
+
+ "I cannot avail myself of Mr. Gifford's remarks, because I have
+ received none, except on the first act. Yours, &c.
+
+ "P.S. Do, pray, beg the editors of papers to say any thing
+ blackguard they please; but not to put me amongst their arrivals.
+ They do me more mischief by such nonsense than all their abuse can
+ do."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 386. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, Sept. 21. 1820.
+
+ "So you are at your old tricks again. This is the second packet I
+ have received unaccompanied by a single line of good, bad, or
+ indifferent. It is strange that you have never forwarded any
+ further observations of Gifford's. How am I to alter or amend, if I
+ hear no further? or does this silence mean that it is well enough
+ as it is, or too bad to be repaired? If the last, why do you not
+ say so at once, instead of playing pretty, while you know that soon
+ or late you must out with the truth.
+
+ "Yours, &c.
+
+ "P.S. My sister tells me that you sent to her to enquire where I
+ was, believing in my arrival, _driving a curricle_, &c. &c. into
+ Palace-yard. Do you think me a coxcomb or a madman, to be capable
+ of such an exhibition? My sister knew me better, and told you, that
+ could not be me. You might as well have thought me entering on 'a
+ pale horse,' like Death in the Revelations."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 387. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, Sept. '23. 1820.
+
+ "Get from Mr. Hobhouse, and send me a proof (with the Latin) of my
+ Hints from Horace; it has now the _nonum prematur in annum_
+ complete for its production, being written at Athens in 1811. I
+ have a notion that, with some omissions of names and passages, it
+ will do; and I could put my late observations _for_ Pope amongst
+ the notes, with the date of 1820, and so on. As far as
+ versification goes, it is good; and, on looking back to what I
+ wrote about that period, I am astonished to see how _little_ I have
+ trained on. I wrote better then than now; but that comes of my
+ having fallen into the atrocious bad taste of the times. If I can
+ trim it for present publication, what with the other things you
+ have of mine, you will have a volume or two of _variety_ at least,
+ for there will be all measures, styles, and topics, whether good or
+ no. I am anxious to hear what Gifford thinks of the tragedy: pray
+ let me know. I really do not know what to think myself.
+
+ "If the Germans pass the Po, they will be treated to a mass out of
+ the Cardinal de Retz's _Breviary_. * *'s a fool, and could not
+ understand this: Frere will. It is as pretty a conceit as you would
+ wish to see on a summer's day.
+
+ "Nobody here believes a word of the evidence against the Queen. The
+ very mob cry shame against their countrymen, and say, that for half
+ the money spent upon the trial, any testimony whatever may be
+ brought out of Italy. This you may rely upon as fact. I told you as
+ much before. As to what travellers report, what _are travellers_?
+ Now I have _lived_ among the Italians--not _Florenced_, and
+ _Romed_, and galleried, and conversationed it for a few months, and
+ then home again; but been of their families, and friendships, and
+ feuds, and loves, and councils, and correspondence, in a part of
+ Italy least known to foreigners,--and have been amongst them of all
+ classes, from the Conte to the Contadine; and you may be sure of
+ what I say to you.
+
+ "Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 388. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, Sept. 28. 1820.
+
+ "I thought that I had told you long ago, that it never was intended
+ nor written with any view to the stage. I have said so in the
+ preface too. It is too long and too regular for your stage, the
+ persons too few, and the _unity_ too much observed. It is more like
+ a play of Alfieri's than of your stage (I say this humbly in
+ speaking of that great man); but there is poetry, and it is equal
+ to Manfred, though I know not what esteem is held of Manfred.
+
+ "I have now been nearly as long _out_ of England as I was there
+ during the time I saw you frequently. I came home July 14th, 1811,
+ and left again April 25th, 1816: so that Sept. 28th, 1820, brings
+ me within a very few months of the same duration of time of my stay
+ and my absence. In course, I can know nothing of the public taste
+ and feelings, but from what I glean from letters, &c. Both seem to
+ be as bad as possible.
