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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Autobiography of Anthony Trollope
+by Anthony Trollope
+(#40 in our series by Anthony Trollope)
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+Title: Autobiography of Anthony Trollope
+
+Author: Anthony Trollope
+
+Release Date: June, 2004 [EBook #5978]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on October 4, 2002]
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+Edition: 10
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+Language: English
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+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF ANTHONY TROLLOPE ***
+
+
+
+
+This etext was produced by Jesse Chandler (lots_of_nature@yahoo.co.uk)
+
+
+
+Autobiography of Anthony Trollope
+
+By Anthony Trollope
+
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+
+
+It may be well that I should put a short preface to this book. In
+the summer of 1878 my father told me that he had written a memoir
+of his own life. He did not speak about it at length, but said
+that he had written me a letter, not to be opened until after his
+death, containing instructions for publication.
+
+This letter was dated 30th April, 1876. I will give here as much
+of it as concerns the public: "I wish you to accept as a gift from
+me, given you now, the accompanying pages which contain a memoir
+of my life. My intention is that they shall be published after
+my death, and be edited by you. But I leave it altogether to your
+discretion whether to publish or to suppress the work;--and also
+to your discretion whether any part or what part shall be omitted.
+But I would not wish that anything should be added to the memoir.
+If you wish to say any word as from yourself, let it be done in
+the shape of a preface or introductory chapter." At the end there
+is a postscript: "The publication, if made at all, should be effected
+as soon as possible after my death." My father died on the 6th of
+December, 1882.
+
+It will be seen, therefore, that my duty has been merely to pass
+the book through the press conformably to the above instructions.
+I have placed headings to the right-hand pages throughout the book,
+and I do not conceive that I was precluded from so doing. Additions
+of any other sort there have been none; the few footnotes are my
+father's own additions or corrections. And I have made no alterations.
+I have suppressed some few passages, but not more than would amount
+to two printed pages has been omitted. My father has not given any
+of his own letters, nor was it his wish that any should be published.
+
+So much I would say by way of preface. And I think I may also give
+in a few words the main incidents in my father's life after he
+completed his autobiography.
+
+He has said that he had given up hunting; but he still kept two
+horses for such riding as may be had in or about the immediate
+neighborhood of London. He continued to ride to the end of his
+life: he liked the exercise, and I think it would have distressed
+him not to have had a horse in his stable. But he never spoke
+willingly on hunting matters. He had at last resolved to give up
+his favourite amusement, and that as far as he was concerned there
+should be an end of it. In the spring of 1877 he went to South
+Africa, and returned early in the following year with a book on
+the colony already written. In the summer of 1878, he was one of
+a party of ladies and gentlemen who made an expedition to Iceland
+in the "Mastiff," one of Mr. John Burns' steam-ships. The journey
+lasted altogether sixteen days, and during that time Mr. and Mrs.
+Burns were the hospitable entertainers. When my father returned,
+he wrote a short account of How the "Mastiffs" went to Iceland.
+The book was printed, but was intended only for private circulation.
+
+Every day, until his last illness, my father continued his work.
+He would not otherwise have been happy. He demanded from himself
+less than he had done ten years previously, but his daily task was
+always done. I will mention now the titles of his books that were
+published after the last included in the list which he himself has
+given at the end of the second volume:--
+
+An Eye for an Eye, . . . . 1879
+Cousin Henry, . . . . . . 1879
+Thackeray, . . . . . . . 1879
+The Duke's Children, . . . . 1880
+Life of Cicero, . . . . . 1880
+Ayala's Angel, . . . . . 1881
+Doctor Wortle's School, . . . 1881
+Frau Frohmann and other Stories, . 1882
+Lord Palmerston, . . . . . 1882
+The Fixed Period, . . . . . 1882
+Kept in the Dark, . . . . . 1882
+Marion Fay, . . . . . . 1882
+Mr. Scarborough's Family, . . . 1883
+
+At the time of his death he had written four-fifths of an Irish
+story, called The Landleaguers, shortly about to be published; and
+he left in manuscript a completed novel, called An Old Man's Love,
+which will be published by Messrs. Blackwood & Sons in 1884.
+
+In the summer of 1880 my father left London, and went to live at
+Harting, a village in Sussex, but on the confines of Hampshire. I
+think he chose that spot because he found there a house that suited
+him, and because of the prettiness of the neighborhood. His last
+long journey was a trip to Italy in the late winter and spring of
+1881; but he went to Ireland twice in 1882. He went there in May
+of that year, and was then absent nearly a month. This journey did
+him much good, for he found that the softer atmosphere relieved
+his asthma, from which he had been suffering for nearly eighteen
+months. In August following he made another trip to Ireland, but
+from this journey he derived less benefit. He was much interested
+in, and was very much distressed by, the unhappy condition of the
+country. Few men know Ireland better than he did. He had lived
+there for sixteen years, and his Post Office word had taken him
+into every part of the island. In the summer of 1882 he began his
+last novel, The Landleaguers, which, as stated above, was unfinished
+when he died. This book was a cause of anxiety to him. He could not
+rid his mind of the fact that he had a story already in the course
+of publication, but which he had not yet completed. In no other
+case, except Framley Parsonage, did my father publish even the
+first number of any novel before he had fully completed the whole
+tale.
+
+On the evening of the 3rd of November, 1882, he was seized with
+paralysis on the right side, accompanied by loss of speech. His
+mind had also failed, though at intervals his thoughts would return
+to him. After the first three weeks these lucid intervals became
+rarer, but it was always very difficult to tell how far his mind
+was sound or how far astray. He died on the evening of the 6th of
+December following, nearly five weeks from the night of his attack.
+
+I have been led to say these few words, not at all from a desire
+to supplement my father's biography of himself, but to mention the
+main incidents in his life after he had finished his own record. In
+what I have here said I do not think I have exceeded his instructions.
+
+Henry M. Trollope.
+September, 1883.
+
+
+
+
+
+Autobiography of Anthony Trollope
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+MY EDUCATION
+
+1815-1834
+
+
+
+
+In writing these pages, which, for the want of a better name, I shall
+be fain to call the autobiography of so insignificant a person as
+myself, it will not be so much my intention to speak of the little
+details of my private life, as of what I, and perhaps others round
+me, have done in literature; of my failures and successes such as
+they have been, and their causes; and of the opening which a literary
+career offers to men and women for the earning of their bread. And
+yet the garrulity of old age, and the aptitude of a man's mind to
+recur to the passages of his own life, will, I know, tempt me to say
+something of myself;--nor, without doing so, should I know how to
+throw my matter into any recognised and intelligible form. That I,
+or any man, should tell everything of himself, I hold to be impossible.
+Who could endure to own the doing of a mean thing? Who is there
+that has done none? But this I protest:--that nothing that I say
+shall be untrue. I will set down naught in malice; nor will I give
+to myself, or others, honour which I do not believe to have been
+fairly won. My boyhood was, I think, as unhappy as that of a young
+gentleman could well be, my misfortunes arising from a mixture of
+poverty and gentle standing on the part of my father, and from an
+utter want on my part of the juvenile manhood which enables some
+boys to hold up their heads even among the distresses which such
+a position is sure to produce.
+
+I was born in 1815, in Keppel Street, Russell Square; and while a
+baby, was carried down to Harrow, where my father had built a house
+on a large farm which, in an evil hour he took on a long lease from
+Lord Northwick. That farm was the grave of all my father's hopes,
+ambition, and prosperity, the cause of my mother's sufferings, and
+of those of her children, and perhaps the director of her destiny
+and of ours. My father had been a Wykamist and a fellow of New
+College, and Winchester was the destination of my brothers and
+myself; but as he had friends among the masters at Harrow, and as
+the school offered an education almost gratuitous to children living
+in the parish, he, with a certain aptitude to do things differently
+from others, which accompanied him throughout his life, determined
+to use that august seminary as "t'other school" for Winchester, and
+sent three of us there, one after the other, at the age of seven.
+My father at this time was a Chancery barrister practising in
+London, occupying dingy, almost suicidal chambers, at No. 23 Old
+Square, Lincoln's Inn,--chambers which on one melancholy occasion
+did become absolutely suicidal. [Footnote: A pupil of his destroyed
+himself in the rooms.] He was, as I have been informed by those
+quite competent to know, an excellent and most conscientious lawyer,
+but plagued with so bad a temper, that he drove the attorneys from
+him. In his early days he was a man of some small fortune and of
+higher hopes. These stood so high at the time of my birth, that
+he was felt to be entitled to a country house, as well as to that
+in Keppel Street; and in order that he might build such a residence,
+he took the farm. This place he called Julians, and the land runs
+up to the foot of the hill on which the school and the church
+stand,--on the side towards London. Things there went much against
+him; the farm was ruinous, and I remember that we all regarded the
+Lord Northwick of those days as a cormorant who was eating us up.
+My father's clients deserted him. He purchased various dark gloomy
+chambers in and about Chancery Lane, and his purchases always went
+wrong. Then, as a final crushing blow, and old uncle, whose heir he
+was to have been, married and had a family! The house in London was
+let; and also the house he built at Harrow, from which he descended
+to a farmhouse on the land, which I have endeavoured to make known
+to some readers under the name of Orley Farm. This place, just as it
+was when we lived there, is to be seen in the frontispiece to the
+first edition of that novel, having the good fortune to be delineated
+by no less a pencil than that of John Millais.
+
+My two elder brothers had been sent as day-boarders to Harrow
+School from the bigger house, and may probably have been received
+among the aristocratic crowd,--not on equal terms, because a
+day-boarder at Harrow in those days was never so received,--but at
+any rate as other day-boarders. I do not suppose that they were well
+treated, but I doubt whether they were subjected to the ignominy
+which I endured. I was only seven, and I think that boys at seven
+are now spared among their more considerate seniors. I was never
+spared; and was not even allowed to run to and fro between our house
+and the school without a daily purgatory. No doubt my appearance
+was against me. I remember well, when I was still the junior boy
+in the school, Dr. Butler, the head-master, stopping me in the
+street, and asking me, with all the clouds of Jove upon his brow
+and the thunder in his voice, whether it was possible that Harrow
+School was disgraced by so disreputably dirty a boy as I! Oh, what
+I felt at that moment! But I could not look my feelings. I do not
+doubt that I was dirty;--but I think that he was cruel. He must
+have known me had he seen me as he was wont to see me, for he was
+in the habit of flogging me constantly. Perhaps he did not recognise
+me by my face.
+
+At this time I was three years at Harrow; and, as far as I can
+remember, I was the junior boy in the school when I left it.
+
+Then I was sent to a private school at Sunbury, kept by Arthur
+Drury. This, I think, must have been done in accordance with the
+advice of Henry Drury, who was my tutor at Harrow School, and my
+father's friend, and who may probably have expressed an opinion that
+my juvenile career was not proceeding in a satisfactory manner at
+Harrow. To Sunbury I went, and during the two years I was there,
+though I never had any pocket-money, and seldom had much in the
+way of clothes, I lived more nearly on terms of equality with other
+boys than at any other period during my very prolonged school-days.
+Even here, I was always in disgrace. I remember well how, on one
+occasion, four boys were selected as having been the perpetrators
+of some nameless horror. What it was, to this day I cannot even
+guess; but I was one of the four, innocent as a babe, but adjudged
+to have been the guiltiest of the guilty. We each had to write out
+a sermon, and my sermon was the longest of the four. During the
+whole of one term-time we were helped last at every meal. We were
+not allowed to visit the playground till the sermon was finished.
+Mine was only done a day or two before the holidays. Mrs. Drury,
+when she saw us, shook her head with pitying horror. There were
+ever so many other punishments accumulated on our heads. It broke
+my heart, knowing myself to be innocent, and suffering also under
+the almost equally painful feeling that the other three--no doubt
+wicked boys--were the curled darlings of the school, who would never
+have selected me to share their wickedness with them. I contrived
+to learn, from words that fell from Mr. Drury, that he condemned
+me because I, having come from a public school, might be supposed
+to be the leader of wickedness! On the first day of the next term
+he whispered to me half a word that perhaps he had been wrong.
+With all a stupid boy's slowness, I said nothing; and he had not
+the courage to carry reparation further. All that was fifty years
+ago, and it burns me now as though it were yesterday. What lily-livered
+curs those boys must have been not to have told the truth!--at any
+rate as far as I was concerned. I remember their names well, and
+almost wish to write them here.
+
+When I was twelve there came the vacancy at Winchester College which
+I was destined to fill. My two elder brothers had gone there, and
+the younger had been taken away, being already supposed to have lost
+his chance of New College. It had been one of the great ambitions
+of my father's life that his three sons, who lived to go to Winchester,
+should all become fellows of New College. But that suffering man
+was never destined to have an ambition gratified. We all lost the
+prize which he struggled with infinite labour to put within our
+reach. My eldest brother all but achieved it, and afterwards went
+to Oxford, taking three exhibitions from the school, though he
+lost the great glory of a Wykamist. He has since made himself well
+known to the public as a writer in connection with all Italian
+subjects. He is still living as I now write. But my other brother
+died early.
+
+While I was at Winchester my father's affairs went from bad to worse.
+He gave up his practice at the bar, and, unfortunate that he was,
+took another farm. It is odd that a man should conceive,--and in
+this case a highly educated and a very clever man,--that farming
+should be a business in which he might make money without any
+special education or apprenticeship. Perhaps of all trades it is
+the one in which an accurate knowledge of what things should be
+done, and the best manner of doing them, is most necessary. And it is
+one also for success in which a sufficient capital is indispensable.
+He had no knowledge, and, when he took this second farm, no capital.
+This was the last step preparatory to his final ruin.
+
+Soon after I had been sent to Winchester my mother went to America,
+taking with her my brother Henry and my two sisters, who were then
+no more than children. This was, I think, in 1827. I have no clear
+knowledge of her object, or of my father's; but I believe that
+he had an idea that money might be made by sending goods,--little
+goods, such as pin-cushions, pepper-boxes, and pocket-knives,--out
+to the still unfurnished States; and that she conceived that an
+opening might be made for my brother Henry by erecting some bazaar
+or extended shop in one of the Western cities. Whence the money
+came I do not know, but the pocket-knives and the pepper-boxes were
+bought and the bazaar built. I have seen it since in the town of
+Cincinnati,--a sorry building! But I have been told that in those
+days it was an imposing edifice. My mother went first, with my
+sisters and second brother. Then my father followed them, taking my
+elder brother before he went to Oxford. But there was an interval
+of some year and a half during which he and I were in Winchester
+together.
+
+Over a period of forty years, since I began my manhood at a desk
+in the Post Office, I and my brother, Thomas Adolphus, have been
+fast friends. There have been hot words between us, for perfect
+friendship bears and allows hot words. Few brothers have had more
+of brotherhood. But in those schooldays he was, of all my foes,
+the worst. In accordance with the practice of the college, which
+submits, or did then submit, much of the tuition of the younger
+boys from the elder, he was my tutor; and in his capacity of teacher
+and ruler, he had studied the theories of Draco. I remember well
+how he used to exact obedience after the manner of that lawgiver.
+Hang a little boy for stealing apples, he used to say, and other
+little boys will not steal apples. The doctrine was already exploded
+elsewhere, but he stuck to it with conservative energy. The result
+was that, as a part of his daily exercise, he thrashed me with a big
+stick. That such thrashings should have been possible at a school
+as a continual part of one's daily life, seems to me to argue a
+very ill condition of school discipline.
+
+At this period I remember to have passed one set of holidays--the
+midsummer holidays--in my father's chambers in Lincoln's Inn. There
+was often a difficulty about the holidays,--as to what should be
+done with me. On this occasion my amusement consisted in wandering
+about among those old deserted buildings, and in reading Shakespeare
+out of a bi-columned edition, which is still among my books. It
+was not that I had chosen Shakespeare, but that there was nothing
+else to read.
+
+After a while my brother left Winchester and accompanied my father
+to America. Then another and a different horror fell to my fate.
+My college bills had not been paid, and the school tradesmen who
+administered to the wants of the boys were told not to extend their
+credit to me. Boots, waistcoats, and pocket-handkerchiefs, which,
+with some slight superveillance, were at the command of other
+scholars, were closed luxuries to me. My schoolfellows of course
+knew that it was so, and I became a Pariah. It is the nature of
+boys to be cruel. I have sometimes doubted whether among each other
+they do usually suffer much, one from the other's cruelty; but I
+suffered horribly! I could make no stand against it. I had no friend
+to whom I could pour out my sorrows. I was big, and awkward, and
+ugly, and, I have no doubt, sulked about in a most unattractive
+manner. Of course I was ill-dressed and dirty. But ah! how well
+I remember all the agonies of my young heart; how I considered
+whether I should always be alone; whether I could not find my way
+up to the top of that college tower, and from thence put an end to
+everything? And a worse thing came than the stoppage of the supplies
+from the shopkeepers. Every boy had a shilling a week pocket-money,
+which we called battels, and which was advanced to us out of the
+pocket of the second master. On one awful day the second master
+announced to me that my battels would be stopped. He told me the
+reason,--the battels for the last half-year had not been repaid; and
+he urged his own unwillingness to advance the money. The loss of a
+shilling a week would not have been much,--even though pocket-money
+from other sources never reached me,--but that the other boys all
+knew it! Every now and again, perhaps three or four times in a
+half-year, these weekly shillings were given to certain servants
+of the college, in payment, it may be presumed, for some extra
+services. And now, when it came to the turn of any servant, he
+received sixty-nine shillings instead of seventy, and the cause
+of the defalcation was explained to him. I never saw one of those
+servants without feeling I had picked his pocket.
+
+When I had been at Winchester something over three years, my father
+returned to England and took me away. Whether this was done because
+of the expense, or because my chance of New College was supposed
+to have passed away, I do not know. As a fact, I should, I believe,
+have gained the prize, as there occurred in my year an exceptional
+number of vacancies. But it would have served me nothing, as there
+would have been no funds for my maintenance at the University
+till I should have entered in upon the fruition of the founder's
+endowment, and my career at Oxford must have been unfortunate.
+
+When I left Winchester, I had three more years of school before me,
+having as yet endured nine. My father at this time having left my
+mother and sisters with my younger brother in America, took himself
+to live at a wretched tumble-down farmhouse on the second farm
+he had hired! And I was taken there with him. It was nearly three
+miles from Harrow, at Harrow Weald, but in the parish; and from
+this house I was again sent to that school as a day-boarder. Let
+those who know what is the usual appearance and what the usual
+appurtenances of a boy at such a school, consider what must have
+been my condition among them, with a daily walk of twelve miles
+through the lanes, added to the other little troubles and labours
+of a school life!
+
+Perhaps the eighteen months which I passed in this condition,
+walking to and fro on those miserably dirty lanes, was the worst
+period of my life. I was now over fifteen, and had come to an age
+at which I could appreciate at its full the misery of expulsion
+from all social intercourse. I had not only no friends, but was
+despised by all my companions. The farmhouse was not only no more
+than a farmhouse, but was one of those farmhouses which seem always
+to be in danger of falling into the neighbouring horse-pond. As it
+crept downwards from house to stables, from stables to barns, from
+barns to cowsheds, and from cowsheds to dungheaps, one could hardly
+tell where one began and the other ended! There was a parlour in
+which my father lived, shut up among big books; but I passed my most
+jocund hours in the kitchen, making innocent love to the bailiff's
+daughter. The farm kitchen might be very well through the evening,
+when the horrors of the school were over; but it all added to the
+cruelty of the days. A sizar at a Cambridge college, or a Bible-clerk
+at Oxford, has not pleasant days, or used not to have them half a
+century ago; but his position was recognised, and the misery was
+measured. I was a sizar at a fashionable school, a condition never
+premeditated. What right had a wretched farmer's boy, reeking from
+a dunghill, to sit next to the sons of peers,--or much worse still,
+next to the sons of big tradesmen who made their ten thousand a
+year? The indignities I endured are not to be described. As I look
+back it seems to me that all hands were turned against me,--those
+of masters as well as boys. I was allowed to join in no plays. Nor
+did I learn anything,--for I was taught nothing. The only expense,
+except that of books, to which a house-boarder was then subject,
+was the fee to a tutor, amounting, I think, to ten guineas. My
+tutor took me without the fee; but when I heard him declare the fact
+in the pupil-room before the boys, I hardly felt grateful for the
+charity. I was never a coward, and cared for a thrashing as little
+as any boy, but one cannot make a stand against the acerbities of
+three hundred tyrants without a moral courage of which at that time
+I possessed none. I know that I skulked, and was odious to the eyes
+of those I admired and envied. At last I was driven to rebellion,
+and there came a great fight,--at the end of which my opponent
+had to be taken home for a while. If these words be ever printed,
+I trust that some schoolfellow of those days may still be left alive
+who will be able to say that, in claiming this solitary glory of
+my school-days, I am not making a false boast.
+
+I wish I could give some adequate picture of the gloom of that
+farmhouse. My elder brother--Tom as I must call him in my narrative,
+though the world, I think, knows him best as Adolphus--was at Oxford.
+My father and I lived together, he having no means of living except
+what came from the farm. My memory tells me that he was always
+in debt to his landlord and to the tradesmen he employed. Of
+self-indulgence no one could accuse him. Our table was poorer, I
+think, than that of the bailiff who still hung on to our shattered
+fortunes. The furniture was mean and scanty. There was a large
+rambling kitchen-garden, but no gardener; and many times verbal
+incentives were made to me,--generally, I fear, in vain,--to
+get me to lend a hand at digging and planting. Into the hayfields
+on holidays I was often compelled to go,--not, I fear, with much
+profit. My father's health was very bad. During the last ten years
+of his life, he spent nearly the half of his time in bed, suffering
+agony from sick headaches. But he was never idle unless when
+suffering. He had at this time commenced a work,--an Encyclopedia
+Ecclesiastica, as he called it,--on which he laboured to the moment
+of his death. It was his ambition to describe all ecclesiastical
+terms, including the denominations of every fraternity of monks
+and every convent of nuns, with all their orders and subdivisions.
+Under crushing disadvantages, with few or no books of reference,
+with immediate access to no library, he worked at his most ungrateful
+task with unflagging industry. When he died, three numbers out
+of eight had been published by subscription; and are now, I fear,
+unknown, and buried in the midst of that huge pile of futile
+literature, the building up of which has broken so many hearts.
+
+And my father, though he would try, as it were by a side wind, to
+get a useful spurt of work out of me, either in the garden or in
+the hay-field, had constantly an eye to my scholastic improvement.
+From my very babyhood, before those first days at Harrow, I had to
+take my place alongside of him as he shaved at six o'clock in the
+morning, and say my early rules from the Latin Grammar, or repeat
+the Greek alphabet; and was obliged at these early lessons to hold
+my head inclined towards him, so that in the event of guilty fault,
+he might be able to pull my hair without stopping his razor or
+dropping his shaving-brush. No father was ever more anxious for
+the education of his children, though I think none ever knew less
+how to go about the work. Of amusement, as far as I can remember,
+he never recognised the need. He allowed himself no distraction,
+and did not seem to think it was necessary to a child. I cannot
+bethink me of aught that he ever did for my gratification; but for
+my welfare,--for the welfare of us all,--he was willing to make
+any sacrifice. At this time, in the farmhouse at Harrow Weald,
+he could not give his time to teach me, for every hour that he was
+not in the fields was devoted to his monks and nuns; but he would
+require me to sit at a table with Lexicon and Gradus before me.
+As I look back on my resolute idleness and fixed determination to
+make no use whatever of the books thus thrust upon me, or of the
+hours, and as I bear in mind the consciousness of great energy in
+after-life, I am in doubt whether my nature is wholly altered, or
+whether his plan was wholly bad. In those days he never punished
+me, though I think I grieved him much by my idleness; but in passion
+he knew not what he did, and he has knocked me down with the great
+folio Bible which he always used. In the old house were the two first
+volumes of Cooper's novel, called The Prairie, a relic--probably a
+dishonest relic--of some subscription to Hookham's library. Other
+books of the kind there was none. I wonder how many dozen times I
+read those two first volumes.
+
+It was the horror of those dreadful walks backwards and forwards
+which made my life so bad. What so pleasant, what so sweet, as a
+walk along an English lane, when the air is sweet and the weather
+fine, and when there is a charm in walking? But here were the same
+lanes four times a day, in wet and dry, in heat and summer, with
+all the accompanying mud and dust, and with disordered clothes. I
+might have been known among all the boys at a hundred yards' distance
+by my boots and trousers,--and was conscious at all times that I
+was so known. I remembered constantly that address from Dr. Butler
+when I was a little boy. Dr. Longley might with equal justice have
+said the same thing any day,--only that Dr. Longley never in his
+life was able to say an ill-natured word. Dr. Butler only became
+Dean of Peterborough, but his successor lived to be Archbishop of
+Canterbury.
+
+I think it was in the autumn of 1831 that my mother, with the rest
+of the family, returned from America. She lived at first at the
+farmhouse, but it was only for a short time. She came back with a
+book written about the United States, and the immediate pecuniary
+success which that work obtained enabled her to take us all back to
+the house at Harrow,--not to the first house, which would still have
+been beyond her means, but to that which has since been called
+Orley Farm, and which was an Eden as compared to our abode at
+Harrow Weald. Here my schooling went on under somewhat improved
+circumstances. The three miles became half a mile, and probably
+some salutary changes were made in my wardrobe. My mother and
+my sisters, too, were there. And a great element of happiness was
+added to us all in the affectionate and life-enduring friendship
+of the family of our close neighbour Colonel Grant. But I was never
+able to overcome--or even to attempt to overcome--the absolute
+isolation of my school position. Of the cricket-ground or racket-court
+I was allowed to know nothing. And yet I longed for these things
+with an exceeding longing. I coveted popularity with a covetousness
+that was almost mean. It seemed to me that there would be an
+Elysium in the intimacy of those very boys whom I was bound to hate
+because they hated me. Something of the disgrace of my school-days
+has clung to me all through life. Not that I have ever shunned to
+speak of them as openly as I am writing now, but that when I have
+been claimed as schoolfellow by some of those many hundreds who
+were with me either at Harrow or at Winchester, I have felt that
+I had no right to talk of things from most of which I was kept in
+estrangement.
+
+Through all my father's troubles he still desired to send me either
+to Oxford or Cambridge. My elder brother went to Oxford, and Henry
+to Cambridge. It all depended on my ability to get some scholarship
+that would help me to live at the University. I had many chances.
+There were exhibitions from Harrow--which I never got. Twice I tried
+for a sizarship at Clare Hall,--but in vain. Once I made a futile
+attempt for a scholarship at Trinity, Oxford,--but failed again. Then
+the idea of a university career was abandoned. And very fortunate
+it was that I did not succeed, for my career with such assistance
+only as a scholarship would have given me, would have ended in debt
+and ignominy.
+
+When I left Harrow I was all but nineteen, and I had at first gone
+there at seven. During the whole of those twelve years no attempt
+had been made to teach me anything but Latin and Greek, and very
+little attempt to teach me those languages. I do not remember
+any lessons either in writing or arithmetic. French and German I
+certainly was not taught. The assertion will scarcely be credited,
+but I do assert that I have no recollection of other tuition
+except that in the dead languages. At the school at Sunbury there
+was certainly a writing master and a French master. The latter was
+an extra, and I never had extras. I suppose I must have been in
+the writing master's class, but though I can call to mind the man,
+I cannot call to mind his ferule. It was by their ferules that I
+always knew them, and they me. I feel convinced in my mind that I
+have been flogged oftener than any human being alive. It was just
+possible to obtain five scourgings in one day at Winchester, and
+I have often boasted that I obtained them all. Looking back over
+half a century, I am not quite sure whether the boast is true; but
+if I did not, nobody ever did.
+
+And yet when I think how little I knew of Latin or Greek on leaving
+Harrow at nineteen, I am astonished at the possibility of such
+waste of time. I am now a fair Latin scholar,--that is to say, I
+read and enjoy the Latin classics, and could probably make myself
+understood in Latin prose. But the knowledge which I have, I have
+acquired since I left school,--no doubt aided much by that groundwork
+of the language which will in the process of years make its way
+slowly, even through the skin. There were twelve years of tuition
+in which I do not remember that I ever knew a lesson! When I left
+Harrow I was nearly at the top of the school, being a monitor, and,
+I think, the seventh boy. This position I achieved by gravitation
+upwards. I bear in mind well with how prodigal a hand prizes used
+to be showered about; but I never got a prize. From the first to
+the last there was nothing satisfactory in my school career,--except
+the way in which I licked the boy who had to be taken home to be
+cured.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+MY MOTHER
+
+
+
+
+Though I do not wish in these pages to go back to the origin of
+all the Trollopes, I must say a few words of my mother,--partly
+because filial duty will not allow me to be silent as to a parent
+who made for herself a considerable name in the literature of her
+day, and partly because there were circumstances in her career
+well worthy of notice. She was the daughter of the Rev. William
+Milton, vicar of Heckfield, who, as well as my father, had been
+a fellow of New College. She was nearly thirty when, in 1809, she
+married my father. Six or seven years ago a bundle of love-letters
+from her to him fell into my hand in a very singular way, having
+been found in the house of a stranger, who, with much courtesy,
+sent them to me. They were then about sixty years old, and had been
+written some before and some after her marriage, over the space of
+perhaps a year. In no novel of Richardson's or Miss Burney's have
+I seen a correspondence at the same time so sweet, so graceful,
+and so well expressed. But the marvel of these letters was in the
+strange difference they bore to the love-letters of the present
+day. They are, all of them, on square paper, folded and sealed,
+and addressed to my father on circuit; but the language in each,
+though it almost borders on the romantic, is beautifully chosen,
+and fit, without change of a syllable, for the most critical eye.
+What girl now studies the words with which she shall address her
+lover, or seeks to charm him with grace of diction? She dearly likes
+a little slang, and revels in the luxury of entire familiarity with
+a new and strange being. There is something in that, too, pleasant
+to our thoughts, but I fear that this phase of life does not conduce
+to a taste for poetry among our girls. Though my mother was a writer
+of prose, and revelled in satire, the poetic feeling clung to her
+to the last.
+
+In the first ten years of her married life she became the mother of
+six children, four of whom died of consumption at different ages.
+My elder sister married, and had children, of whom one still lives;
+but she was one of the four who followed each other at intervals
+during my mother's lifetime. Then my brother Tom and I were left to
+her,--with the destiny before us three of writing more books than
+were probably ever before produced by a single family. [Footnote:
+The family of Estienne, the great French printers of the fifteenth
+and sixteenth centuries, of whom there were at least nine or ten,
+did more perhaps for the production of literature than any other
+family. But they, though they edited, and not unfrequently translated
+the works which they published, were not authors in the ordinary
+sense.] My married sister added to the number by one little anonymous
+high church story, called Chollerton.
+
+From the date of their marriage up to 1827, when my mother went
+to America, my father's affairs had always been going down in the
+world. She had loved society, affecting a somewhat liberal role
+and professing an emotional dislike to tyrants, which sprung from
+the wrongs of would-be regicides and the poverty of patriot exiles.
+An Italian marquis who had escaped with only a second shirt from
+the clutches of some archduke whom he had wished to exterminate,
+or a French proletaire with distant ideas of sacrificing himself to
+the cause of liberty, were always welcome to the modest hospitality
+of her house. In after years, when marquises of another caste had
+been gracious to her, she became a strong Tory, and thought that
+archduchesses were sweet. But with her politics were always an affair
+of the heart,--as, indeed, were all her convictions. Of reasoning
+from causes, I think that she knew nothing. Her heart was in
+every way so perfect, her desire to do good to all around her so
+thorough, and her power of self-sacrifice so complete, that she
+generally got herself right in spite of her want of logic; but it
+must be acknowledged that she was emotional. I can remember now her
+books, and can see her at her pursuits. The poets she loved best
+were Dante and Spenser. But she raved also of him of whom all such
+ladies were raving then, and rejoiced in the popularity and wept
+over the persecution of Lord Byron. She was among those who seized
+with avidity on the novels, as they came out, of the then unknown
+Scott, and who could still talk of the triumphs of Miss Edgeworth.
+With the literature of the day she was familiar, and with the poets
+of the past. Of other reading I do not think she had mastered much.
+Her life, I take it, though latterly clouded by many troubles, was
+easy, luxurious, and idle, till my father's affairs and her own
+aspirations sent her to America. She had dear friends among literary
+people, of whom I remember Mathias, Henry Milman, and Miss Landon;
+but till long after middle life she never herself wrote a line for
+publication.
+
+In 1827 she went to America, having been partly instigated by the
+social and communistic ideas of a lady whom I well remember,--a
+certain Miss Wright,--who was, I think, the first of the American
+female lecturers. Her chief desire, however, was to establish
+my brother Henry; and perhaps joined with that was the additional
+object of breaking up her English home without pleading broken
+fortunes to all the world. At Cincinnati, in the State of Ohio,
+she built a bazaar, and I fancy lost all the money which may have
+been embarked in that speculation. It could not have been much, and
+I think that others also must have suffered. But she looked about
+her, at her American cousins, and resolved to write a book about
+them. This book she brought back with her in 1831, and published
+it early in 1832. When she did this she was already fifty. When
+doing this she was aware that unless she could so succeed in making
+money, there was no money for any of the family. She had never before
+earned a shilling. She almost immediately received a considerable
+sum from the publishers,--if I remember rightly, amounting to two
+sums of (pounds)400 each within a few months; and from that moment till
+nearly the time of her death, at any rate for more than twenty
+years, she was in the receipt of a considerable income from her
+writings. It was a late age at which to begin such a career.
+
+The Domestic Manners of the Americans was the first of a series
+of books of travels, of which it was probably the best, and was
+certainly the best known. It will not be too much to say of it that
+it had a material effect upon the manners of the Americans of the
+day, and that that effect has been fully appreciated by them. No
+observer was certainly ever less qualified to judge of the prospects
+or even of the happiness of a young people. No one could have been
+worse adapted by nature for the task of learning whether a nation
+was in a way to thrive. Whatever she saw she judged, as most women
+do, from her own standing-point. If a thing were ugly to her eyes,
+it ought to be ugly to all eyes,--and if ugly, it must be bad.
+What though people had plenty to eat and clothes to wear, if they
+put their feet upon the tables and did not reverence their betters?
+The Americans were to her rough, uncouth, and vulgar,--and she
+told them so. Those communistic and social ideas, which had been so
+pretty in a drawing-room, were scattered to the winds. Her volumes
+were very bitter; but they were very clever, and they saved the
+family from ruin.
+
+Book followed book immediately,--first two novels, and then a book
+on Belgium and Western Germany. She refurnished the house which
+I have called Orley Farm, and surrounded us again with moderate
+comforts. Of the mixture of joviality and industry which formed
+her character, it is almost impossible to speak with exaggeration.
+The industry was a thing apart, kept to herself. It was not necessary
+that any one who lived with her should see it. She was at her table
+at four in the morning, and had finished her work before the world
+had begun to be aroused. But the joviality was all for others.
+She could dance with other people's legs, eat and drink with other
+people's palates, be proud with the lustre of other people's finery.
+Every mother can do that for her own daughters; but she could do it
+for any girl whose look, and voice, and manners pleased her. Even
+when she was at work, the laughter of those she loved was a pleasure
+to her. She had much, very much, to suffer. Work sometimes came
+hard to her, so much being required,--for she was extravagant, and
+liked to have money to spend; but of all people I have known she
+was the most joyous, or, at any rate, the most capable of joy.
+
+We continued this renewed life at Harrow for nearly two years,
+during which I was still at the school, and at the end of which
+I was nearly nineteen. Then there came a great catastrophe. My
+father, who, when he was well, lived a sad life among his monks and
+nuns, still kept a horse and gig. One day in March, 1834, just as
+it had been decided that I should leave the school then, instead
+of remaining, as had been intended, till midsummer, I was summoned
+very early in the morning, to drive him up to London. He had been
+ill, and must still have been very ill indeed when he submitted to
+be driven by any one. It was not till we had started that he told
+me that I was to put him on board the Ostend boat. This I did,
+driving him through the city down to the docks. It was not within
+his nature to be communicative, and to the last he never told me
+why he was going to Ostend. Something of a general flitting abroad
+I had heard before, but why he should have flown first, and flown
+so suddenly, I did not in the least know till I returned. When I got
+back with the gig, the house and furniture were all in the charge
+of the sheriff's officers.
+
+The gardener who had been with us in former days stopped me as I
+drove up the road, and with gestures, signs, and whispered words,
+gave me to understand that the whole affair--horse, gig, and
+barness--would be made prize of if I went but a few yards farther.
+Why they should not have been made prize of I do not know. The
+little piece of dishonest business which I at once took in hand
+and carried through successfully was of no special service to any
+of us. I drove the gig into the village, and sold the entire equipage
+to the ironmonger for (pounds)17, the exact sum which he claimed as being
+due to himself. I was much complimented by the gardener, who seemed
+to think that so much had been rescued out of the fire. I fancy
+that the ironmonger was the only gainer by my smartness.
+
+When I got back to the house a scene of devastation was in progress,
+which still was not without its amusement. My mother, through
+her various troubles, had contrived to keep a certain number of
+pretty-pretties which were dear to her heart. They were not much,
+for in those days the ornamentation of houses was not lavish as it
+is now; but there was some china, and a little glass, a few books,
+and a very moderate supply of household silver. These things, and
+things like them, were being carried down surreptitiously, through
+a gap between the two gardens, on to the premises of our friend
+Colonel Grant. My two sisters, then sixteen and seventeen, and the
+Grant girls, who were just younger, were the chief marauders. To
+such forces I was happy to add myself for any enterprise, and
+between us we cheated the creditors to the extent of our powers,
+amidst the anathemas, but good-humoured abstinence from personal
+violence, of the men in charge of the property. I still own a few
+books that were thus purloined.
+
+For a few days the whole family bivouacked under the Colonel's
+hospitable roof, cared for and comforted by that dearest of all women,
+his wife. Then we followed my father to Belgium, and established
+ourselves in a large house just outside the walls of Bruges. At
+this time, and till my father's death, everything was done with
+money earned by my mother. She now again furnished the house,--this
+being the third that she had put in order since she came back from
+America two years and a half ago.
+
+There were six of us went into this new banishment. My brother
+Henry had left Cambridge and was ill. My younger sister was ill.