+
+ "I thought _Anastasius excellent_: did I not say so? Matthews's
+ Diary most excellent; it, and Forsyth, and parts of Hobhouse, are
+ all we have of truth or sense upon Italy. The Letter to Julia very
+ good indeed, I do not despise * * * * * *; but if she knit blue
+ stockings instead of wearing them, it would be better. _You_ are
+ taken in by that false stilted trashy style, which is a mixture of
+ all the styles of the day, which are _all bombastic_ (I don't
+ except my _own_--no one has done more through negligence to corrupt
+ the language); but it is neither English nor poetry. Time will
+ show.
+
+ "I am sorry Gifford has made no further remarks beyond the first
+ Act: does he think all the English equally sterling as he thought
+ the first? You did right to send the proofs: I was a fool; but I do
+ really detest the sight of proofs: it is an absurdity; but comes
+ from laziness.
+
+ "You can steal the two Juans into the world quietly, tagged to the
+ others. The play as you will--the Dante too; but the _Pulci_ I am
+ proud of: it is superb; you have no such translation. It is the
+ best thing I ever did in my life. I wrote the play from beginning
+ to end, and not a _single scene without interruption_, and being
+ obliged to break off in the middle; for I had my hands full, and my
+ head, too, just then; so it can be no great shakes--I mean the
+ play; and the head too, if you like.
+
+ "P.S. Politics here still savage and uncertain. However, we are all
+ in our 'bandaliers,' to join the 'Highlanders if they cross the
+ Forth,' _i.e._ to crush the Austrians if they cross the Po. The
+ rascals!--and that dog Liverpool, to say their subjects are
+ _happy_! If ever I come back, I'll work some of these ministers.
+
+ "Sept. 29.
+
+ "I opened my letter to say, that on reading _more_ of the four
+ volumes on Italy, where the author says 'declined an introduction,'
+ I perceive (_horresco referens_) it is written by a WOMAN!!! In
+ that case you must suppress my note and answer, and all I have said
+ about the book and the writer. I never dreamed of it until now, in
+ my extreme wrath at that precious note. I can only say that I am
+ sorry that a lady should say any thing of the kind. What I would
+ have said to one of the other sex you know already. Her book too
+ (as a _she_ book) is not a bad one; but she evidently don't know
+ the Italians, or rather don't like them, and forgets the _causes_
+ of their misery and profligacy (_Matthews_ and _Forsyth_ are your
+ men for truth and tact), and has gone over Italy in
+ _company_--_always_ a _bad_ plan: you must be _alone_ with people
+ to know them well. Ask her, who was the '_descendant of Lady M.W.
+ Montague_,' and by whom? by Algarotti?
+
+ "I suspect that, in Marino Faliero, you and yours won't like the
+ _politics_, which are perilous to you in these times; but recollect
+ that it is _not a political_ play, and that I was obliged to put
+ into the mouths of the characters the sentiments upon which they
+ acted. I hate all things written like Pizarro, to represent France,
+ England, and so forth. All I have done is meant to be purely
+ Venetian, even to the very prophecy of its present state.
+
+ "Your Angles in general know little of the _Italians_, who detest
+ them for their numbers and their GENOA treachery. Besides, the
+ English travellers have not been composed of the best company. How
+ could they?--out of 100,000, how many gentlemen were there, or
+ honest men?
+
+ "Mitchell's Aristophanes is excellent. Send me the rest of it.
+
+ "These fools will force me to write a book about Italy myself, to
+ give them 'the loud lie.' They prate about assassination; what is
+ it but the origin of duelling--and '_a wild justice_,' as Lord
+ Bacon calls it? It is the fount of the modern point of honour in
+ what the laws can't or _won't_ reach. Every man is liable to it
+ more or less, according to circumstances or place. For instance, I
+ am living here exposed to it daily, for I have happened to make a
+ powerful and unprincipled man my enemy;--and I never sleep the
+ worse for it, or ride in less solitary places, because precaution
+ is useless, and one thinks of it as of a disease which may or may
+ not strike. It is true that there are those here, who, if he did,
+ would 'live to think on't;' but that would not awake my bones: I
+ should be sorry if it would, were they once at rest."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 389. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, 8bre 6 deg., 1820.