+And though as yet we hardly told each other that it was so, we began
+to feel that that desolating fiend, consumption, was among us. My
+father was broken-hearted as well as ill, but whenever he could
+sit at his table he still worked at his ecclesiastical records. My
+elder sister and I were in good health, but I was an idle, desolate
+hanger-on, that most hopeless of human beings, a hobbledehoy
+of nineteen, without any idea of a career, or a profession, or
+a trade. As well as I can remember I was fairly happy, for there
+were pretty girls at Bruges with whom I could fancy that I was in
+love; and I had been removed from the real misery of school. But
+as to my future life I had not even an aspiration. Now and again
+there would arise a feeling that it was hard upon my mother that
+she should have to do so much for us, that we should be idle while
+she was forced to work so constantly; but we should probably have
+thought more of that had she not taken to work as though it were
+the recognised condition of life for an old lady of fifty-five.
+
+Then, by degrees, an established sorrow was at home among us. My
+brother was an invalid, and the horrid word, which of all words were
+for some years after the most dreadful to us, had been pronounced.
+It was no longer a delicate chest, and some temporary necessity
+for peculiar care,--but consumption! The Bruges doctor had said
+so, and we knew that he was right. From that time forth my mother's
+most visible occupation was that of nursing. There were two sick
+men in the house, and hers were the hands that tended them. The
+novels went on, of course. We had already learned to know that they
+would be forthcoming at stated intervals,--and they always were
+forthcoming. The doctor's vials and the ink-bottle held equal
+places in my mother's rooms. I have written many novels under many
+circumstances; but I doubt much whether I could write one when my
+whole heart was by the bedside of a dying son. Her power of dividing
+herself into two parts, and keeping her intellect by itself clear
+from the troubles of the world, and fit for the duty it had to do,
+I never saw equalled. I do not think that the writing of a novel
+is the most difficult task which a man may be called upon to do;
+but it is a task that may be supposed to demand a spirit fairly
+at ease. The work of doing it with a troubled spirit killed Sir
+Walter Scott. My mother went through it unscathed in strength,
+though she performed all the work of day-nurse and night-nurse to
+a sick household;--for there were soon three of them dying.
+
+At this time there came from some quarter an offer to me of a
+commission in an Austrian cavalry regiment; and so it was apparently
+my destiny to be a soldier. But I must first learn German and
+French, of which languages I knew almost nothing. For this a year
+was allowed me, and in order that it might be accomplished without
+expense, I undertook the duties of a classical usher to a school
+then kept by William Drury at Brussels. Mr. Drury had been one of
+the masters at Harrow when I went there at seven years old, and is
+now, after an interval of fifty-three years, even yet officiating
+as clergyman at that place. [Footnote: He died two years after
+these words were written.] To Brussels I went, and my heart still
+sinks within me as I reflect that any one should have intrusted to
+me the tuition of thirty boys. I can only hope that those boys went
+there to learn French, and that their parents were not particular
+as to their classical acquirements. I remember that on two occasions
+I was sent to take the school out for a walk; but that after the
+second attempt Mrs. Drury declared that the boys' clothes would not
+stand any further experiments of that kind. I cannot call to mind
+any learning by me of other languages; but as I only remained in
+that position for six weeks, perhaps the return lessons had not
+been as yet commenced. At the end of the six weeks a letter reached
+me, offering me a clerkship in the General Post Office, and I
+accepted it. Among my mother's dearest friends she reckoned Mrs.
+Freeling, the wife of Clayton Freeling, whose father, Sir Francis
+Freeling, then ruled the Post Office. She had heard of my desolate
+position, and had begged from her father-in-law the offer of a
+berth in his own office.
+
+I hurried back from Brussels to Bruges on my way to London, and
+found that the number of invalids had been increased. My younger
+sister, Emily, who, when I had left the house, was trembling on
+the balance,--who had been pronounced to be delicate, but with that
+false-tongued hope which knows the truth, but will lie lest the
+heart should faint, had been called delicate, but only delicate,--was
+now ill. Of course she was doomed. I knew it of both of them,
+though I had never heard the word spoken, or had spoken it to any
+one. And my father was very ill,--ill to dying, though I did not
+know it. And my mother had decreed to send my elder sister away to
+England, thinking that the vicinity of so much sickness might be
+injurious to her. All this happened late in the autumn of 1834, in
+the spring of which year we had come to Bruges; and then my mother
+was left alone in a big house outside the town, with two Belgian
+women-servants, to nurse these dying patients--the patients being
+her husband and children--and to write novels for the sustenance
+of the family! It was about this period of her career that her best
+novels were written.
+
+To my own initiation at the Post Office I will return in the next
+chapter. Just before Christmas my brother died, and was buried at
+Bruges. In the following February my father died, and was buried
+alongside of him,--and with him died that tedious task of his,
+which I can only hope may have solaced many of his latter hours. I
+sometimes look back, meditating for hours together, on his adverse
+fate. He was a man, finely educated, of great parts, with immense
+capacity for work, physically strong very much beyond the average
+of men, addicted to no vices, carried off by no pleasures, affectionate
+by nature, most anxious for the welfare of his children, born to
+fair fortunes,--who, when he started in the world, may be said to
+have had everything at his feet. But everything went wrong with
+him. The touch of his hand seemed to create failure. He embarked
+in one hopeless enterprise after another, spending on each all the
+money he could at the time command. But the worse curse to him of
+all was a temper so irritable that even those whom he loved the
+best could not endure it. We were all estranged from him, and yet
+I believe that he would have given his heart's blood for any of
+us. His life as I knew it was one long tragedy.
+
+After his death my mother moved to England, and took and furnished
+a small house at Hadley, near Barnet. I was then a clerk in the
+London Post Office, and I remember well how gay she made the place
+with little dinners, little dances, and little picnics, while
+she herself was at work every morning long before others had left
+their beds. But she did not stay at Hadley much above a year. She
+went up to London, where she again took and furnished a house,
+from which my remaining sister was married and carried away into
+Cumberland. My mother soon followed her, and on this occasion did
+more than take a house. She bought a bit of land,--a field of three
+acres near the town,--and built a residence for herself. This, I
+think, was in 1841, and she had thus established and re-established
+herself six times in ten years. But in Cumberland she found the
+climate too severe, and in 1844 she moved herself to Florence,
+where she remained till her death in 1863. She continued writing
+up to 1856, when she was seventy-six years old,--and had at that
+time produced 114 volumes, of which the first was not written till
+she was fifty. Her career offers great encouragement to those who
+have not begun early in life, but are still ambitious to do something
+before they depart hence.
+
+She was an unselfish, affectionate, and most industrious woman,
+with great capacity for enjoyment and high physical gifts. She was
+endowed too, with much creative power, with considerable humour,
+and a genuine feeling for romance. But she was neither clear-sighted
+nor accurate; and in her attempts to describe morals, manners, and
+even facts, was unable to avoid the pitfalls of exaggeration.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE GENERAL POST OFFICE
+
+1834-1841
+
+
+
+
+While I was still learning my duty as an usher at Mr. Drury's
+school at Brussels, I was summoned to my clerkship in the London
+Post Office, and on my way passed through Bruges. I then saw my
+father and my brother Henry for the last time. A sadder household
+never was held together. They were all dying; except my mother, who
+would sit up night after night nursing the dying ones and writing
+novels the while,--so that there might be a decent roof for them
+to die under. Had she failed to write the novels, I do not know
+where the roof would have been found. It is now more that forty
+years ago, and looking back over so long a lapse of time I can tell
+the story, though it be the story of my own father and mother, of
+my own brother and sister, almost as coldly as I have often done
+some scene of intended pathos in fiction; but that scene was indeed
+full of pathos. I was then becoming alive to the blighted ambition
+of my father's life, and becoming alive also to the violence of the
+strain which my mother was enduring. But I could do nothing but go
+and leave them. There was something that comforted me in the idea
+that I need no longer be a burden,--a fallacious idea, as it soon
+proved. My salary was to be (pounds)90 a year, and on that I was to live
+in (pounds)ondon, keep up my character as a gentleman, and be happy.
+That I should have thought this possible at the age of nineteen,
+and should have been delighted at being able to make the attempt,
+does not surprise me now; but that others should have thought it
+possible, friends who knew something of the world, does astonish
+me. A lad might have done so, no doubt, or might do so even in
+these days, who was properly looked after and kept under control,--on
+whose behalf some law of life had been laid down. Let him pay so
+much a week for his board and lodging, so much for his clothes, so
+much for his washing, and then let him understand that he has--shall
+we say?--sixpence a day left for pocket-money and omnibuses. Any
+one making the calculation will find the sixpence far too much. No
+such calculation was made for me or by me. It was supposed that a
+sufficient income had been secured to me, and that I should live
+upon it as other clerks lived.
+
+But as yet the (pounds)90 a year was not secured to me. On reaching London
+I went to my friend Clayton Freeling, who was then secretary at
+the Stamp Office, and was taken by him to the scene of my future
+labours in St. Martin's le Grand. Sir Francis Freeling was the
+secretary, but he was greatly too high an official to be seen at
+first by a new junior clerk. I was taken, therefore, to his eldest
+son Henry Freeling, who was the assistant secretary, and by him
+I was examined as to my fitness. The story of that examination is
+given accurately in one of the opening chapters of a novel written
+by me, called The Three Clerks. If any reader of this memoir would
+refer to that chapter and see how Charley Tudor was supposed to have
+been admitted into the Internal Navigation Office, that reader
+will learn how Anthony Trollope was actually admitted into the
+Secretary's office of the General Post Office in 1834. I was asked
+to copy some lines from the Times newspaper with an old quill pen,
+and at once made a series of blots and false spellings. "That
+won't do, you know," said Henry Freeling to his brother Clayton.
+Clayton, who was my friend, urged that I was nervous, and asked
+that I might be allowed to do a bit of writing at home and bring
+it as a sample on the next day. I was then asked whether I was
+a proficient in arithmetic. What could I say? I had never learned
+the multiplication table, and had no more idea of the rule of three
+than of conic sections. "I know a little of it," I said humbly,
+whereupon I was sternly assured that on the morrow, should I succeed
+in showing that my handwriting was all that it ought to be, I should
+be examined as to that little of arithmetic. If that little should
+not be found to comprise a thorough knowledge of all the ordinary
+rules, together with practised and quick skill, my career in life
+could not be made at the Post Office. Going down the main stairs
+of the building,--stairs which have I believe been now pulled down
+to make room for sorters and stampers,--Clayton Freeling told me
+not to be too down-hearted. I was myself inclined to think that I
+had better go back to the school in Brussels. But nevertheless I
+went to work, and under the surveillance of my elder brother made
+a beautiful transcript of four or five pages of Gibbon. With a
+faltering heart I took these on the next day to the office. With
+my caligraphy I was contented, but was certain that I should come
+to the ground among the figures. But when I got to "The Grand,"
+as we used to call our office in those days, from its site in
+St. Martin's le Grand, I was seated at a desk without any further
+reference to my competency. No one condescended even to look at my
+beautiful penmanship.
+
+That was the way in which candidates for the Civil Service were
+examined in my young days. It was at any rate the way in which I
+was examined. Since that time there has been a very great change
+indeed;--and in some respects a great improvement. But in regard
+to the absolute fitness of the young men selected for the public
+service, I doubt whether more harm has not been done than good. And
+I think that good might have been done without the harm. The rule
+of the present day is, that every place shall be open to public
+competition, and that it shall be given to the best among the
+comers. I object to this, that at present there exists no known
+mode of learning who is best, and that the method employed has no
+tendency to elicit the best. That method pretends only to decide
+who among a certain number of lads will best answer a string of
+questions, for the answering of which they are prepared by tutors,
+who have sprung up for the purpose since this fashion of election
+has been adopted. When it is decided in a family that a boy shall
+"try the Civil Service," he is made to undergo a certain amount of
+cramming. But such treatment has, I maintain, no connection whatever
+with education. The lad is no better fitted after it than he was
+before for the future work of his life. But his very success fills
+him with false ideas of his own educational standing, and so far
+unfits him. And, by the plan now in vogue, it has come to pass that
+no one is in truth responsible either for the conduct, the manners,
+or even for the character of the youth. The responsibility was
+perhaps slight before; but existed, and was on the increase.
+
+There might have been,--in some future time of still increased
+wisdom, there yet may be,--a department established to test the
+fitness of acolytes without recourse to the dangerous optimism of
+competitive choice. I will not say but that there should have been
+some one to reject me,--though I will have the hardihood to say
+that, had I been so rejected, the Civil Service would have lost
+a valuable public servant. This is a statement that will not, I
+think, be denied by those who, after I am gone, may remember anything
+of my work. Lads, no doubt, should not be admitted who have none of
+the small acquirements that are wanted. Our offices should not be
+schools in which writing and early lessons in geography, arithmetic,
+or French should be learned. But all that could be ascertained
+without the perils of competitive examination.
+
+The desire to insure the efficiency of the young men selected, has
+not been the only object--perhaps not the chief object--of those
+who have yielded in this matter to the arguments of the reformers.
+There had arisen in England a system of patronage, under which it
+had become gradually necessary for politicians to use their influence
+for the purchase of political support. A member of the House of
+Commons, holding office, who might chance to have five clerkships
+to give away in a year, found himself compelled to distribute them
+among those who sent him to the House. In this there was nothing
+pleasant to the distributer of patronage. Do away with the system
+altogether, and he would have as much chance of support as another.
+He bartered his patronage only because another did so also. The
+beggings, the refusings, the jealousies, the correspondence, were
+simply troublesome. Gentlemen in office were not therefore indisposed
+to rid themselves of the care of patronage. I have no doubt their
+hands are the cleaner and their hearts are the lighter; but I do
+doubt whether the offices are on the whole better manned.
+
+As what I now write will certainly never be read till I am dead, I
+may dare to say what no one now does dare to say in print,--though
+some of us whisper it occasionally into our friends' ears. There
+are places in life which can hardly be well filled except by
+"Gentlemen." The word is one the use of which almost subjects one
+to ignominy. If I say that a judge should be a gentleman, or a
+bishop, I am met with a scornful allusion to "Nature's Gentlemen."
+Were I to make such an assertion with reference to the House of
+Commons, nothing that I ever said again would receive the slightest
+attention. A man in public life could not do himself a greater
+injury than by saying in public that the commissions in the army or
+navy, or berths in the Civil Service, should be given exclusively
+to gentlemen. He would be defied to define the term,--and would
+fail should he attempt to do so. But he would know what he meant,
+and so very probably would they who defied him. It may be that the
+son of a butcher of the village shall become as well fitted for
+employments requiring gentle culture as the son of the parson.
+Such is often the case. When such is the case, no one has been more
+prone to give the butcher's son all the welcome he has merited than
+I myself; but the chances are greatly in favour of the parson's son.
+The gates of the one class should be open to the other; but neither
+to the one class nor to the other can good be done by declaring
+that there are no gates, no barrier, no difference. The system of
+competitive examination is, I think, based on a supposition that
+there is no difference.
+
+I got into my place without any examining. Looking back now, I think
+I can see with accuracy what was then the condition of my own mind
+and intelligence. Of things to be learned by lessons I knew almost
+less than could be supposed possible after the amount of schooling
+I had received. I could read neither French, Latin, nor Greek.
+I could speak no foreign language,--and I may as well say here as
+elsewhere that I never acquired the power of really talking French.
+I have been able to order my dinner and take a railway ticket, but
+never got much beyond that. Of the merest rudiments of the sciences
+I was completely ignorant. My handwriting was in truth wretched. My
+spelling was imperfect. There was no subject as to which examination
+would have been possible on which I could have gone through an
+examination otherwise than disgracefully. And yet I think I knew
+more than the average young men of the same rank who began life at
+nineteen. I could have given a fuller list of the names of the poets
+of all countries, with their subjects and periods,--and probably
+of historians,--than many others; and had, perhaps, a more accurate
+idea of the manner in which my own country was governed. I knew the
+names of all the Bishops, all the Judges, all the Heads of Colleges,
+and all the Cabinet Ministers,--not a very useful knowledge indeed,
+but one that had not been acquired without other matter which was
+more useful. I had read Shakespeare and Byron and Scott, and could
+talk about them. The music of the Miltonic line was familiar to
+me. I had already made up my mind that Pride and Prejudice was the
+best novel in the English language,--a palm which I only partially
+withdrew after a second reading of Ivanhoe, and did not completely
+bestow elsewhere till Esmond was written. And though I would
+occasionally break down in my spelling, I could write a letter. If
+I had a thing to say, I could so say it in written words that the
+readers should know what I meant,--a power which is by no means
+at the command of all those who come out from these competitive
+examinations with triumph. Early in life, at the age of fifteen,
+I had commenced the dangerous habit of keeping a journal, and this
+I maintained for ten years. The volumes remained in my possession
+unregarded--never looked at--till 1870, when I examined them, and,
+with many blushes, destroyed them. They convicted me of folly,
+ignorance, indiscretion, idleness, extravagance, and conceit. But
+they had habituated me to the rapid use of pen and ink, and taught
+me how to express myself with faculty.
+
+I will mention here another habit which had grown upon me from
+still earlier years,--which I myself often regarded with dismay
+when I thought of the hours devoted to it, but which, I suppose,
+must have tended to make me what I have been. As a boy, even as a
+child, I was thrown much upon myself. I have explained, when speaking
+of my school-days, how it came to pass that other boys would not
+play with me. I was therefore alone, and had to form my plays
+within myself. Play of some kind was necessary to me then, as it
+always has been. Study was not my bent, and I could not please
+myself by being all idle. Thus it came to pass that I was always
+going about with some castle in the air firmly build within my
+mind. Nor were these efforts in architecture spasmodic, or subject
+to constant change from day to day. For weeks, for months, if
+I remember rightly, from year to year, I would carry on the same
+tale, binding myself down to certain laws, to certain proportions,
+and proprieties, and unities. Nothing impossible was ever
+introduced,--nor even anything which, from outward circumstances,
+would seem to be violently improbable. I myself was of course my own
+hero. Such is a necessity of castle-building. But I never became a
+king, or a duke,--much less when my height and personal appearance
+were fixed could I be an Antinous, or six feet high. I never was
+a learned man, nor even a philosopher. But I was a very clever
+person, and beautiful young women used to be fond of me. And I
+strove to be kind of heart, and open of hand, and noble in thought,
+despising mean things; and altogether I was a very much better
+fellow than I have ever succeeded in being since. This had been
+the occupation of my life for six or seven years before I went to
+the Post Office, and was by no means abandoned when I commenced
+my work. There can, I imagine, hardly be a more dangerous mental
+practice; but I have often doubted whether, had it not been my
+practice, I should ever have written a novel. I learned in this way
+to maintain an interest in a fictitious story, to dwell on a work
+created by my own imagination, and to live in a world altogether
+outside the world of my own material life. In after years I have
+done the same,--with this difference, that I have discarded the
+hero of my early dreams, and have been able to lay my own identity
+aside.
+
+I must certainly acknowledge that the first seven years of my
+official life were neither creditable to myself nor useful to the
+public service. These seven years were passed in London, and during
+this period of my life it was my duty to be present every morning
+at the office punctually at 10 A.M. I think I commenced my quarrels
+with the authorities there by having in my possession a watch
+which was always ten minutes late. I know that I very soon achieved
+a character for irregularity, and came to be regarded as a black
+sheep by men around me who were not themselves, I think, very
+good public servants. From time to time rumours reached me that if
+I did not take care I should be dismissed; especially one rumour
+in my early days, through my dearly beloved friend Mrs. Clayton
+Freeling,--who, as I write this, is still living, and who, with
+tears in her eyes, besought me to think of my mother. That was during
+the life of Sir Francis Freeling, who died,--still in harness,--a
+little more than twelve months after I joined the office. And yet
+the old man showed me signs of almost affectionate kindness, writing
+to me with his own hand more than once from his death-bed.
+
+Sir Francis Freeling was followed at the Post Office by Colonel
+Maberly, who certainly was not my friend. I do not know that I
+deserved to find a friend in my new master, but I think that a man
+with better judgment would not have formed so low an opinion of
+me as he did. Years have gone by, and I can write now, and almost
+feel, without anger; but I can remember well the keenness of my
+anguish when I was treated as though I were unfit for any useful
+work. I did struggle--not to do the work, for there was nothing
+which was not easy without any struggling--but to show that I
+was willing to do it. My bad character nevertheless stuck to me,
+and was not to be got rid of by any efforts within my power. I do
+admit that I was irregular. It was not considered to be much in
+my favour that I could write letters--which was mainly the work of
+our office--rapidly, correctly, and to the purpose. The man who
+came at ten, and who was always still at his desk at half-past four,
+was preferred before me, though when at his desk he might be less
+efficient. Such preference was no doubt proper; but, with a little
+encouragement, I also would have been punctual. I got credit for
+nothing and was reckless.
+
+As it was, the conduct of some of us was very bad. There was a
+comfortable sitting-room up-stairs, devoted to the use of some one
+of our number who in turn was required to remain in the place all
+night. Hither one or two of us would adjourn after lunch, and
+play ecarte for an hour or two. I do not know whether such ways
+are possible now in our public offices. And here we used to have
+suppers and card-parties at night--great symposiums, with much
+smoking of tobacco; for in our part of the building there lived a
+whole bevy of clerks. These were gentlemen whose duty it then was
+to make up and receive the foreign mails. I do not remember that
+they worked later or earlier than the other sorting-clerks; but
+there was supposed to be something special in foreign letters,
+which required that the men who handled them should have minds
+undistracted by the outer world. Their salaries, too, were higher
+than those of their more homely brethren; and they paid nothing
+for their lodgings. Consequently there was a somewhat fast set in
+those apartments, given to cards and to tobacco, who drank spirits
+and water in preference to tea. I was not one of them, but was a
+good deal with them.
+
+I do not know that I should interest my readers by saying much of
+my Post Office experiences in those days. I was always on the eve
+of being dismissed, and yet was always striving to show how good a
+public servant I could become, if only a chance were given me. But
+the chance went the wrong way. On one occasion, in the performance
+of my duty, I had to put a private letter containing bank-notes on
+the secretary's table,--which letter I had duly opened, as it was
+not marked private. The letter was seen by the Colonel, but had
+not been moved by him when he left the room. On his return it was
+gone. In the meantime I had returned to the room, again in the
+performance of some duty. When the letter was missed I was sent
+for, and there I found the Colonel much moved about his letter, and
+a certain chief clerk, who, with a long face, was making suggestions
+as to the probable fate of the money. "The letter has been taken,"
+said the Colonel, turning to me angrily, "and, by G----! there has
+been nobody in the room but you and I." As he spoke, he thundered
+his fist down upon the table. "Then," said I, "by G----! you have
+taken it." And I also thundered my fist down;--but, accidentally,
+not upon the table. There was there a standing movable desk, at
+which, I presume, it was the Colonel's habit to write, and on this
+movable desk was a large bottle full of ink. My fist unfortunately
+came on the desk, and the ink at once flew up, covering the Colonel's
+face and shirt-front. Then it was a sight to see that senior clerk,
+as he seized a quite of blotting-paper, and rushed to the aid of his
+superior officer, striving to mop up the ink; and a sight also to
+see the Colonel, in his agony, hit right out through the blotting-paper
+at that senior clerk's unoffending stomach. At that moment there
+came in the Colonel's private secretary, with the letter and the
+money, and I was desired to go back to my own room. This was an
+incident not much in my favour, though I do not know that it did
+me special harm.
+
+I was always in trouble. A young woman down in the country had
+taken it into her head that she would like to marry me,--and a very
+foolish young woman she must have been to entertain such a wish.
+I need not tell that part of the story more at length, otherwise
+than by protesting that no young man in such a position was ever
+much less to blame than I had been in this. The invitation had
+come from her, and I had lacked the pluck to give it a decided
+negative; but I had left the house within half an hour, going away
+without my dinner, and had never returned to it. Then there was a
+correspondence,--if that can be called a correspondence in which
+all the letters came from one side. At last the mother appeared at
+the Post Office. My hair almost stands on my head now as I remember
+the figure of the woman walking into the big room in which I sat
+with six or seven other clerks, having a large basket on her arm and
+an immense bonnet on her head. The messenger had vainly endeavoured
+to persuade her to remain in the ante-room. She followed the man
+in, and walking up the centre of the room, addressed me in a loud
+voice: "Anthony Trollope, when are you going to marry my daughter?"
+We have all had our worst moments, and that was one of my worst. I
+lived through it, however, and did not marry the young lady. These
+little incidents were all against me in the office.
+
+And then a certain other phase of my private life crept into official
+view, and did me a damage. As I shall explain just now, I rarely
+at this time had any money wherewith to pay my bills. In this state
+of things a certain tailor had taken from me an acceptance for, I
+think, (pounds)12, which found its way into the hands of a money-lender.
+With that man, who lived in a little street near Mecklenburgh Square,
+I formed a most heart-rending but a most intimate acquaintance.
+In cash I once received from him (pounds)4. For that and for the original
+amount of the tailor's bill, which grew monstrously under repeated
+renewals, I paid ultimately something over (pounds)200. That is so common
+a story as to be hardly worth the telling; but the peculiarity of
+this man was that he became so attached to me as to visit me every
+day at my office. For a long period he found it to be worth his
+while to walk up those stone steps daily, and come and stand behind
+my chair, whispering to me always the same words: "Now I wish you
+would be punctual. If you only would be punctual, I should like
+you to have anything you want." He was a little, clean, old man,
+who always wore a high starched white cravat inside of which he
+had a habit of twisting his chin as he uttered his caution. When I
+remember the constant persistency of his visits, I cannot but feel
+that he was paid very badly for his time and trouble. Those visits
+were very terrible, and can have hardly been of service to me in
+the office.
+
+Of one other misfortune which happened to me in those days I must
+tell the tale. A junior clerk in the secretary's office was always
+told off to sleep upon the premises, and he was supposed to be the
+presiding genius of the establishment when the other members of
+the Secretary's department had left the building. On an occasion
+when I was still little more than a lad,--perhaps one-and-twenty
+years old,--I was filling this responsible position. At about seven
+in the evening word was brought to me that the Queen of,--I think
+Saxony, but I am sure it was a Queen,--wanted to see the night
+mails sent out. At this time, when there were many mail-coaches,
+this was a show, and august visitors would sometimes come to see
+it. But preparation was generally made beforehand, and some pundit
+of the office would be at hand to do the honours. On this occasion
+we were taken by surprise, and there was no pundit. I therefore
+gave the orders, and accompanied her Majesty around the building,
+walking backwards, as I conceived to be proper, and often in great
+peril as I did so, up and down the stairs. I was, however, quite
+satisfied with my own manner of performing an unaccustomed and most
+important duty. There were two old gentlemen with her Majesty, who,
+no doubt, were German barons, and an ancient baroness also. They
+had come and, when they had seen the sights, took their departure
+in two glass coaches. As they were preparing to go, I saw the two
+barons consulting together in deep whispers, and then as the result
+of that conversation one of them handed me a half-a-crown! That
+also was a bad moment.
+
+I came up to town, as I said before, purporting to live a jolly
+life upon (pounds)90 per annum. I remained seven years in the General Post
+Office, and when I left it my income was (pounds)140. During the whole
+of this time I was hopelessly in debt. There were two intervals,
+amounting together to nearly two years, in which I lived with
+my mother, and therefore lived in comfort,--but even then I was
+overwhelmed with debt. She paid much for me,--paid all that I
+asked her to pay, and all that she could find out that I owed. But
+who in such a condition ever tells all and makes a clean breast of
+it? The debts, of course, were not large, but I cannot think now
+how I could have lived, and sometimes have enjoyed life, with such
+a burden of duns as I endured. Sheriff's officers with uncanny
+documents, of which I never understood anything, were common
+attendants on me. And yet I do not remember that I was ever locked
+up, though I think I was twice a prisoner. In such emergencies some
+one paid for me. And now, looking back at it, I have to ask myself
+whether my youth was very wicked. I did no good in it; but was there
+fair ground for expecting good from me? When I reached London no
+mode of life was prepared for me,--no advice even given to me. I
+went into lodgings, and then had to dispose of my time. I belonged
+to no club, and knew very few friends who would receive me into
+their houses. In such a condition of life a young man should no
+doubt go home after his work, and spend the long hours of the evening
+in reading good books and drinking tea. A lad brought up by strict
+parents, and without having had even a view of gayer things, might
+perhaps do so. I had passed all my life at public schools, where I
+had seen gay things, but had never enjoyed them. Towards the good
+books and tea no training had been given me. There was no house in
+which I could habitually see a lady's face and hear a lady's voice.
+No allurement to decent respectability came in my way. It seems to
+me that in such circumstances the temptations of loose life will
+almost certainly prevail with a young man. Of course if the mind be
+strong enough, and the general stuff knitted together of sufficiently
+stern material, the temptations will not prevail. But such minds
+and such material are, I think, uncommon. The temptation at any
+rate prevailed with me.
+
+I wonder how many young men fall utterly to pieces from being turned
+loose into London after the same fashion. Mine was, I think, of
+all phases of such life the most dangerous. The lad who is sent
+to mechanical work has longer hours, during which he is kept from
+danger, and has not generally been taught in his boyhood to anticipate
+pleasure. He looks for hard work and grinding circumstances.
+I certainly had enjoyed but little pleasure, but I had been among
+those who did enjoy it and were taught to expect it. And I had
+filled my mind with the ideas of such joys.
+
+And now, except during official hours, I was entirely without
+control,--without the influences of any decent household around me.
+I have said something of the comedy of such life, but it certainly
+had its tragic aspect. Turning it all over in my own mind, as I
+have constantly done in after years, the tragedy has always been
+uppermost. And so it was as the time was passing. Could there be
+any escape from such dirt? I would ask myself; and I always answered
+that there was no escape. The mode of life was itself wretched. I
+hated the office. I hated my work. More than all I hated my idleness.
+I had often told myself since I left school that the only career in
+life within my reach was that of an author, and the only mode of
+authorship open to me that of a writer of novels. In the journal which
+I read and destroyed a few years since, I found the matter argued
+out before I had been in the Post Office two years. Parliament was
+out of the question. I had not means to go to the Bar. In Official
+life, such as that to which I had been introduced, there did not
+seem to be any opening for real success. Pens and paper I could
+command. Poetry I did not believe to be within my grasp. The drama,
+too, which I would fain have chosen, I believed to be above me. For
+history, biography, or essay writing I had not sufficient erudition.
+But I thought it possible that I might write a novel. I had resolved
+very early that in that shape must the attempt be made. But the
+months and years ran on, and no attempt was made. And yet no day was
+passed without thoughts of attempting, and a mental acknowledgment
+of the disgrace of postponing it. What reader will not understand
+the agony of remorse produced by such a condition of mind?
+The gentleman from Mecklenburgh Square was always with me in the
+morning,--always angering me by his hateful presence,--but when the
+evening came I could make no struggle towards getting rid of him.
+
+In those days I read a little, and did learn to read French and
+Latin. I made myself familiar with Horace, and became acquainted with
+the works of our own greatest poets. I had my strong enthusiasms,
+and remember throwing out of the window in Northumberland Street,
+where I lived, a volume of Johnson's Lives of the Poets, because
+he spoke sneeringly of Lycidas. That was Northumberland Street by
+the Marylebone Workhouse, on to the back-door of which establishment
+my room looked out--a most dreary abode, at which I fancy I must
+have almost ruined the good-natured lodging-house keeper by my
+constant inability to pay her what I owed.
+
+How I got my daily bread I can hardly remember. But I do remember
+that I was often unable to get myself a dinner. Young men generally
+now have their meals provided for them. I kept house, as it were.
+Every day I had to find myself with the day's food. For my breakfast
+I could get some credit at the lodgings, though that credit would
+frequently come to an end. But for all that I had often breakfast
+to pay day by day; and at your eating-house credit is not given. I
+had no friends on whom I could sponge regularly. Out on the Fulham
+Road I had an uncle, but his house was four miles from the Post
+Office, and almost as far from my own lodgings. Then came borrowings
+of money, sometimes absolute want, and almost constant misery.
+
+Before I tell how it came about that I left this wretched life,
+I must say a word or two of the friendships which lessened its
+misfortunes. My earliest friend in life was John Merivale, with whom
+I had been at school at Sunbury and Harrow, and who was a nephew
+of my tutor, Harry Drury. Herman Merivale, who afterwards became my
+friend, was his brother, as is also Charles Merivale, the historian
+and Dean of Ely. I knew John when I was ten years old, and am happy
+to be able to say that he is going to dine with me one day this
+week. I hope I may not injure his character by stating that in those
+days I lived very much with him. He, too, was impecunious, but he
+had a home in London, and knew but little of the sort of penury
+which I endured. For more than fifty years he and I have been close
+friends. And then there was one W---- A----, whose misfortunes in
+life will not permit me to give his full name, but whom I dearly
+loved. He had been at Winchester and at Oxford, and at both places
+had fallen into trouble. He then became a schoolmaster,--or perhaps
+I had better say usher,--and finally he took orders. But he was
+unfortunate in all things, and died some years ago in poverty. He
+was most perverse; bashful to very fear of a lady's dress; unable
+to restrain himself in anything, but yet with a conscience that
+was always stinging him; a loving friend, though very quarrelsome;
+and, perhaps, of all men I have known, the most humorous. And he
+was entirely unconscious of his own humour. He did not know that
+he could so handle all matters as to create infinite amusement out
+of them. Poor W---- A----! To him there came no happy turning-point
+at which life loomed seriously on him, and then became prosperous.
+
+W---- A----, Merivale, and I formed a little club, which we called
+the Tramp Society, and subjected to certain rules, in obedience to
+which we wandered on foot about the counties adjacent to London.
+Southampton was the furthest point we ever reached; but Buckinghamshire
+and Hertfordshire were more dear to us. These were the happiest
+hours of my then life--and perhaps not the least innocent, although
+we were frequently in peril from the village authorities whom we
+outraged. Not to pay for any conveyance, never to spend above five
+shillings a day, to obey all orders from the elected ruler of the
+hour (this enforced under heavy fines), were among our statutes.
+I would fain tell here some of our adventures:--how A---- enacted
+an escaped madman and we his pursuing keepers, and so got ourselves
+a lift in a cart, from which we ran away as we approached the
+lunatic asylum; how we were turned out of a little town at night,
+the townsfolk frightened by the loudness of our mirth; and how we
+once crept into a hayloft and were wakened in the dark morning by
+a pitchfork,--and how the juvenile owner of that pitchfork fled
+through the window when he heard the complaints of the wounded man!
+But the fun was the fun of W---- A----, and would cease to be fun
+as told by me.
+
+It was during these years that John Tilley, who has now been for
+many years the permanent senior officer of the Post Office, married
+my sister, whom he took with him into Cumberland, where he was
+stationed as one of our surveyors. He has been my friend for more
+than forty years; as has also Peregrine Birch, a clerk in the House
+of Lords, who married one of those daughters of Colonel Grant who
+assisted us in the raid we made on the goods which had been seized
+by the Sheriff's officer at Harrow. These have been the oldest and
+dearest friends of my life, and I can thank God that three of them
+are still alive.
+
+When I had been nearly seven years in the Secretary's office of
+the Post Office, always hating my position there, and yet always
+fearing that I should be dismissed from it, there came a way of
+escape. There had latterly been created in the service a new body
+of officers called surveyors' clerks. There were at that time
+seven surveyors in England, two in Scotland and three in Ireland.
+To each of these officers a clerk had been lately attached, whose
+duty it was to travel about the country under the surveyor's orders.
+There had been much doubt among the young men in the office whether
+they should or should not apply for these places. The emoluments
+were good and the work alluring; but there was at first supposed
+to be something derogatory in the position. There was a rumour that
+the first surveyor who got a clerk sent the clerk out to fetch his
+beer, and that another had called upon his clerk to send the linen
+to the wash. There was, however, a conviction that nothing could be
+worse than the berth of a surveyor's clerk in Ireland. The clerks
+were all appointed, however. To me it had not occurred to ask for
+anything, nor would anything have been given me. But after a while
+there came a report from the far west of Ireland that the man sent
+there was absurdly incapable. It was probably thought then that
+none but a man absurdly incapable would go on such a mission to the
+west of Ireland. When the report reached the London office I was
+the first to read it. I was at that time in dire trouble, having
+debts on my head and quarrels with our Secretary-Colonel, and a
+full conviction that my life was taking me downwards to the lowest
+pits. So I went to the Colonel boldly, and volunteered for Ireland
+if he would send me. He was glad to be so rid of me, and I went.
+This happened in August, 1841, when I was twenty-six years old. My
+salary in Ireland was to be but (pounds)100 a year; but I was to receive
+fifteen shillings a day for every day that I was away from home,
+and sixpence for every mile that I travelled. The same allowances
+were made in England; but at that time travelling in Ireland was
+done at half the English prices. My income in Ireland, after paying
+my expenses, became at once (pounds)400. This was the first good fortune
+of my life.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+IRELAND--MY FIRST TWO NOVELS
+
+1841-1848
+
+
+
+
+In the preceding pages I have given a short record of the first
+twenty-six years of my life,--years of suffering, disgrace, and
+inward remorse. I fear that my mode of telling will have left an idea
+simply of their absurdities; but, in truth, I was wretched,--sometimes
+almost unto death, and have often cursed the hour in which I was
+born. There had clung to me a feeling that I had been looked upon
+always as an evil, an encumbrance, a useless thing,--as a creature
+of whom those connected with him had to be ashamed. And I feel
+certain now that in my young days I was so regarded. Even my few
+friends who had found with me a certain capacity for enjoyment were
+half afraid of me. I acknowledge the weakness of a great desire to
+be loved,--of a strong wish to be popular with my associates. No
+child, no boy, no lad, no young man, had ever been less so. And I
+had been so poor, and so little able to bear poverty. But from the
+day on which I set my foot in Ireland all these evils went away
+from me. Since that time who has had a happier life than mine?
+Looking round upon all those I know, I cannot put my hand upon
+one. But all is not over yet. And, mindful of that, remembering
+how great is the agony of adversity, how crushing the despondency
+of degradation, how susceptible I am myself to the misery coming
+from contempt,--remembering also how quickly good things may go
+and evil things come,--I am often again tempted to hope, almost to
+pray, that the end may be near. Things may be going well now--
+
+ "Sin aliquem infandum casum, Fortuna, minaris;
+ Nunc, o nunc liceat crudelem abrumpere vitam."
+
+There is unhappiness so great that the very fear of it is an alloy
+to happiness. I had then lost my father, and sister, and brother,--have
+since lost another sister and my mother;--but I have never as yet
+lost a wife or a child.
+
+When I told my friends that I was going on this mission to Ireland
+they shook their heads, but said nothing to dissuade me. I think
+it must have been evident to all who were my friends that my life
+in London was not a success. My mother and elder brother were
+at this time abroad, and were not consulted;--did not even know
+my intention in time to protest against it. Indeed, I consulted
+no one, except a dear old cousin, our family lawyer, from whom I
+borrowed (pounds)200 to help me out of England. He lent me the money, and
+looked upon me with pitying eyes--shaking his head. "After all,
+you were right to go," he said to me when I paid him the money a
+few years afterwards.