+
+ "You will have now received all the Acts, corrected, of the Marino
+ Faliero. What you say of the 'bet of 100 guineas' made by some one
+ who says that he saw me last week, reminds me of what happened in
+ 1810: you can easily ascertain the fact, and it is an odd one.
+
+ "In the latter end of 1811, I met one evening at the Alfred my old
+ school and form fellow (for we were within two of each other, _he_
+ the higher, though both very near the top of our remove,) _Peel_,
+ the Irish secretary. He told me that, in 1810, he met me, as he
+ thought, in St. James's Street, but we passed without speaking. He
+ mentioned this, and it was denied as impossible, I being then in
+ Turkey. A day or two afterward, he pointed out to his brother a
+ person on the opposite side of the way:--'There,' said he, 'is the
+ man whom I took for Byron.' His brother instantly answered, 'Why,
+ it is Byron, and no one else.' But this is not all:--I was _seen_
+ by somebody to _write down my name_ amongst the enquirers after the
+ King's health, then attacked by insanity. Now, at this very period,
+ as nearly as I could make out, I was ill of a _strong fever_ at
+ Patras, caught in the marshes near Olympia, from the _malaria_. If
+ I had died there, this would have been a new ghost story for you.
+ You can easily make out the accuracy of this from Peel himself, who
+ told it in detail. I suppose you will be of the opinion of
+ Lucretius, who (denies the immortality of the soul, but) asserts
+ that from the 'flying off of the surfaces of bodies, these surfaces
+ or cases, like the coats of an onion, are sometimes seen entire
+ when they are separated from it, so that the shapes and shadows of
+ both the dead and living are frequently beheld.'
+
+ "But if they are, are their coats and waistcoats also seen? I do
+ not disbelieve that we may be two by some unconscious process, to a
+ certain sign, but which of these two I happen at present to be, I
+ leave you to decide. I only hope that _t'other me_ behaves like a
+ gemman.
+
+ "I wish you would get Peel asked how far I am accurate in my
+ recollection of what he told me; for I don't like to say such
+ things without authority.
+
+ "I am not sure that I was _not spoken_ with; but this also you can
+ ascertain. I have written to you such letters that I stop.
+
+ "Yours, &c.
+
+ "P.S. Last year (in June, 1819), I met at Count Mosti's, at
+ Ferrara, an Italian who asked me 'if I knew Lord Byron?' I told him
+ _no_ (no one knows himself, _you_ know). 'Then,' says he, 'I do; I
+ met him at Naples the other day.' I pulled out my card and asked
+ him if that was the way he spelt his name: he answered, _yes_. I
+ suspect that it was a blackguard navy surgeon, who attended a young
+ travelling madam about, and passed himself for a lord at the
+ post-houses. He was a vulgar dog--quite of the cock-pit order--and
+ a precious representative I must have had of him, if it was even
+ so; but I don't know. He passed himself off as a gentleman, and
+ squired about a Countess * * (of this place), then at Venice, an
+ ugly battered woman, of bad morals even for Italy."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 390. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, 8bre 8 deg., 1820.
+
+ "Foscolo's letter is exactly the thing wanted; firstly, because he
+ is a man of genius; and, next, because he is an Italian, and
+ therefore the best judge of Italics. Besides,
+
+ "He's more an antique Roman than a Dane;
+
+ that is, he is more of the ancient Greek than of the modern
+ Italian. Though 'somewhat,' as Dugald Dalgetty says, 'too wild and
+ sa_l_vage' (like 'Ronald of the Mist'), 'tis a wonderful man, and
+ my friends Hobhouse and Rose both swear by him; and they are good
+ judges of men and of Italian humanity.
+
+ "Here are in all _two_ worthy voices gain'd:
+
+ Gifford says it is good 'sterling genuine English,' and Foscolo
+ says that the characters are right Venetian. Shakspeare and Otway
+ had a million of advantages over me, besides the incalculable one
+ of being _dead_ from one to two centuries, and having been both
+ born blackguards (which ARE such attractions to the gentle living
+ reader); let me then preserve the only one which I could possibly
+ have--that of having been at Venice, and entered more into the
+ local spirit of it. I claim no more.