+
+But nobody then thought I was right to go. To become clerk to
+an Irish surveyor, in Connaught, with a salary of (pounds)100 a year, at
+twenty-six years of age! I did not think it right even myself,--except
+that anything was right which would take me away from the General
+Post Office and from London.
+
+My ideas of the duties I was to perform were very vague, as were
+also my ideas of Ireland generally. Hitherto I had passed my time,
+seated at a desk, either writing letters myself, or copying into
+books those which others had written. I had never been called upon
+to do anything I was unable or unfitted to do. I now understood that
+in Ireland I was to be a deputy-inspector of country post offices,
+and that among other things to be inspected would be the postmasters'
+accounts! But as no other person asked a question as to my fitness
+for this work, it seemed unnecessary for me to do so.
+
+On the 15th of September, 1841, I landed in Dublin, without an
+acquaintance in the country, and with only two or three letters of
+introduction from a brother clerk in the Post Office. I had learned
+to think that Ireland was a land flowing with fun and whisky, in
+which irregularity was the rule of life, and where broken heads were
+looked upon as honourable badges. I was to live at a place called
+Banagher, on the Shannon, which I had heard of because of its having
+once been conquered, though it had heretofore conquered everything,
+including the devil. And from Banagher my inspecting tours were to
+be made, chiefly into Connaught, but also over a strip of country
+eastwards, which would enable me occasionally to run up to Dublin.
+I went to a hotel which was very dirty, and after dinner I ordered
+some whisky punch. There was an excitement in this, but when the
+punch was gone I was very dull. It seemed so strange to be in a
+country in which there was not a single individual whom I had ever
+spoken to or ever seen. And it was to be my destiny to go down into
+Connaught and adjust accounts,--the destiny of me who had never
+learned the multiplication table, or done a sum in long division!
+
+On the next morning I called on the Secretary of the Irish Post
+Office, and learned from him that Colonel Maberly had sent a very
+bad character with me. He could not have sent a very good one; but
+I felt a little hurt when I was informed by this new master that he
+had been informed that I was worthless, and must, in all probability,
+be dismissed. "But," said the new master, "I shall judge you by your
+own merits." From that time to the day on which I left the service,
+I never heard a word of censure, nor had many months passed before
+I found that my services were valued. Before a year was over, I
+had acquired the character of a thoroughly good public servant.
+
+The time went very pleasantly. Some adventures I had;--two of
+which I told in the Tales of All Countries, under the names of The
+O'Conors of Castle Conor, and Father Giles of Ballymoy. I will not
+swear to every detail in these stories, but the main purport of
+each is true. I could tell many others of the same nature, were
+this the place for them. I found that the surveyor to whom I had
+been sent kept a pack of hounds, and therefore I bought a hunter.
+I do not think he liked it, but he could not well complain. He never
+rode to hounds himself, but I did; and then and thus began one of
+the great joys of my life. I have ever since been constant to the
+sport, having learned to love it with an affection which I cannot
+myself fathom or understand. Surely no man has laboured at it as I
+have done, or hunted under such drawbacks as to distances, money, and
+natural disadvantages. I am very heavy, very blind, have been--in
+reference to hunting--a poor man, and am now an old man. I have
+often had to travel all night outside a mail-coach, in order that
+I might hunt the next day. Nor have I ever been in truth a good
+horseman. And I have passed the greater part of my hunting life
+under the discipline of the Civil Service. But it has been for
+more than thirty years a duty to me to ride to hounds; and I have
+performed that duty with a persistent energy. Nothing has ever
+been allowed to stand in the way of hunting,--neither the writing
+of books, nor the work of the Post Office, nor other pleasures.
+As regarded the Post Office, it soon seemed to be understood that
+I was to hunt; and when my services were re-transferred to England,
+no word of difficulty ever reached me about it. I have written on
+very many subjects, and on most of them with pleasure, but on no
+subject with such delight as that on hunting. I have dragged it
+into many novels,--into too many, no doubt,--but I have always felt
+myself deprived of a legitimate joy when the nature of the tale has
+not allowed me a hunting chapter. Perhaps that which gave me the
+greatest delight was the description of a run on a horse accidentally
+taken from another sportsman--a circumstance which occurred to my
+dear friend Charles Buxton, who will be remembered as one of the
+members for Surrey.
+
+It was altogether a very jolly life that I led in Ireland. I
+was always moving about, and soon found myself to be in pecuniary
+circumstances which were opulent in comparison with those of my
+past life. The Irish people did not murder me, nor did they even
+break my head. I soon found them to be good-humoured, clever--the
+working classes very much more intelligent than those of
+England--economical, and hospitable. We hear much of their spendthrift
+nature; but extravagance is not the nature of an Irishman. He
+will count the shillings in a pound much more accurately than an
+Englishman, and will with much more certainty get twelve pennyworth
+from each. But they are perverse, irrational, and but little bound
+by the love of truth. I lived for many years among them--not finally
+leaving the country until 1859, and I had the means of studying
+their character.
+
+I had not been a fortnight in Ireland before I was sent down to a
+little town in the far west of county Galway, to balance a defaulting
+postmaster's accounts, find out how much he owed, and report upon
+his capacity to pay. In these days such accounts are very simple.
+They adjust themselves from day to day, and a Post Office surveyor
+has nothing to do with them. At that time, though the sums dealt
+with were small, the forms of dealing with them were very intricate.
+I went to work, however, and made that defaulting postmaster teach
+me the use of those forms. I then succeeded in balancing the account,
+and had no difficulty whatever in reporting that he was altogether
+unable to pay his debt. Of course, he was dismissed; but he had
+been a very useful man to me. I never had any further difficulty
+in the matter.
+
+But my chief work was the investigating of complaints made by the
+public as to postal matters. The practice of the office was and
+is to send one of its servants to the spot to see the complainant
+and to inquire into the facts, when the complainant is sufficiently
+energetic or sufficiently big to make himself well heard. A great
+expense is often incurred for a very small object; but the system
+works well on the whole, as confidence is engendered, and a feeling
+is produced in the country that the department has eyes of its own
+and does keep them open. This employment was very pleasant, and
+to me always easy, as it required at its close no more than the
+writing of a report. There were no accounts in this business, no
+keeping of books, no necessary manipulation of multitudinous forms.
+I must tell of one such complaint and inquiry, because in its result
+I think it was emblematic of many.
+
+A gentleman in county Cavan had complained most bitterly of the
+injury done to him by some arrangement of the Post Office. The
+nature of his grievance has no present significance; but it was
+so unendurable that he had written many letters, couched in the
+strongest language. He was most irate, and indulged himself in
+that scorn which is easy to an angry mind. The place was not in my
+district, but I was borrowed, being young and strong, that I might
+remember the edge of his personal wrath. It was mid-winter, and I
+drove up to his house, a squire's country seat, in the middle of a
+snowstorm, just as it was becoming dark. I was on an open jaunting
+car, and was on my way from one little town to another, the cause
+of his complaint having reference to some mail conveyance between
+the two. I was certainly very cold, and very wet, and very
+uncomfortable when I entered his house. I was admitted by a butler,
+but the gentleman himself hurried into the hall. I at once began to
+explain my business. "God bless me!" he said, "you are wet through.
+John, get Mr. Trollope some brandy and water--very hot." I was
+beginning my story about the post again when he himself took off my
+greatcoat, and suggested that I should go up to my bedroom before
+I troubled myself with business. "Bedroom!" I exclaimed. Then
+he assured me that he would not turn a dog out on such a night as
+that, and into a bedroom I was shown, having first drank the brandy
+and water standing at the drawing-room fire. When I came down I was
+introduced to his daughter, and the three of us went in to dinner.
+I shall never forget his righteous indignation when I again brought
+up the postal question on the departure of the young lady. Was I
+such a Goth as to contaminate wine with business? So I drank my
+wine, and then heard the young lady sing while her father slept
+in his armchair. I spent a very pleasant evening, but my host was
+too sleepy to hear anything about the Post Office that night. It
+was absolutely necessary that I should go away the next morning
+after breakfast, and I explained that the matter must be discussed
+then. He shook his head and wrung his hands in unmistakable
+disgust,--almost in despair. "But what am I to say in my report?"
+I asked. "Anything you please," he said. "Don't spare me, if you
+want an excuse for yourself. Here I sit all the day--with nothing
+to do; and I like writing letters." I did report that Mr.---- was
+now quite satisfied with the postal arrangement of his district;
+and I felt a soft regret that I should have robbed my friend of his
+occupation. Perhaps he was able to take up the Poor Law Board, or
+to attack the Excise. At the Post Office nothing more was heard
+from him.
+
+I went on with the hunting surveyor at Banagher for three years,
+during which, at Kingstown, the watering place near Dublin, I met
+Rose Heseltine, the lady who has since become my wife. The engagement
+took place when I had been just one year in Ireland; but there was
+still a delay of two years before we could be married. She had no
+fortune, nor had I any income beyond that which came from the Post
+Office; and there were still a few debts, which would have been
+paid off no doubt sooner, but for that purchase of the horse. When
+I had been nearly three years in Ireland we were married on the
+11th of June, 1844;--and, perhaps, I ought to name that happy day
+as the commencement of my better life, rather than the day on which
+I first landed in Ireland.
+
+For though during these three years I had been jolly enough, I
+had not been altogether happy. The hunting, the whisky punch, the
+rattling Irish life,--of which I could write a volume of stories
+were this the place to tell them,--were continually driving from
+my mind the still cherished determination to become a writer of
+novels. When I reached Ireland I had never put pen to paper; nor
+had I done so when I became engaged. And when I was married, being
+then twenty-nine, I had only written the first volume of my first
+work. This constant putting off of the day of work was a great
+sorrow to me. I certainly had not been idle in my new berth. I had
+learned my work, so that every one concerned knew that it was safe
+in my hands; and I held a position altogether the reverse of that
+in which I was always trembling while I remained in London. But
+that did not suffice,--did not nearly suffice. I still felt that
+there might be a career before me, if I could only bring myself to
+begin the work. I do not think I much doubted my own intellectual
+sufficiency for the writing of a readable novel. What I did doubt
+was my own industry, and the chances of the market.
+
+The vigour necessary to prosecute two professions at the same time
+is not given to every one, and it was only lately that I had found
+the vigour necessary for one. There must be early hours, and I
+had not as yet learned to love early hours. I was still, indeed, a
+young man; but hardly young enough to trust myself to find the power
+to alter the habits of my life. And I had heard of the difficulties
+of publishing,--a subject of which I shall have to say much should
+I ever bring this memoir to a close. I had dealt already with
+publishers on my mother's behalf, and knew that many a tyro who
+could fill a manuscript lacked the power to put his matter before
+the public;--and I knew, too, that when the matter was printed,
+how little had then been done towards the winning of the battle!
+I had already learned that many a book--many a good book--
+
+ "is born to blush unseen
+ And waste its sweetness on the desert air."
+
+But still the purpose was strong within me, and the first effort
+was made after the following fashion. I was located at a little
+town called Drumsna, or rather village, in the county Leitrim,
+where the postmaster had come to some sorrow about his money; and
+my friend John Merivale was staying with me for a day or two. As
+we were taking a walk in that most uninteresting country, we turned
+up through a deserted gateway, along a weedy, grass-grown avenue,
+till we came to the modern ruins of a country house. It was one of
+the most melancholy spots I ever visited. I will not describe it
+here, because I have done so in the first chapter of my first novel.
+We wandered about the place, suggesting to each other causes for
+the misery we saw there, and, while I was still among the ruined
+walls and decayed beams, I fabricated the plot of The Macdermots
+of Ballycloran. As to the plot itself, I do not know that I ever
+made one so good,--or, at any rate, one so susceptible of pathos.
+I am aware that I broke down in the telling, not having yet studied
+the art. Nevertheless, The Macdermots is a good novel, and worth
+reading by any one who wishes to understand what Irish life was
+before the potato disease, the famine, and the Encumbered Estates
+Bill.
+
+When my friend left me, I set to work and wrote the first chapter
+or two. Up to this time I had continued that practice of castle-building
+of which I have spoken; but now the castle I built was among the
+ruins of that old house. The book, however, hung with me. It was
+only now and then that I found either time or energy for a few
+pages. I commenced the book in September, 1843, and had only written
+a volume when I was married in June, 1844.
+
+My marriage was like the marriage of other people, and of no
+special interest to any one except my wife and me. It took place
+at Rotherham, in Yorkshire, where her father was the manager of a
+bank. We were not very rich, having about (pounds)400 a year on which to
+live.
+
+Many people would say that we were two fools to encounter such
+poverty together. I can only reply that since that day I have never
+been without money in my pocket, and that I soon acquired the means
+of paying what I owed. Nevertheless, more than twelve years had to
+pass over our heads before I received any payment for any literary
+work which afforded an appreciable increase to our income.
+
+Immediately after our marriage, I left the west of Ireland and the
+hunting surveyor, and joined another in the south. It was a better
+district, and I was enabled to live at Clonmel, a town of some
+importance, instead of at Banagher, which is little more than a
+village. I had not felt myself to be comfortable in my old residence
+as a married man. On my arrival there as a bachelor I had been
+received most kindly, but when I brought my English wife I fancied
+that there was a feeling that I had behaved badly to Ireland
+generally. When a young man has been received hospitably in an
+Irish circle, I will not say that it is expected of him that he
+should marry some young lady in that society;--but it certainly is
+expected of him that he shall not marry any young lady out of it.
+I had given offence, and I was made to feel it.
+
+There has taken place a great change in Ireland since the days in
+which I lived at Banagher, and a change so much for the better,
+that I have sometimes wondered at the obduracy with which people
+have spoken of the permanent ill condition of the country. Wages
+are now nearly double what they were then. The Post Office, at any
+rate, is paying almost double for its rural labour,--9s. a week
+when it used to pay 5s., and 12s. a week when it used to pay 7s.
+Banks have sprung up in almost every village. Rents are paid with
+more than English punctuality. And the religious enmity between
+the classes, though it is not yet dead, is dying out. Soon after I
+reached Banagher in 1841, I dined one evening with a Roman Catholic.
+I was informed next day by a Protestant gentleman who had been
+very hospitable to me that I must choose my party. I could not sit
+both at Protestant and Catholic tables. Such a caution would now
+be impossible in any part of Ireland. Home-rule, no doubt, is a
+nuisance,--and especially a nuisance because the professors of the
+doctrine do not at all believe it themselves. There are probably
+no other twenty men in England or Ireland who would be so utterly
+dumfounded and prostrated were Home-rule to have its way as the
+twenty Irish members who profess to support it in the House of
+Commons. But it is not to be expected that nuisances such as these
+should be abolished at a blow. Home-rule is, at any rate, better
+and more easily managed than the rebellion at the close of the
+last century; it is better than the treachery of the Union; less
+troublesome than O'Connell's monster meetings; less dangerous than
+Smith O'Brien and the battle of the cabbage-garden at Ballingary,
+and very much less bloody than Fenianism. The descent from O'Connell
+to Mr. Butt has been the natural declension of a political disease,
+which we had no right to hope would be cured by any one remedy.
+
+When I had been married a year my first novel was finished. In
+July, 1845, I took it with me to the north of England, and intrusted
+the MS. to my mother to do with it the best she could among the
+publishers in London. No one had read it but my wife; nor, as far
+as I am aware, has any other friend of mine ever read a word of
+my writing before it was printed. She, I think, has so read almost
+everything, to my very great advantage in matters of taste. I am sure
+I have never asked a friend to read a line; nor have I ever read a
+word of my own writing aloud,--even to her. With one exception,--which
+shall be mentioned as I come to it,--I have never consulted a friend
+as to a plot, or spoken to any one of the work I have been doing.
+My first manuscript I gave up to my mother, agreeing with her that
+it would be as well that she should not look at it before she gave
+it to a publisher. I knew that she did not give me credit for the
+sort of cleverness necessary for such work. I could see in the
+faces and hear in the voices of those of my friends who were around
+me at the house in Cumberland,--my mother, my sister, my brother-in-law,
+and, I think, my brother,--that they had not expected me to come
+out as one of the family authors. There were three or four in the
+field before me, and it seemed to be almost absurd that another
+should wish to add himself to the number. My father had written
+much,--those long ecclesiastical descriptions,--quite unsuccessfully.
+My mother had become one of the popular authors of the day. My
+brother had commenced, and had been fairly well paid for his work.
+My sister, Mrs. Tilley, had also written a novel, which was at the
+time in manuscript--which was published afterwards without her name,
+and was called Chollerton. I could perceive that this attempt of
+mine was felt to be an unfortunate aggravation of the disease.
+
+My mother, however, did the best she could for me, and soon reported
+that Mr. Newby, of Mortimer Street, was to publish the book. It
+was to be printed at his expense, and he was to give me half the
+profits. Half the profits! Many a young author expects much from such
+an undertaking. I can, with truth, declare that I expected nothing.
+And I got nothing. Nor did I expect fame, or even acknowledgment.
+I was sure that the book would fail, and it did fail most absolutely.
+I never heard of a person reading it in those days. If there was
+any notice taken of it by any critic of the day, I did not see it.
+I never asked any questions about it, or wrote a single letter on
+the subject to the publisher. I have Mr. Newby's agreement with me,
+in duplicate, and one or two preliminary notes; but beyond that I
+did not have a word from Mr. Newby. I am sure that he did not wrong
+me in that he paid me nothing. It is probable that he did not sell
+fifty copies of the work;--but of what he did sell he gave me no
+account.
+
+I do not remember that I felt in any way disappointed or hurt. I
+am quite sure that no word of complaint passed my lips. I think I
+may say that after the publication I never said a word about the
+book, even to my wife. The fact that I had written and published
+it, and that I was writing another, did not in the least interfere
+with my life, or with my determination to make the best I could of
+the Post Office. In Ireland, I think that no one knew that I had
+written a novel. But I went on writing. The Macdermots was published
+in 1847, and The Kellys and the O'Kellys followed in 1848. I
+changed my publisher, but did not change my fortune. This second
+Irish story was sent into the world by Mr. Colburn, who had
+long been my mother's publisher, who reigned in Great Marlborough
+Street, and I believe created the business which is now carried on
+by Messrs. Hurst & Blackett. He had previously been in partnership
+with Mr. Bentley in New Burlington Street. I made the same agreement
+as before as to half profits, and with precisely the same results.
+The book was not only not read, but was never heard of,--at any
+rate, in Ireland. And yet it is a good Irish story, much inferior
+to The Macdermots as to plot, but superior in the mode of telling.
+Again I held my tongue, and not only said nothing but felt nothing.
+Any success would, I think, have carried me off my legs, but I was
+altogether prepared for failure. Though I thoroughly enjoyed the
+writing of these books, I did not imagine, when the time came for
+publishing them, that any one would condescend to read them.
+
+But in reference to The O'Kellys there arose a circumstance which
+set my mind to work on a subject which has exercised it much ever
+since. I made my first acquaintance with criticism. A dear friend
+of mine to whom the book had been sent,--as have all my books,--wrote
+me word to Ireland that he had been dining at some club with a man
+high in authority among the gods of the Times newspaper, and that
+this special god had almost promised that The O'Kellys should be
+noticed in that most influential of "organs." The information moved
+me very much; but it set me thinking whether the notice, should it
+ever appear, would not have been more valuable, at any rate, more
+honest, if it had been produced by other means;--if, for instance,
+the writer of the notice had been instigated by the merits or demerits
+of the book instead of by the friendship of a friend. And I made
+up my mind then that, should I continue this trade of authorship,
+I would have no dealings with any critic on my own behalf. I would
+neither ask for nor deplore criticism, nor would I ever thank a
+critic for praise, or quarrel with him, even in my own heart, for
+censure. To this rule I have adhered with absolute strictness, and
+this rule I would recommend to all young authors. What can be got
+by touting among the critics is never worth the ignominy. The same
+may, of course, be said of all things acquired by ignominious means.
+But in this matter it is so easy to fall into the dirt. Facilis
+descensus Averni. There seems to be but little fault in suggesting
+to a friend that a few words in this or that journal would be of
+service. But any praise so obtained must be an injustice to the
+public, for whose instruction, and not for the sustentation of the
+author, such notices are intended. And from such mild suggestion
+the descent to crawling at the critic's feet, to the sending of
+presents, and at last to a mutual understanding between critics
+and criticised, is only too easy. Other evils follow, for the
+denouncing of which this is hardly the place;--though I trust I
+may find such place before my work is finished. I took no notice
+of my friend's letter, but I was not the less careful in watching
+The Times. At last the review came,--a real review in The Times. I
+learned it by heart, and can now give, if not the words, the exact
+purport. "Of The Kellys and the O'Kellys we may say what the master
+said to his footman, when the man complained of the constant supply
+of legs of mutton on the kitchen table. Well, John, legs of mutton
+are good, substantial food;' and we may say also what John replied:
+'Substantial, sir,--yes, they are substantial, but a little coarse.'"
+That was the review, and even that did not sell the book!
+
+From Mr. Colburn I did receive an account, showing that 375 copies
+of the book had been printed, that 140 had been sold,--to those,
+I presume, who liked substantial food though it was coarse,--and
+that he had incurred a loss of (pounds)63 19S. 1 1/2d. The truth of the
+account I never for a moment doubted; nor did I doubt the wisdom
+of the advice given to me in the following letter, though I never
+thought of obeying it--
+
+ "GREAT MARLBOROUGH STREET,
+ November 11, 1848.
+
+"MY DEAR SIR,--I am sorry to say that absence from town and other
+circumstances have prevented me from earlier inquiring into the
+results of the sale of The Kellys and the O'Kellys, with which the
+greatest efforts have been used, but in vain. The sale has been,
+I regret to say, so small that the loss upon the publication is
+very considerable; and it appears clear to me that, although in
+consequence of the great number of novels that are published, the
+sale of each, with some few exceptions, must be small, yet it is
+evident that readers do not like novels on Irish subjects as well
+as on others. Thus, you will perceive, it is impossible for me to
+give any encouragement to you to proceed in novel-writing.
+
+"As, however, I understand you have nearly finished the novel La Vendee,
+perhaps you will favour me with a sight of it when convenient.--I
+remain, etc., etc.,
+
+ "H. COLBURN."
+
+This, though not strictly logical, was a rational letter, telling
+a plain truth plainly. I did not like the assurance that "the
+greatest efforts had been used," thinking that any efforts which
+might be made for the popularity of a book ought to have come from
+the author;--but I took in good part Mr. Colburn's assurance that
+he could not encourage me in the career I had commenced. I would
+have bet twenty to one against my own success. But by continuing
+I could lose only pen and paper; and if the one chance in twenty
+did turn up in my favour, then how much might I win!
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+MY FIRST SUCCESS
+
+1849-1855
+
+
+
+
+I had at once gone to work on a third novel, and had nearly
+completed it, when I was informed of the absolute failure of the
+former. I find, however, that the agreement for its publication was
+not made till 1850, by which time I imagine that Mr. Colburn must
+have forgotten the disastrous result of The O'Kellys, as he thereby
+agrees to give me (pounds)20 down for my "new historical novel, to be
+called La Vendee." He agreed also to pay me (pounds)30 more when he had
+sold 350 copies, and (pounds)50 more should he sell 450 within six months. I
+got my (pounds)20, and then heard no more of (pounds)a Vendee, not even receiving
+any account. Perhaps the historical title had appeared more alluring
+to him than an Irish subject; though it was not long afterwards that
+I received a warning from the very same house of business against
+historical novels,--as I will tell at length when the proper time
+comes.
+
+I have no doubt that the result of the sale of this story was
+no better than that of the two that had gone before. I asked no
+questions, however, and to this day have received no information.
+The story is certainly inferior to those which had gone before;--chiefly
+because I knew accurately the life of the people in Ireland, and
+knew, in truth, nothing of life in the La Vendee country, and also
+because the facts of the present time came more within the limits
+of my powers of story-telling than those of past years. But I read
+the book the other day, and am not ashamed of it. The conception
+as to the feeling of the people is, I think, true; the characters
+are distinct, and the tale is not dull. As far as I can remember,
+this morsel of criticism is the only one that was ever written on
+the book.
+
+I had, however, received (pounds)20. Alas! alas! years were to roll by
+before I should earn by my pen another shilling. And, indeed, I
+was well aware that I had not earned that; but that the money had
+been "talked out of" the worthy publisher by the earnestness of
+my brother, who made the bargain for me. I have known very much
+of publishers and have been surprised by much in their mode of
+business,--by the apparent lavishness and by the apparent hardness
+to authors in the same men,--but by nothing so much as by the ease
+with which they can occasionally be persuaded to throw away small
+sums of money. If you will only make the payment future instead of
+present, you may generally twist a few pounds in your own or your
+client's favour. "You might as well promise her (pounds)20. This day six
+months will do very well." The publisher, though he knows that the
+money will never come back to him, thinks it worth his while to
+rid himself of your importunity at so cheap a price.
+
+But while I was writing La Vendee I made a literary attempt in
+another direction. In 1847 and 1848 there had come upon Ireland
+the desolation and destruction, first of the famine, and then of
+the pestilence which succeeded the famine. It was my duty at that
+time to be travelling constantly in those parts of Ireland in which
+the misery and troubles thence arising were, perhaps, at their
+worst. The western parts of Cork, Kerry, and Clare were pre-eminently
+unfortunate. The efforts,--I may say, the successful efforts,--made
+by the Government to stay the hands of death will still be in the
+remembrance of many:--how Sir Robert Peel was instigated to repeal the
+Corn Laws; and how, subsequently, Lord John Russell took measures
+for employing the people, and supplying the country with Indian
+corn. The expediency of these latter measures was questioned by
+many. The people themselves wished, of course, to be fed without
+working; and the gentry, who were mainly responsible for the rates,
+were disposed to think that the management of affairs was taken
+too much out of their own hands. My mind at the time was busy with
+the matter, and, thinking that the Government was right, I was
+inclined to defend them as far as my small powers went. S. G. O.
+(Lord Sydney Godolphin Osborne) was at that time denouncing the
+Irish scheme of the Administration in the Times, using very strong
+language,--as those who remember his style will know. I fancied
+then,--as I still think,--that I understood the country much better
+than he did; and I was anxious to show that the steps taken for
+mitigating the terrible evil of the times were the best which the
+Minister of the day could have adopted. In 1848 I was in London,
+and, full of my purpose, I presented myself to Mr. John Forster,--who
+has since been an intimate and valued friend,--but who was at that
+time the editor of the Examiner. I think that that portion of the
+literary world which understands the fabrication of newspapers
+will admit that neither before his time, nor since, has there been
+a more capable editor of a weekly newspaper. As a literary man, he
+was not without his faults. That which the cabman is reported to
+have said of him before the magistrate is quite true. He was always
+"an arbitrary cove." As a critic, he belonged to the school of
+Bentley and Gifford,--who would always bray in a literary mortar
+all critics who disagreed from them, as though such disagreement
+were a personal offence requiring personal castigation. But that
+very eagerness made him a good editor. Into whatever he did he put
+his very heart and soul. During his time the Examiner was almost
+all that a Liberal weekly paper should be. So to John Forster I
+went, and was shown into that room in Lincoln's Inn Fields in which,
+some three or four years earlier, Dickens had given that reading of
+which there is an illustration with portraits in the second volume
+of his life.
+
+At this time I knew no literary men. A few I had met when living
+with my mother, but that had been now so long ago that all such
+acquaintance had died out. I knew who they were as far as a man
+could get such knowledge from the papers of the day, and felt myself
+as in part belonging to the guild, through my mother, and in some
+degree by my own unsuccessful efforts. But it was not probable that
+any one would admit my claim;--nor on this occasion did I make any
+claim. I stated my name and official position, and the fact that
+opportunities had been given me of seeing the poorhouses in Ireland,
+and of making myself acquainted with the circumstances of the
+time. Would a series of letters on the subject be accepted by the
+Examiner? The great man, who loomed very large to me, was pleased
+to say that if the letters should recommend themselves by their
+style and matter, if they were not too long, and if,--every reader
+will know how on such occasions an editor will guard himself,--if
+this and if that, they should be favourably entertained. They were
+favourably entertained,--if printing and publication be favourable
+entertainment. But I heard no more of them. The world in Ireland
+did not declare that the Government had at last been adequately
+defended, nor did the treasurer of the Examiner send me a cheque
+in return.
+
+Whether there ought to have been a cheque I do not even yet know.
+A man who writes a single letter to a newspaper, of course, is not
+paid for it,--nor for any number of letters on some point personal
+to himself. I have since written sets of letters to newspapers, and
+have been paid for them; but then I have bargained for a price. On
+this occasion I had hopes; but they never ran high, and I was not
+much disappointed. I have no copy now of those letters, and could
+not refer to them without much trouble; nor do I remember what I
+said. But I know that I did my best in writing them.
+
+When my historical novel failed, as completely as had its predecessors,
+the two Irish novels, I began to ask myself whether, after all,
+that was my proper line. I had never thought of questioning the
+justice of the verdict expressed against me. The idea that I was
+the unfortunate owner of unappreciated genius never troubled me. I
+did not look at the books after they were published, feeling sure
+that they had been, as it were, damned with good reason. But still
+I was clear in my mind that I would not lay down my pen. Then and
+therefore I determined to change my hand, and to attempt a play.
+I did attempt the play, and in 1850 I wrote a comedy, partly in
+blank verse, and partly in prose, called The Noble Jilt. The plot
+I afterwards used in a novel called Can You Forgive Her? I believe
+that I did give the best of my intellect to the play, and I must
+own that when it was completed it pleased me much. I copied it,
+and re-copied it, touching it here and touching it there, and then
+sent it to my very old friend, George Bartley, the actor, who had
+when I was in London been stage-manager of one of the great theatres,
+and who would, I thought, for my own sake and for my mother's, give
+me the full benefit of his professional experience.
+
+I have now before me the letter which he wrote to me,--a letter
+which I have read a score of times. It was altogether condemnatory.
+"When I commenced," he said, "I had great hopes of your production.
+I did not think it opened dramatically, but that might have been
+remedied." I knew then that it was all over. But, as my old friend
+warmed to the subject, the criticism became stronger and stronger,
+till my ears tingled. At last came the fatal blow. "As to the
+character of your heroine, I felt at a loss how to describe it,
+but you have done it for me in the last speech of Madame Brudo."
+Madame Brudo was the heroine's aunt. "'Margaret, my child, never
+play the jilt again; 'tis a most unbecoming character. Play it
+with what skill you will, it meets but little sympathy.' And this,
+be assured, would be its effect upon an audience. So that I must
+reluctantly add that, had I been still a manager, The Noble Jilt
+is not a play I could have recommended for production." This was a
+blow that I did feel. The neglect of a book is a disagreeable fact
+which grows upon an author by degrees. There is no special moment
+of agony,--no stunning violence of condemnation. But a piece of
+criticism such as this, from a friend, and from a man undoubtedly
+capable of forming an opinion, was a blow in the face! But I
+accepted the judgment loyally, and said not a word on the subject
+to any one. I merely showed the letter to my wife, declaring my
+conviction, that it must be taken as gospel. And as critical gospel
+it has since been accepted. In later days I have more than once
+read the play, and I know that he was right. The dialogue, however,
+I think to be good, and I doubt whether some of the scenes be not
+the brightest and best work I ever did.
+
+Just at this time another literary project loomed before my eyes,
+and for six or eight months had considerable size. I was introduced
+to Mr. John Murray, and proposed to him to write a handbook for
+Ireland. I explained to him that I knew the country better than
+most other people, perhaps better than any other person, and could
+do it well. He asked me to make a trial of my skill, and to send
+him a certain number of pages, undertaking to give me an answer
+within a fortnight after he should have received my work. I came
+back to Ireland, and for some weeks I laboured very hard. I "did"
+the city of Dublin, and the county of Kerry, in which lies the
+lake scenery of Killarney, and I "did" the route from Dublin to
+Killarney, altogether completing nearly a quarter of the proposed
+volume. The roll of MS. was sent to Albemarle Street,--but was never
+opened. At the expiration of nine months from the date on which it
+reached that time-honoured spot it was returned without a word, in
+answer to a very angry letter from myself. I insisted on having
+back my property,--and got it. I need hardly say that my property
+has never been of the slightest use to me. In all honesty I think
+that had he been less dilatory, John Murray would have got a very
+good Irish Guide at a cheap rate.
+
+Early in 1851 I was sent upon a job of special official work, which
+for two years so completely absorbed my time that I was able to
+write nothing. A plan was formed for extending the rural delivery
+of letters, and for adjusting the work, which up to that time had
+been done in a very irregular manner. A country letter-carrier
+would be sent in one direction in which there were but few letters
+to be delivered, the arrangement having originated probably at
+the request of some influential person, while in another direction
+there was no letter-carrier because no influential person had exerted
+himself. It was intended to set this right throughout England,
+Ireland, and Scotland; and I quickly did the work in the Irish
+district to which I was attached. I was then invited to do the same
+in a portion of England, and I spent two of the happiest years of
+my life at the task. I began in Devonshire; and visited, I think
+I may say, every nook in that county, in Cornwall, Somersetshire,
+the greater part of Dorsetshire, the Channel Islands, part of
+Oxfordshire, Wiltshire, Gloucestershire, Worcestershire, Herefordshire,
+Monmouthshire, and the six southern Welsh counties. In this way I
+had an opportunity of seeing a considerable portion of Great Britain,
+with a minuteness which few have enjoyed. And I did my business
+after a fashion in which no other official man has worked at
+least for many years. I went almost everywhere on horseback. I had
+two hunters of my own, and here and there, where I could, I hired
+a third horse. I had an Irish groom with me,--an old man, who has
+now been in my service for thirty-five years; and in this manner I
+saw almost every house--I think I may say every house of importance--in
+this large district. The object was to create a postal network
+which should catch all recipients of letters. In France it was, and
+I suppose still is, the practice to deliver every letter. Wherever
+the man may live to whom a letter is addressed, it is the duty of
+some letter-carrier to take that letter to his house, sooner or
+later. But this, of course, must be done slowly. With us a delivery
+much delayed was thought to be worse than none at all. In some places
+we did establish posts three times a week, and perhaps occasionally
+twice a week; but such halting arrangements were considered to
+be objectionable, and we were bound down by a salutary law as to
+expense, which came from our masters at the Treasury. We were not
+allowed to establish any messenger's walk on which a sufficient
+number of letters would not be delivered to pay the man's wages,
+counted at a halfpenny a letter. But then the counting was in our
+own hands, and an enterprising official might be sanguine in his
+figures. I think I was sanguine. I did not prepare false accounts;
+but I fear that the postmasters and clerks who absolutely had the
+country to do became aware that I was anxious for good results.
+It is amusing to watch how a passion will grow upon a man. During
+those two years it was the ambition of my life to cover the country
+with rural letter-carriers. I do not remember that in any case a
+rural post proposed by me was negatived by the authorities; but I
+fear that some of them broke down afterwards as being too poor, or
+because, in my anxiety to include this house and that, I had sent
+the men too far afield. Our law was that a man should not be required
+to walk more than sixteen miles a day. Had the work to be done been
+all on a measured road, there would have been no need for doubt as
+to the distances. But my letter-carriers went here and there across
+the fields. It was my special delight to take them by all short
+cuts; and as I measured on horseback the short cuts which they would
+have to make on foot, perhaps I was sometimes a little unjust to
+them.
+
+All this I did on horseback, riding on an average forty miles a
+day. I was paid sixpence a mile for the distance travelled, and it
+was necessary that I should at any rate travel enough to pay for
+my equipage. This I did, and got my hunting out of it also. I have
+often surprised some small country postmaster, who had never seen
+or heard of me before, by coming down upon him at nine in the
+morning, with a red coat and boots and breeches, and interrogating
+him as to the disposal of every letter which came into his office.
+And in the same guise I would ride up to farmhouses, or parsonages,
+or other lone residences about the country, and ask the people how
+they got their letters, at what hour, and especially whether they
+were delivered free or at a certain charge. For a habit had crept
+into use, which came to be, in my eyes, at that time, the one sin
+for which there was no pardon, in accordance with which these rural
+letter-carriers used to charge a penny a letter, alleging that the
+house was out of their beat, and that they must be paid for their
+extra work. I think that I did stamp out that evil. In all these
+visits I was, in truth, a beneficent angel to the public, bringing
+everywhere with me an earlier, cheaper, and much more regular delivery
+of letters. But not unfrequently the angelic nature of my mission
+was imperfectly understood. I was perhaps a little in a hurry to
+get on, and did not allow as much time as was necessary to explain
+to the wondering mistress of the house, or to an open-mouthed farmer,
+why it was that a man arrayed for hunting asked so many questions
+which might be considered impertinent, as applying to his or her
+private affairs. "Good-morning, sir. I have just called to ask a
+few questions. I am a surveyor of the Post Office. How do you get
+your letters? As I am a little in a hurry, perhaps you can explain
+at once." Then I would take out my pencil and notebook, and wait
+for information. And in fact there was no other way in which the
+truth could be ascertained. Unless I came down suddenly as a summer's
+storm upon them, the very people who were robbed by our messengers
+would not confess the robbery, fearing the ill-will of the men. It
+was necessary to startle them into the revelations which I required
+them to make for their own good. And I did startle them. I became
+thoroughly used to it, and soon lost my native bashfulness;--but
+sometimes my visits astonished the retiring inhabitants of country
+houses. I did, however, do my work, and can look back upon what I
+did with thorough satisfaction. I was altogether in earnest; and
+I believe that many a farmer now has his letters brought daily to
+his house free of charge, who but for me would still have had to
+send to the post-town for them twice a week, or to have paid a man
+for bringing them irregularly to his door.
+
+This work took up my time so completely, and entailed upon me so
+great an amount of writing, that I was in fact unable to do any
+literary work. From day to day I thought of it, still purporting
+to make another effort, and often turning over in my head some
+fragment of a plot which had occurred to me. But the day did not
+come in which I could sit down with my pen and paper and begin
+another novel. For, after all, what could it be but a novel? The
+play had failed more absolutely than the novels, for the novels
+had attained the honour of print. The cause of this pressure of
+official work lay, not in the demands of the General Post Office,
+which more than once expressed itself as astonished by my celerity,
+but in the necessity which was incumbent on me to travel miles
+enough to pay for my horses, and upon the amount of correspondence,
+returns, figures, and reports which such an amount of daily travelling
+brought with it. I may boast that the work was done very quickly
+and very thoroughly,--with no fault but an over-eagerness to extend
+postal arrangements far and wide.