+
+ "I know what Foscolo means about Calendaro's _spitting_ at Bertram;
+ _that's_ national--the objection, I mean. The Italians and French,
+ with those 'flags of abomination,' their pocket handkerchiefs, spit
+ there, and here, and every where else--in your face almost, and
+ therefore _object_ to it on the stage as _too familiar_. But we who
+ _spit_ nowhere--but in a man's face when we grow savage--are not
+ likely to feel this. Remember _Massinger_, and Kean's Sir Giles
+ Overreach--
+
+ "Lord! _thus_ I _spit_ at thee and at thy counsel!
+
+ Besides, Calendaro does _not_ spit in Bertram's face; he spits _at_
+ him, as I have seen the Mussulmans do upon the ground when they are
+ in a rage. Again, he _does not in fact despise_ Bertram, though he
+ affects it--as we all do, when angry with one we think our
+ inferior. He is angry at not being allowed to die in his own way
+ (although not afraid of death); and recollect that he suspected and
+ hated Bertram from the first. Israel Bertuccio, on the other hand,
+ is a cooler and more concentrated fellow: he acts upon _principle
+ and impulse_; Calendaro upon _impulse_ and _example_.
+
+ "So there's argument for you.
+
+ "The Doge _repeats_;--_true_, but it is from engrossing passion,
+ and because he sees _different_ persons, and is always obliged to
+ recur to the _cause_ uppermost in his mind. His speeches are
+ long:--true, but I wrote for the _closet_, and on the French and
+ Italian model rather than yours, which I think not very highly of,
+ for all your _old_ dramatists, who are long enough too, God
+ knows:--_look_ into any of them.
+
+ "I return you Foscolo's letter, because it alludes also to his
+ private affairs. I am sorry to see such a man in straits, because I
+ know what they are, or what they were. I never met but three men
+ who would have held out a finger to me: one was yourself, the other
+ William Bankes, and the other a nobleman long ago dead: but of
+ these the first was the only one who offered it while I _really_
+ wanted it; the second from good will--but I was not in need of
+ Bankes's aid, and would not have accepted it if I had (though I
+ love and esteem him); and the _third_ --------.[82]
+
+ "So you see that I have seen some strange things in my time. As for
+ your own offer, it was in 1815, when I was in actual uncertainty of
+ five pounds. I rejected it; but I have not forgotten it, although
+ you probably have.
+
+ "P.S. Foscolo's Ricciardo was lent, with the _leaves uncut_, to
+ some Italians, now in villeggiatura, so that I have had no
+ opportunity of hearing their decision, or of reading it. They
+ seized on it as Foscolo's, and on account of the beauty of the
+ paper and printing, directly. If I find it takes, I will reprint it
+ _here_. The Italians think as highly of Foscolo as they can of any
+ man, divided and miserable as they are, and with neither leisure at
+ present to read, nor head nor heart to judge of any thing but
+ extracts from French newspapers and the Lugano Gazette.
+
+ "We are all looking at one another, like wolves on their prey in
+ pursuit, only waiting for the first falling on to do unutterable
+ things. They are a great world in chaos, or angels in hell, which
+ you please; but out of chaos came Paradise, and out of hell--I
+ don't know what; but the devil went _in_ there, and he was a fine
+ fellow once, you know.
+
+ "You need never favour me with any periodical publication, except
+ the Edinburgh Quarterly, and an occasional Blackwood; or now and
+ then a Monthly Review; for the rest I do not feel curiosity enough
+ to look beyond their covers.
+
+ "To be sure I took in the British finely. He fell precisely into
+ the glaring trap laid for him. It was inconceivable how he could be
+ so absurd as to imagine us serious with him.
+
+ "Recollect, that if you put my name to 'Don Juan' in these canting
+ days, any lawyer might oppose my guardian right of my daughter in
+ Chancery, on the plea of its containing the _parody_;--such are the
+ perils of a foolish jest. I was not aware of this at the time, but
+ you will find it correct, I believe; and you may be sure that the
+ Noels would not let it slip. Now I prefer my child to a poem at any
+ time, and so should you, as having half a dozen.