+
+In the course of the job I visited Salisbury, and whilst wandering
+there one mid-summer evening round the purlieus of the cathedral I
+conceived the story of The Warden,--from whence came that series of
+novels of which Barchester, with its bishops, deans, and archdeacon,
+was the central site. I may as well declare at once that no one
+at their commencement could have had less reason than myself to
+presume himself to be able to write about clergymen. I have been
+often asked in what period of my early life I had lived so long
+in a cathedral city as to have become intimate with the ways of a
+Close. I never lived in any cathedral city,--except London, never
+knew anything of any Close, and at that time had enjoyed no peculiar
+intimacy with any clergyman. My archdeacon, who has been said to be
+life-like, and for whom I confess that I have all a parent's fond
+affection, was, I think, the simple result of an effort of my moral
+consciousness. It was such as that, in my opinion, that an archdeacon
+should be,--or, at any rate, would be with such advantages as
+an archdeacon might have; and lo! an archdeacon was produced, who
+has been declared by competent authorities to be a real archdeacon
+down to the very ground. And yet, as far as I can remember, I had
+not then even spoken to an archdeacon. I have felt the compliment
+to be very great. The archdeacon came whole from my brain after
+this fashion;--but in writing about clergymen generally, I had to
+pick up as I went whatever I might know or pretend to know about
+them. But my first idea had no reference to clergymen in general.
+I had been struck by two opposite evils,--or what seemed to me to
+be evils,--and with an absence of all art-judgment in such matters, I
+thought that I might be able to expose them, or rather to describe
+them, both in one and the same tale. The first evil was the
+possession by the Church of certain funds and endowments which had
+been intended for charitable purposes, but which had been allowed
+to become incomes for idle Church dignitaries. There had been more
+than one such case brought to public notice at the time, in which
+there seemed to have been an egregious malversation of charitable
+purposes. The second evil was its very opposite. Though I had been
+much struck by the injustice above described, I had also often
+been angered by the undeserved severity of the newspapers towards
+the recipients of such incomes, who could hardly be considered
+to be the chief sinners in the matter. When a man is appointed to
+a place, it is natural that he should accept the income allotted
+to that place without much inquiry. It is seldom that he will be
+the first to find out that his services are overpaid. Though he be
+called upon only to look beautiful and to be dignified upon State
+occasions, he will think (pounds)2000 a year little enough for such beauty
+and dignity as he brings to the task. I felt that there had been
+some tearing to pieces which might have been spared. But I was
+altogether wrong in supposing that the two things could be combined.
+Any writer in advocating a cause must do so after the fashion of
+an advocate,--or his writing will be ineffective. He should take up
+one side and cling to that, and then he may be powerful. There should
+be no scruples of conscience. Such scruples make a man impotent for
+such work. It was open to me to have described a bloated parson,
+with a red nose and all other iniquities, openly neglecting every
+duty required from him, and living riotously on funds purloined
+from the poor,--defying as he did do so the moderate remonstrances
+of a virtuous press. Or I might have painted a man as good, as sweet,
+and as mild as my warden, who should also have been a hard-working,
+ill-paid minister of God's word, and might have subjected him to the
+rancorous venom of some daily Jupiter, who, without a leg to stand
+on, without any true case, might have been induced, by personal
+spite, to tear to rags the poor clergyman with poisonous, anonymous,
+and ferocious leading articles. But neither of these programmes
+recommended itself to my honesty. Satire, though it may exaggerate
+the vice it lashes, is not justified in creating it in order that
+it may be lashed. Caricature may too easily become a slander, and
+satire a libel. I believed in the existence neither of the red-nosed
+clerical cormorant, nor in that of the venomous assassin of the
+journals. I did believe that through want of care and the natural
+tendency of every class to take care of itself, money had slipped
+into the pockets of certain clergymen which should have gone
+elsewhere; and I believed also that through the equally natural
+propensity of men to be as strong as they know how to be, certain
+writers of the press had allowed themselves to use language which
+was cruel, though it was in a good cause. But the two objects
+should not have been combined--and I now know myself well enough
+to be aware that I was not the man to have carried out either of
+them.
+
+Nevertheless I thought much about it, and on the 29th of July,
+1853,--having been then two years without having made any literary
+effort,--I began The Warden, at Tenbury in Worcestershire. It was
+then more than twelve months since I had stood for an hour on the
+little bridge in Salisbury, and had made out to my own satisfaction
+the spot on which Hiram's hospital should stand. Certainly no work
+that I ever did took up so much of my thoughts. On this occasion
+I did no more than write the first chapter, even if so much. I had
+determined that my official work should be moderated, so as to allow
+me some time for writing; but then, just at this time, I was sent
+to take the postal charge of the northern counties in Ireland,--of
+Ulster, and the counties Meath and Louth. Hitherto in official
+language I had been a surveyor's clerk,--now I was to be a surveyor.
+The difference consisted mainly in an increase of income from about
+(pounds)450 to about (pounds)800;--for at that time the sum netted still depended
+on the number of miles travelled. Of course that English work
+to which I had become so warmly wedded had to be abandoned. Other
+parts of England were being done by other men, and I had nearly
+finished the area which had been entrusted to me. I should have
+liked to ride over the whole country, and to have sent a rural
+post letter-carrier to every parish, every village, every hamlet,
+and every grange in England.
+
+We were at this time very much unsettled as regards any residence.
+While we were living at Clonmel two sons had been born, who certainly
+were important enough to have been mentioned sooner. At Clonmel we
+had lived in lodgings, and from there had moved to Mallow, a town
+in the county Cork, where we had taken a house. Mallow was in the
+centre of a hunting country, and had been very pleasant to me. But
+our house there had been given up when it was known that I should
+be detained in England; and then we had wandered about in the western
+counties, moving our headquarters from one town to another. During
+this time we had lived at Exeter, at Bristol, at Caermarthen,
+at Cheltenham, and at Worcester. Now we again moved, and settled
+ourselves for eighteen months at Belfast. After that we took a
+house at Donnybrook, the well-known suburb of Dublin.
+
+The work of taking up a new district, which requires not only that
+the man doing it should know the nature of the postal arrangements,
+but also the characters and the peculiarities of the postmasters
+and their clerks, was too heavy to allow of my going on with my
+book at once. It was not till the end of 1852 that I recommenced it,
+and it was in the autumn of 1853 that I finished the work. It was
+only one small volume, and in later days would have been completed
+in six weeks,--or in two months at the longest, if other work had
+pressed. On looking at the title-page, I find it was not published
+till 1855. I had made acquaintance, through my friend John Merivale,
+with William Longman the publisher, and had received from him an
+assurance that the manuscript should be "looked at." It was "looked
+at," and Messrs. Longman made me an offer to publish it at half
+profits. I had no reason to love "half profits," but I was very
+anxious to have my book published, and I acceded. It was now more
+than ten years since I had commenced writing The Macdermots, and
+I thought that if any success was to be achieved, the time surely
+had come. I had not been impatient; but, if there was to be a time,
+surely it had come.
+
+The novel-reading world did not go mad about The Warden; but I soon
+felt that it had not failed as the others had failed. There were
+notices of it in the press, and I could discover that people around
+me knew that I had written a book. Mr. Longman was complimentary,
+and after a while informed me that there would be profits to divide.
+At the end of 1855 I received a cheque for (pounds)9 8s. 8d., which was
+the first money I had ever earned by literary work;--that (pounds)20 which
+poor Mr. Colburn had been made to pay certainly never having been
+earned at all. At the end of 1856 I received another sum of (pounds)10
+15s. 1d. The pecuniary success was not great. Indeed, as regarded
+remuneration for the time, stone-breaking would have done better.
+A thousand copies were printed, of which, after a lapse of five or
+six years, about 300 had to be converted into another form, and sold
+as belonging to a cheap edition. In its original form The Warden
+never reached the essential honour of a second edition.
+
+I have already said of the work that it failed altogether in
+the purport for which it was intended. But it has a merit of its
+own,--a merit by my own perception of which I was enabled to see
+wherein lay whatever strength I did possess. The characters of the
+bishop, of the archdeacon, of the archdeacon's wife, and especially
+of the warden, are all well and clearly drawn. I had realised to
+myself a series of portraits, and had been able so to put them on
+the canvas that my readers should see that which I meant them to
+see. There is no gift which an author can have more useful to him
+than this. And the style of the English was good, though from most
+unpardonable carelessness the grammar was not unfrequently faulty.
+With such results I had no doubt but that I would at once begin
+another novel.
+
+I will here say one word as a long-deferred answer to an item of
+criticism which appeared in the Times newspaper as to The Warden.
+In an article-if I remember rightly--on The Warden and Barchester
+Towers combined--which I would call good-natured, but that I take
+it for granted that the critics of the Times are actuated by higher
+motives than good-nature, that little book and its sequel are spoken
+of in terms which were very pleasant to the author. But there was
+added to this a gentle word of rebuke at the morbid condition of the
+author's mind which had prompted him to indulge in personalities,--the
+personalities in question having reference to some editor or manager
+of the Times newspaper. For I had introduced one Tom Towers as being
+potent among the contributors to the Jupiter, under which name I
+certainly did allude to the Times. But at that time, living away in
+Ireland, I had not even heard the name of any gentleman connected
+with the Times newspaper, and could not have intended to represent
+any individual by Tom Towers. As I had created an archdeacon, so had
+I created a journalist, and the one creation was no more personal
+or indicative of morbid tendencies than the other. If Tom Towers
+was at all like any gentleman connected with the Times, my moral
+consciousness must again have been very powerful.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+"BARCHESTER TOWERS" AND THE "THREE CLERKS"
+
+1855-1858
+
+
+
+
+It was, I think, before I started on my English tours among the
+rural posts that I made my first attempt at writing for a magazine.
+I had read, soon after they came out, the two first volumes of
+Charles Menvale's History of the Romans under the Empire, and had
+got into some correspondence with the author's brother as to the
+author's views about Caesar. Hence arose in my mind a tendency to
+investigate the character of probably the greatest man who ever
+lived, which tendency in after years produced a little book of
+which I shall have to speak when its time comes,--and also a taste
+generally for Latin literature, which has been one of the chief
+delights of my later life. And I may say that I became at this time
+as anxious about Caesar, and as desirous of reaching the truth as
+to his character, as we have all been in regard to Bismarck in these
+latter days. I lived in Caesar, and debated with myself constantly
+whether he crossed the Rubicon as a tyrant or as a patriot. In
+order that I might review Mr. Merivale's book without feeling that
+I was dealing unwarrantably with a subject beyond me, I studied the
+Commentaries thoroughly, and went through a mass of other reading
+which the object of a magazine article hardly justified,--but which
+has thoroughly justified itself in the subsequent pursuits of my
+life. I did write two articles, the first mainly on Julius Caesar,
+and the second on Augustus, which appeared in the Dublin University
+Magazine. They were the result of very much labour, but there came
+from them no pecuniary product. I had been very modest when I sent
+them to the editor, as I had been when I called on John Forster,
+not venturing to suggest the subject of money. After a while I did
+call upon the proprietor of the magazine in Dublin, and was told
+by him that such articles were generally written to oblige friends,
+and that articles written to oblige friends were not usually paid
+for. The Dean of Ely, as the author of the work in question now
+is, was my friend; but I think I was wronged, as I certainly had
+no intention of obliging him by my criticism. Afterwards, when I
+returned to Ireland, I wrote other articles for the same magazine,
+one of which, intended to be very savage in its denunciation, was
+on an official blue-book just then brought out, preparatory to the
+introduction of competitive examinations for the Civil Service. For
+that and some other article, I now forget what, I was paid. Up to
+the end of 1857 I had received (pounds)55 for the hard work of ten years.
+
+It was while I was engaged on Barchester Towers that I adopted a
+system of writing which, for some years afterwards, I found to be
+very serviceable to me. My time was greatly occupied in travelling,
+and the nature of my travelling was now changed. I could not
+any longer do it on horseback. Railroads afforded me my means of
+conveyance, and I found that I passed in railway-carriages very
+many hours of my existence. Like others, I used to read,--though
+Carlyle has since told me that a man when travelling should not
+read, but "sit still and label his thoughts." But if I intended
+to make a profitable business out of my writing, and, at the same
+time, to do my best for the Post Office, I must turn these hours
+to more account than I could do even by reading. I made for myself
+therefore a little tablet, and found after a few days' exercise
+that I could write as quickly in a railway-carriage as I could at
+my desk. I worked with a pencil, and what I wrote my wife copied
+afterwards. In this way was composed the greater part of Barchester
+Towers and of the novel which succeeded it, and much also of others
+subsequent to them. My only objection to the practice came from
+the appearance of literary ostentation, to which I felt myself to
+be subject when going to work before four or five fellow-passengers.
+But I got used to it, as I had done to the amazement of the west
+country farmers' wives when asking them after their letters.
+
+In the writing of Barchester Towers I took great delight. The bishop
+and Mrs. Proudie were very real to me, as were also the troubles
+of the archdeacon and the loves of Mr. Slope. When it was done,
+Mr. W. Longman required that it should be subjected to his reader;
+and he returned the MS. to me, with a most laborious and voluminous
+criticism,--coming from whom I never knew. This was accompanied
+by an offer to print the novel on the half-profit system, with a
+payment of (pounds)100 in advance out of my half-profits,--on condition
+that I would comply with the suggestions made by his critic. One
+of these suggestions required that I should cut the novel down to
+two volumes. In my reply, I went through the criticisms, rejecting
+one and accepting another, almost alternately, but declaring at
+last that no consideration should induce me to cut out a third of
+my work. I am at a loss to know how such a task could have been
+performed. I could burn the MS., no doubt, and write another book
+on the same story; but how two words out of six are to be withdrawn
+from a written novel, I cannot conceive. I believe such tasks have
+been attempted--perhaps performed; but I refused to make even the
+attempt. Mr. Longman was too gracious to insist on his critic's
+terms; and the book was published, certainly none the worse, and
+I do not think much the better, for the care that had been taken
+with it.
+
+The work succeeded just as The Warden had succeeded. It achieved
+no great reputation, but it was one of the novels which novel
+readers were called upon to read. Perhaps I may be assuming upon
+myself more than I have a right to do in saying now that Barchester
+Towers has become one of those novels which do not die quite at once,
+which live and are read for perhaps a quarter of a century; but if
+that be so, its life has been so far prolonged by the vitality of
+some of its younger brothers. Barchester Towers would hardly be
+so well known as it is had there been no Framley Parsonage and no
+Last Chronicle of Barset.
+
+I received my (pounds)100, in advance, with profound delight. It was a
+positive and most welcome increase to my income, and might probably
+be regarded as a first real step on the road to substantial success.
+I am well aware that there are many who think that an author in his
+authorship should not regard money,--nor a painter, or sculptor, or
+composer in his art. I do not know that this unnatural sacrifice
+is supposed to extend itself further. A barrister, a clergyman, a
+doctor, an engineer, and even actors and architects, may without
+disgrace follow the bent of human nature, and endeavour to fill
+their bellies and clothe their backs, and also those of their wives
+and children, as comfortably as they can by the exercise of their
+abilities and their crafts. They may be as rationally realistic,
+as may the butchers and the bakers; but the artist and the author
+forget the high glories of their calling if they condescend to make
+a money return a first object. They who preach this doctrine will
+be much offended by my theory, and by this book of mine, if my theory
+and my book come beneath their notice. They require the practice
+of a so-called virtue which is contrary to nature, and which, in
+my eyes, would be no virtue if it were practised. They are like
+clergymen who preach sermons against the love of money, but who
+know that the love of money is so distinctive a characteristic
+of humanity that such sermons are mere platitudes called for by
+customary but unintelligent piety. All material progress has come
+from man's desire to do the best he can for himself and those
+about him, and civilisation and Christianity itself have been made
+possible by such progress. Though we do not all of us argue this
+matter out within our breasts, we do all feel it; and we know that
+the more a man earns the more useful he is to his fellow-men. The
+most useful lawyers, as a rule, have been those who have made the
+greatest incomes,--and it is the same with the doctors. It would
+be the same in the Church if they who have the choosing of bishops
+always chose the best man. And it has in truth been so too in art
+and authorship. Did Titian or Rubens disregard their pecuniary
+rewards? As far as we know, Shakespeare worked always for money,
+giving the best of his intellect to support his trade as an actor.
+In our own century what literary names stand higher than those of
+Byron, Tennyson, Scott, Dickens, Macaulay, and Carlyle? And I think
+I may say that none of those great men neglected the pecuniary result
+of their labours. Now and then a man may arise among us who in any
+calling, whether it be in law, in physic, in religious teaching,
+in art, or literature, may in his professional enthusiasm utterly
+disregard money. All will honour his enthusiasm, and if he be
+wifeless and childless, his disregard of the great object of men's
+work will be blameless. But it is a mistake to suppose that a man
+is a better man because he despises money. Few do so, and those few
+in doing so suffer a defeat. Who does not desire to be hospitable
+to his friends, generous to the poor, liberal to all, munificent
+to his children, and to be himself free from the casking fear which
+poverty creates? The subject will not stand an argument;--and yet
+authors are told that they should disregard payment for their work,
+and be content to devote their unbought brains to the welfare of
+the public. Brains that are unbought will never serve the public
+much. Take away from English authors their copyrights, and you
+would very soon take away from England her authors.
+
+I say this here, because it is my purpose as I go on to state what
+to me has been the result of my profession in the ordinary way in
+which professions are regarded, so that by my example may be seen
+what prospect there is that a man devoting himself to literature
+with industry, perseverance, certain necessary aptitudes, and fair
+average talents, may succeed in gaining a livelihood, as another man
+does in another profession. The result with me has been comfortable
+but not splendid, as I think was to have been expected from the
+combination of such gifts.
+
+I have certainly always had also before my eyes the charms of
+reputation. Over and above the money view of the question, I wished
+from the beginning to be something more than a clerk in the Post
+Office. To be known as somebody,--to be Anthony Trollope if it be
+no more,--is to me much. The feeling is a very general one, and
+I think beneficent. It is that which has been called the "last
+infirmity of noble mind." The infirmity is so human that the man who
+lacks it is either above or below humanity. I own to the infirmity.
+But I confess that my first object in taking to literature as a
+profession was that which is common to the barrister when he goes
+to the Bar, and to the baker when he sets up his oven. I wished to
+make an income on which I and those belonging to me might live in
+comfort.
+
+If indeed a man writes his books badly, or paints his pictures
+badly, because he can make his money faster in that fashion than
+by doing them well, and at the same time proclaims them to be the
+best he can do,--if in fact he sells shoddy for broadcloth,--he
+is dishonest, as is any other fraudulent dealer. So may be the
+barrister who takes money that he does not earn, or the clergyman
+who is content to live on a sinecure. No doubt the artist or the
+author may have a difficulty which will not occur to the seller of
+cloth, in settling within himself what is good work and what is
+bad,--when labour enough has been given, and when the task has been
+scamped. It is a danger as to which he is bound to be severe with
+himself--in which he should feel that his conscience should be set
+fairly in the balance against the natural bias of his interest. If
+he do not do so, sooner or later his dishonesty will be discovered,
+and will be estimated accordingly. But in this he is to be governed
+only by the plain rules of honesty which should govern us all.