+
+ "Let me know your notions.
+
+ "If you turn over the earlier pages of the Huntingdon peerage
+ story, you will see how common a name Ada was in the early
+ Plantagenet days. I found it in my own pedigree in the reign of
+ John and Henry, and gave it to my daughter. It was also the name of
+ Charlemagne's sister. It is in an early chapter of Genesis, as the
+ name of the wife of Lamech; and I suppose Ada is the feminine of
+ _Adam_. It is short, ancient, vocalic, and had been in my family;
+ for which reason I gave it to my daughter."
+
+[Footnote 82: The paragraph is left thus imperfect in the original.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 391. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, 8bre 12 deg., 1820.
+
+ "By land and sea carriage a considerable quantity of books have
+ arrived; and I am obliged and grateful: but 'medio de fonte
+ leporum, surgit amari aliquid,' &c. &c.; which, being interpreted,
+ means,
+
+ "I'm thankful for your books, dear Murray;
+ But why not send Scott's Monast_ery_?
+
+ the only book in four _living_ volumes I would give a baioccolo to
+ see--'bating the rest of the same author, and an occasional
+ Edinburgh and Quarterly, as brief chroniclers of the times. Instead
+ of this, here are Johnny Keats's * * poetry, and three novels by
+ God knows whom, except that there is Peg * * *'s name to one of
+ them--a spinster whom I thought we had sent back to her spinning.
+ Crayon is very good; Hogg's Tales rough, but RACY, and welcome.
+
+ "Books of travels are expensive, and I don't want them, having
+ travelled already; besides, they lie. Thank the author of 'The
+ Profligate' for his (or her) present. Pray send me _no more_ poetry
+ but what is rare and decidedly good. There is such a trash of Keats
+ and the like upon my tables that I am ashamed to look at them. I
+ say nothing against your parsons, your S * *s and your C * *s--it
+ is all very fine--but pray dispense me from the pleasure. Instead
+ of poetry, if you will favour me with a few soda-powders, I shall
+ be delighted: but all prose ('bating _travels_ and novels NOT by
+ Scott) is welcome, especially Scott's Tales of my Landlord, and so
+ on.
+
+ "In the notes to Marino Faliero, it may be as well to say that
+ '_Benintende_' was not really of _the Ten_, but merely _Grand
+ Chancellor_, a separate office (although important): it was an
+ arbitrary alteration of mine. The Doges too were all _buried_ in
+ St. _Mark's before_ Faliero. It is singular that when his
+ predecessor, Andrea Dandolo, died, _the Ten_ made a law that _all_
+ the _future Doges_ should be _buried with their families, in their
+ own churches,--one would think by a kind of presentiment_. So that
+ all that is said of his _ancestral Doges_, as buried at St. John's
+ and Paul's, is altered from the fact, _they being in St. Mark's.
+ Make a note_ of this, and put _Editor_ as the subscription to it.
+
+ "As I make such pretensions to accuracy, I should not like to be
+ _twitted_ even with such trifles on that score. Of the play they
+ may say what they please, but not so of my costume and _dram.
+ pers._ they having been real existences.
+
+ "I omitted Foscolo in my list of living _Venetian worthies, in the
+ notes_, considering him as an _Italian_ in general, and not a mere
+ provincial like the rest; and as an Italian I have spoken of him in
+ the preface to Canto 4th of Childe Harold.
+
+ "The French translation of us!!! _oime! oime!_--the German; but I
+ don't understand the latter and his long dissertation at the end
+ about the Fausts. Excuse haste. Of politics it is not safe to
+ speak, but nothing is decided as yet.
+
+ "I am in a very fierce humour at not having Scott's Monastery. You
+ are _too liberal_ in quantity, and somewhat careless of the
+ quality, of your missives. All the _Quarterlies_ (four in number) I
+ had had before from you, and _two_ of the Edinburgh; but no matter;
+ we shall have new ones by and by. No more Keats, I entreat:--flay
+ him alive; if some of you don't, I must skin him myself. There is
+ no bearing the drivelling idiotism of the manikin.
+
+ "I don't feel inclined to care further about 'Don Juan.' What do
+ you think a very pretty Italian lady said to me the other day? She
+ had read it in the French, and paid me some compliments, with due
+ DRAWBACKS, upon it. I answered that what she said was true, but
+ that I suspected it would live longer than Childe Harold. '_Ah
+ but_' (said she). '_I would rather have the fame of Childe Harold
+ for three years than an_ IMMORTALITY _of Don Juan!_' The truth is
+ that _it is_ TOO TRUE, and the women hate many things which strip
+ off the tinsel of _sentiment_; and they are right, as it would rob
+ them of their weapons. I never knew a woman who did not hate _De
+ Grammont's Memoirs_ for the same reason: even Lady * * used to
+ abuse them.
+
+ "Rose's work I never received. It was seized at Venice. Such is the
+ liberality of the Huns, with their two hundred thousand men, that
+ they dare not let such a volume as his circulate."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 392. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, 8bre 16 deg., 1820.
+
+ "The Abbot has just arrived; many thanks; as also for the
+ _Monastery--when you send it!!!_
+
+ "The Abbot will have a more than ordinary interest for me, for an
+ ancestor of mine by the mother's side, Sir J. Gordon of Gight, the
+ handsomest of his day, died on a scaffold at Aberdeen for his
+ loyalty to Mary, of whom he was an imputed paramour as well as her
+ relation. His fate was much commented on in the Chronicles of the
+ times. If I mistake not, he had something to do with her escape
+ from Loch Leven, or with her captivity there. But this you will
+ know better than I.
+
+ "I recollect Loch Leven as it were but yesterday. I saw it in my
+ way to England in 1798, being then ten years of age. My mother, who
+ was as haughty as Lucifer with her descent from the Stuarts, and
+ her right line from the _old Gordons, not the Seyton Gordons_, as
+ she disdainfully termed the ducal branch, told me the story, always
+ reminding me how superior _her_ Gordons were to the southern
+ Byrons, notwithstanding our Norman, and always masculine descent,
+ which has never lapsed into a female, as my mother's Gordons had
+ done in her own person.
+
+ "I have written to you so often lately, that the brevity of this
+ will be welcome. Yours," &c.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LETTER 393. TO MR. MURRAY.
+
+ "Ravenna, 8bre 17 deg., 1820.
+
+ "Enclosed is the Dedication of Marino Faliero to _Goethe_.
+ Query,--is his title _Baron_ or not? I think yes. Let me know your
+ opinion, and so forth.
+
+ "P.S. Let me know what Mr. Hobhouse and you have decided about the
+ two prose letters and their publication.
+
+ "I enclose you an Italian abstract of the German translator of
+ Manfred's Appendix, in which you will perceive quoted what Goethe
+ says of the _whole body_ of English poetry (and _not_ of me in
+ particular). On this the Dedication is founded, as you will
+ perceive, though I had thought of it before, for I look upon him as
+ a great man."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The very singular Dedication transmitted with this letter has never
+before been published, nor, as far as I can learn, ever reached the
+hands of the illustrious German. It is written in the poet's most
+whimsical and mocking mood; and the unmeasured severity poured out in it
+upon the two favourite objects of his wrath and ridicule compels me to
+deprive the reader of some of its most amusing passages.
+
+DEDICATION TO BARON GOETHE, &c. &c. &c.
+
+ "Sir,--In the Appendix to an English work lately translated into
+ German and published at Leipsic, a judgment of yours upon English
+ poetry is quoted as follows: 'That in English poetry, great genius,
+ universal power, a feeling of profundity, with sufficient
+ tenderness and force, are to be found; but that _altogether these
+ do not constitute poets_,' &c. &c.
+
+ "I regret to see a great man falling into a great mistake. This
+ opinion of yours only proves that the '_Dictionary of ten thousand
+ living English Authors_' has not been translated into German. You
+ will have read, in your friend Schlegel's version, the dialogue in
+ Macbeth--
+
+ "'There are _ten thousand_!
+ _Macbeth_. _Geese_, villain?
+ _Answer_. _Authors_, sir.'
+
+ Now, of these 'ten thousand authors,' there are actually nineteen
+ hundred and eighty-seven poets, all alive at this moment, whatever
+ their works may be, as their booksellers well know; and amongst
+ these there are several who possess a far greater reputation than
+ mine, although considerably less than yours. It is owing to this
+ neglect on the part of your German translators that you are not
+ aware of the works of * * *.
+
+ "There is also another, named * * * *
+
+ "I mention these poets by way of sample to enlighten you. They form
+ but two bricks of our Babel, (WINDSOR bricks, by the way,) but may
+ serve for a specimen of the building.
+
+ "It is, moreover, asserted that 'the predominant character of the
+ whole body of the present English poetry is a _disgust_ and
+ _contempt_ for life.' But I rather suspect that, by one single work
+ of _prose_, _you_ yourself have excited a greater contempt for life
+ than all the English volumes of poesy that ever were written.
+ Madame de Stael says, that 'Werther has occasioned more suicides
+ than the most beautiful woman;' and I really believe that he has
+ put more individuals out of this world than Napoleon himself,
+ except in the way of his profession. Perhaps, Illustrious Sir, the
+ acrimonious judgment passed by a celebrated northern journal upon
+ you in particular, and the Germans in general, has rather
+ indisposed you towards English poetry as well as criticism. But you
+ must not regard our critics, who are at bottom good-natured
+ fellows, considering their two professions,--taking up the law in
+ court, and laying it down out of it. No one can more lament their
+ hasty and unfair judgment, in your particular, than I do; and I so
+ expressed myself to your friend Schlegel, in 1816, at Coppet.
+
+ "In behalf of my 'ten thousand' living brethren, and of myself, I
+ have thus far taken notice of an opinion expressed with regard to
+ 'English poetry' in general, and which merited notice, because it
+ was YOURS.
+
+ "My principal object in addressing you was to testify my sincere
+ respect and admiration of a man, who, for half a century, has led
+ the literature of a great nation, and will go down to posterity as
+ the first literary character of his age.
+
+ "You have been fortunate, Sir, not only in the writings which have
+ illustrated your name, but in the name itself, as being
+ sufficiently musical for the articulation of posterity. In this you
+ have the advantage of some of your countrymen, whose names would
+ perhaps be immortal also--if any body could pronounce them.
+
+ "It may, perhaps, be supposed, by this apparent tone of levity,
+ that I am wanting in intentional respect towards you; but this will
+ be a mistake: I am always flippant in prose. Considering you, as I
+ really and warmly do, in common with all your own, and with most
+ other nations, to be by far the first literary character which has
+ existed in Europe since the death of Voltaire, I felt, and feel,
+ desirous to inscribe to you the following work,--_not_ as being
+ either a tragedy or a _poem_, (for I cannot pronounce upon its
+ pretensions to be either one or the other, or both, or neither,)
+ but as a mark of esteem and admiration from a foreigner to the man
+ who has been hailed in Germany 'THE GREAT GOETHE.'
+
+ "I have the honour to be,
+
+ "With the truest respect,
+
+ "Your most obedient and
+
+ "Very humble servant,
+
+ "BYRON.
+
+ "Ravenna, 8bre 14 deg., 1820.
+
+ "P.S. I perceive that in Germany, as well as in Italy, there is a
+ great struggle about what they call '_Classical_' and
+ '_Romantic_,'--terms which were not subjects of classification in
+ England, at least when I left it four or five years ago. Some of
+ the English scribblers, it is true, abused Pope and Swift, but the
+ reason was that they themselves did not know how to write either
+ prose or verse; but nobody thought them worth making a sect of.
+ Perhaps there may be something of the kind sprung up lately, but I
+ have not heard much about it, and it would be such bad taste that I
+ shall be very sorry to believe it."
+
+
+END OF THE FOURTH VOLUME.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Life of Lord Byron, Vol. IV, by Thomas Moore
+
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