+Having said so much, I shall not scruple as I go on to attribute
+to the pecuniary result of my labours all the importance which I
+felt them to have at the time.
+
+Barchester Towers, for which I had received (pounds)100 in advance, sold
+well enough to bring me further payments--moderate payments--from
+the publishers. From that day up to this very time in which I am
+writing, that book and The Warden together have given me almost
+every year some small income. I get the accounts very regularly,
+and I find that I have received (pounds)727 11S. 3d. for the two. It is
+more than I got for the three or four works that came afterwards,
+but the payments have been spread over twenty years.
+
+When I went to Mr. Longman with my next novel, The Three Clerks,
+in my hand, I could not induce him to understand that a lump sum
+down was more pleasant than a deferred annuity. I wished him to
+buy it from me at a price which he might think to be a fair value,
+and I argued with him that as soon as an author has put himself into
+a position which insures a sufficient sale of his works to give a
+profit, the publisher is not entitled to expect the half of such
+proceeds. While there is a pecuniary risk, the whole of which must
+be borne by the publisher, such division is fair enough; but such
+a demand on the part of the publisher is monstrous as soon as the
+article produced is known to be a marketable commodity. I thought
+that I had now reached that point, but Mr. Longman did not agree with
+me. And he endeavoured to convince me that I might lose more than
+I gained, even though I should get more money by going elsewhere.
+"It is for you," said he, "to think whether our names on your
+title-page are not worth more to you than the increased payment."
+This seemed to me to savour of that high-flown doctrine of the
+contempt of money which I have never admired. I did think much
+of Messrs. Longman's name, but I liked it best at the bottom of a
+cheque.
+
+I was also scared from the august columns of Paternoster Row by
+a remark made to myself by one of the firm, which seemed to imply
+that they did not much care for works of fiction. Speaking of a
+fertile writer of tales who was not then dead, he declared that ----
+(naming the author in question) had spawned upon them (the publishers)
+three novels a year! Such language is perhaps justifiable in regard
+to a man who shows so much of the fecundity of the herring; but I
+did not know how fruitful might be my own muse, and I thought that
+I had better go elsewhere.
+
+I had then written The Three Clerks, which, when I could not sell
+it to Messrs. Longman, I took in the first instance to Messrs.
+Hurst & Blackett, who had become successors to Mr. Colburn. I had
+made an appointment with one of the firm, which, however, that
+gentleman was unable to keep. I was on my way from Ireland to Italy,
+and had but one day in London in which to dispose of my manuscript.
+I sat for an hour in Great Marlborough Street, expecting the return
+of the peccant publisher who had broken his tryst, and I was about
+to depart with my bundle under my arm when the foreman of the
+house came to me. He seemed to think it a pity that I should go,
+and wished me to leave my work with him. This, however, I would not
+do, unless he would undertake to buy it then and there. Perhaps he
+lacked authority. Perhaps his judgment was against such purchase.
+But while we debated the matter, he gave me some advice. "I hope
+it's not historical, Mr. Trollope?" he said. "Whatever you do,
+don't be historical; your historical novel is not worth a damn."
+Thence I took The Three Clerks to Mr. Bentley; and on the same
+afternoon succeeded in selling it to him for (pounds)250. His son still
+possesses it, and the firm has, I believe, done very well with the
+purchase. It was certainly the best novel I had as yet written.
+The plot is not so good as that of the Macdermots; nor are there
+any characters in the book equal to those of Mrs. Proudie and the
+Warden; but the work has a more continued interest, and contains
+the first well-described love-scene that I ever wrote. The passage
+in which Kate Woodward, thinking that she will die, tries to take
+leave of the lad she loves, still brings tears to my eyes when I
+read it. I had not the heart to kill her. I never could do that.
+And I do not doubt but that they are living happily together to
+this day.
+
+The lawyer Chaffanbrass made his first appearance in this novel,
+and I do not think that I have cause to be ashamed of him. But this
+novel now is chiefly noticeable to me from the fact that in it I
+introduced a character under the name of Sir Gregory Hardlines, by
+which I intended to lean very heavily on that much loathed scheme
+of competitive examination, of which at that time Sir Charles
+Trevelyan was the great apostle. Sir Gregory Hardlines was intended
+for Sir Charles Trevelyan,--as any one at the time would know who
+had taken an interest in the Civil Service. "We always call him
+Sir Gregory," Lady Trevelyan said to me afterwards, when I came
+to know her and her husband. I never learned to love competitive
+examination; but I became, and am, very fond of Sir Charles Trevelyan.
+Sir Stafford Northcote, who is now Chancellor of the Exchequer,
+was then leagued with his friend Sir Charles, and he too appears
+in The Three Clerks under the feebly facetious name of Sir Warwick
+West End.
+
+But for all that The Three Clerks was a good novel.
+
+When that sale was made I was on my way to Italy with my wife,
+paying a third visit there to my mother and brother. This was in
+1857, and she had then given up her pen. It was the first year in
+which she had not written, and she expressed to me her delight that
+her labours should be at an end, and that mine should be beginning
+in the same field. In truth they had already been continued for
+a dozen years, but a man's career will generally be held to date
+itself from the commencement of his success. On those foreign
+tours I always encountered adventures, which, as I look back upon
+them now, tempt me almost to write a little book of my long past
+Continental travels. On this occasion, as we made our way slowly
+through Switzerland and over the Alps, we encountered again and
+again a poor forlorn Englishman, who had no friend and no aptitude
+for travelling. He was always losing his way, and finding himself
+with no seat in the coaches and no bed at the inns. On one occasion
+I found him at Coire seated at 5 A. M. in the coupe of a diligence
+which was intended to start at noon for the Engadine, while it was
+his purpose to go over the Alps in another which was to leave at
+5.30, and which was already crowded with passengers. "Ah!" he said,
+"I am in time now, and nobody shall turn me out of this seat,"
+alluding to former little misfortunes of which I had been a witness.
+When I explained to him his position, he was as one to whom life
+was too bitter to be borne. But he made his way into Italy, and
+encountered me again at the Pitti Palace in Florence. "Can you
+tell me something?" he said to me in a whisper, having touched my
+shoulder. "The people are so ill-natured I don't like to ask them.
+Where is it they keep the Medical Venus?" I sent him to the Uffizzi,
+but I fear he was disappointed.
+
+We ourselves, however, on entering Milan had been in quite as much
+distress as any that he suffered. We had not written for beds,
+and on driving up to a hotel at ten in the evening found it full.
+Thence we went from one hotel to another, finding them all full.
+The misery is one well known to travellers, but I never heard of
+another case in which a man and his wife were told at midnight to
+get out of the conveyance into the middle of the street because the
+horse could not be made to go any further. Such was our condition.
+I induced the driver, however, to go again to the hotel which was
+nearest to him, and which was kept by a German. Then I bribed the
+porter to get the master to come down to me; and, though my French
+is ordinarily very defective, I spoke with such eloquence to
+that German innkeeper that he, throwing his arms round my neck in
+a transport of compassion, swore that he would never leave me nor
+my wife till he had put us to bed. And he did so; but, ah! there
+were so many in those beds! It is such an experience as this which
+teaches a travelling foreigner how different on the Continent is
+the accommodation provided for him, from that which is supplied
+for the inhabitants of the country.
+
+It was on a previous visit to Milan, when the telegraph-wires were
+only just opened to the public by the Austrian authorities, that
+we had decided one day at dinner that we would go to Verona that
+night. There was a train at six, reaching Verona at midnight, and
+we asked some servant of the hotel to telegraph for us, ordering
+supper and beds. The demand seemed to create some surprise; but
+we persisted, and were only mildly grieved when we found ourselves
+charged twenty zwanzigers for the message. Telegraphy was new at
+Milan, and the prices were intended to be almost prohibitory. We
+paid our twenty zwanzigers and went on, consoling ourselves with the
+thought of our ready supper and our assured beds. When we reached
+Verona, there arose a great cry along the platform for Signor
+Trollope. I put out my head and declared my identity, when I
+was waited upon by a glorious personage dressed like a beau for a
+ball, with half-a-dozen others almost as glorious behind him, who
+informed me, with his hat in his hand, that he was the landlord of
+the "Due Torre." It was a heating moment, but it became more hot
+when he asked after my people,--"mes gens." I could only turn round,
+and point to my wife and brother-in-law. I had no other "people."
+There were three carriages provided for us, each with a pair of
+grey horses. When we reached the house it was all lit up. We were
+not allowed to move without an attendant with a lighted candle. It
+was only gradually that the mistake came to be understood. On us
+there was still the horror of the bill, the extent of which could
+not be known till the hour of departure had come. The landlord,
+however, had acknowledged to himself that his inductions had been
+ill-founded, and he treated us with clemency. He had never before
+received a telegram.
+
+I apologise for these tales, which are certainly outside my purpose,
+and will endeavour to tell no more that shall not have a closer
+relation to my story. I had finished The Three Clerks just before
+I left England, and when in Florence was cudgelling my brain for
+a new plot. Being then with my brother, I asked him to sketch me a
+plot, and he drew out that of my next novel, called Doctor Thorne.
+I mention this particularly, because it was the only occasion in
+which I have had recourse to some other source than my own brains
+for the thread of a story. How far I may unconsciously have adopted
+incidents from what I have read,--either from history or from works
+of imagination,--I do not know. It is beyond question that a man
+employed as I have been must do so. But when doing it I have not
+been aware that I have done it. I have never taken another man's
+work, and deliberately framed my work upon it. I am far from
+censuring this practice in others. Our greatest masters in works
+of imagination have obtained such aid for themselves. Shakespeare
+dug out of such quarries whenever he could find them. Ben Jonson,
+with heavier hand, built up his structures on his studies of
+the classics, not thinking it beneath him to give, without direct
+acknowledgment, whole pieces translated both from poets and
+historians. But in those days no such acknowledgment was usual.
+Plagiary existed, and was very common, but was not known as a sin.
+It is different now; and I think that an author, when he uses either
+the words or the plot of another, should own as much, demanding to
+be credited with no more of the work than he has himself produced.
+I may say also that I have never printed as my own a word that has
+been written by others. [Footnote: I must make one exception to
+this declaration. The legal opinion as to heirlooms in The Eustace
+Diamonds was written for me by Charles Merewether, the present
+Member for Northampton. I am told that it has become the ruling
+authority on the subject.] It might probably have been better for
+my readers had I done so, as I am informed that Doctor Thorne, the
+novel of which I am now speaking, has a larger sale than any other
+book of mine.
+
+Early in 1858, while I was writing Doctor Thorne, I was asked by
+the great men at the General Post Office to go to Egypt to make a
+treaty with the Pasha for the conveyance of our mails through that
+country by railway. There was a treaty in existence, but that had
+reference to the carriage of bags and boxes by camels from Alexandria
+to Suez. Since its date the railway had grown, and was now nearly
+completed, and a new treaty was wanted. So I came over from Dublin
+to London, on my road, and again went to work among the publishers.
+The other novel was not finished; but I thought I had now progressed
+far enough to arrange a sale while the work was still on the stocks.
+I went to Mr. Bentley and demanded (pounds)400,--for the copyright. He
+acceded, but came to me the next morning at the General Post Office
+to say that it could not be. He had gone to work at his figures
+after I had left him, and had found that (pounds)300 would be the outside
+value of the novel. I was intent upon the larger sum; and in furious
+haste,--for I had but an hour at my disposal,--I rushed to Chapman
+& Hall in Piccadilly, and said what I had to say to Mr. Edward
+Chapman in a quick torrent of words. They were the first of a great
+many words which have since been spoken by me in that back-shop.
+Looking at me as he might have done at a highway robber who had
+stopped him on Hounslow Heath, he said that he supposed he might
+as well do as I desired. I considered this to be a sale, and it
+was a sale. I remember that he held the poker in his hand all the
+time that I was with him;--but in truth, even though he had declined
+to buy the book, there would have been no danger.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+"DOCTOR THORNE"--"THE BERTRAMS"--"THE WEST INDIES" AND "THE SPANISH
+MAIN"
+
+
+
+
+As I journeyed across France to Marseilles, and made thence a
+terribly rough voyage to Alexandria, I wrote my allotted number of
+pages every day. On this occasion more than once I left my paper
+on the cabin table, rushing away to be sick in the privacy of my
+state room. It was February, and the weather was miserable; but
+still I did my work. Labor omnia vincit improbus. I do not say that
+to all men has been given physical strength sufficient for such
+exertion as this, but I do believe that real exertion will enable
+most men to work at almost any season. I had previously to this
+arranged a system of task-work for myself, which I would strongly
+recommend to those who feel as I have felt, that labour, when not
+made absolutely obligatory by the circumstances of the hour, should
+never be allowed to become spasmodic. There was no day on which
+it was my positive duty to write for the publishers, as it was my
+duty to write reports for the Post Office. I was free to be idle if
+I pleased. But as I had made up my mind to undertake this second
+profession, I found it to be expedient to bind myself by certain
+self-imposed laws. When I have commenced a new book, I have always
+prepared a diary, divided into weeks, and carried it on for the
+period which I have allowed myself for the completion of the work.
+In this I have entered, day by day, the number of pages I have
+written, so that if at any time I have slipped into idleness for
+a day or two, the record of that idleness has been there, staring
+me in the face, and demanding of me increased labour, so that the
+deficiency might be supplied. According to the circumstances of the
+time,--whether my other business might be then heavy or light, or
+whether the book which I was writing was or was not wanted with
+speed,--I have allotted myself so many pages a week. The average
+number has been about 40. It has been placed as low as 20, and has
+risen to 112. And as a page is an ambiguous term, my page has been
+made to contain 250 words; and as words, if not watched, will have
+a tendency to straggle, I have had every word counted as I went. In
+the bargains I have made with publishers I have,--not, of course,
+with their knowledge, but in my own mind,--undertaken always to
+supply them with so many words, and I have never put a book out
+of hand short of the number by a single word. I may also say that
+the excess has been very small. I have prided myself on completing
+my work exactly within the proposed dimensions. But I have prided
+myself especially in completing it within the proposed time,--and
+I have always done so. There has ever been the record before me,
+and a week passed with an insufficient number of pages has been a
+blister to my eye, and a month so disgraced would have been a sorrow
+to my heart.
+
+I have been told that such appliances are beneath the notice of a
+man of genius. I have never fancied myself to be a man of genius,
+but had I been so I think I might well have subjected myself to
+these trammels. Nothing surely is so potent as a law that may not
+be disobeyed. It has the force of the water drop that hollows the
+stone. A small daily task, If it be really daily, will beat the
+labours of a spasmodic Hercules. It is the tortoise which always
+catches the hare. The hare has no chance. He loses more time in
+glorifying himself for a quick spurt than suffices for the tortoise
+to make half his journey.
+
+I have known authors whose lives have always been troublesome and
+painful because their tasks have never been done in time. They
+have ever been as boys struggling to learn their lessons as they
+entered the school gates. Publishers have distrusted them, and they
+have failed to write their best because they have seldom written at
+ease. I have done double their work--though burdened with another
+profession,--and have done it almost without an effort. I have not
+once, through all my literary career, felt myself even in danger
+of being late with my task. I have known no anxiety as to "copy."
+The needed pages far ahead--very far ahead--have almost always
+been in the drawer beside me. And that little diary, with its dates
+and ruled spaces, its record that must be seen, its daily, weekly
+demand upon my industry, has done all that for me.
+
+There are those who would be ashamed to subject themselves to
+such a taskmaster, and who think that the man who works with his
+imagination should allow himself to wait till--inspiration moves
+him. When I have heard such doctrine preached, I have hardly been
+able to repress my scorn. To me it would not be more absurd if the
+shoemaker were to wait for inspiration, or the tallow-chandler for
+the divine moment of melting. If the man whose business it is to
+write has eaten too many good things, or has drunk too much, or
+smoked too many cigars,--as men who write sometimes will do,--then
+his condition may be unfavourable for work; but so will be the
+condition of a shoemaker who has been similarly imprudent. I have
+sometimes thought that the inspiration wanted has been the remedy
+which time will give to the evil results of such imprudence.--Mens
+sana in corpore sano. The author wants that as does every other
+workman,--that and a habit of industry. I was once told that the
+surest aid to the writing of a book was a piece of cobbler's wax on
+my chair. I certainly believe in the cobbler's wax much more than
+the inspiration.
+
+It will be said, perhaps, that a man whose work has risen to no
+higher pitch than mine has attained, has no right to speak of the
+strains and impulses to which real genius is exposed. I am ready
+to admit the great variations in brain power which are exhibited by
+the products of different men, and am not disposed to rank my own
+very high; but my own experience tells me that a man can always do
+the work for which his brain is fitted if he will give himself the
+habit of regarding his work as a normal condition of his life. I
+therefore venture to advise young men who look forward to authorship
+as the business of their lives, even when they propose that that
+authorship be of the highest class known, to avoid enthusiastic
+rushes with their pens, and to seat themselves at their desks day
+by day as though they were lawyers' clerks;--and so let them sit
+until the allotted task shall be accomplished.
+
+While I was in Egypt, I finished Doctor Thorne, and on the following
+day began The Bertrams. I was moved now by a determination to excel,
+if not in quality, at any rate in quantity. An ignoble ambition
+for an author, my readers will no doubt say. But not, I think,
+altogether ignoble, if an author can bring himself to look at his
+work as does any other workman. This had become my task, this
+was the furrow in which my plough was set, this was the thing the
+doing of which had fallen into my hands, and I was minded to work
+at it with a will. It is not on my conscience that I have ever
+scamped my work. My novels, whether good or bad, have been as good
+as I could make them. Had I taken three months of idleness between
+each they would have been no better. Feeling convinced of that, I
+finished Doctor Thorne on one day, and began The Bertrams on the
+next.
+
+I had then been nearly two months in Egypt, and had at last
+succeeded in settling the terms of a postal treaty. Nearly twenty
+years have passed since that time, and other years may yet run on
+before these pages are printed. I trust I may commit no official
+sin by describing here the nature of the difficulty which met me.
+I found, on my arrival, that I was to communicate with an officer
+of the Pasha, who was then called Nubar Bey. I presume him to have
+been the gentleman who has lately dealt with our Government as to
+the Suez Canal shares, and who is now well known to the political
+world as Nubar Pasha. I found him a most courteous gentlemen, an
+Armenian. I never went to his office, nor do I know that he had an
+office. Every other day he would come to me at my hotel, and bring
+with him servants, and pipes, and coffee. I enjoyed his coming
+greatly; but there was one point on which we could not agree. As
+to money and other details, it seemed as though he could hardly
+accede fast enough to the wishes of the Postmaster-General; but
+on one point he was firmly opposed to me. I was desirous that the
+mails should be carried through Egypt in twenty-four hours, and he
+thought that forty-eight hours should be allowed. I was obstinate,
+and he was obstinate; and for a long time we could come to
+no agreement. At last his oriental tranquillity seemed to desert
+him, and he took upon himself to assure me, with almost more than
+British energy, that, if I insisted on the quick transit, a terrible
+responsibility would rest on my head. I made this mistake, he
+said,--that I supposed that a rate of travelling which would be
+easy and secure in England could be attained with safety in Egypt.
+"The Pasha, his master, would," he said, "no doubt accede to
+any terms demanded by the British Post Office, so great was his
+reverence for everything British. In that case he, Nubar, would at
+once resign his position, and retire into obscurity. He would be
+ruined; but the loss of life and bloodshed which would certainly
+follow so rash an attempt should not be on his head." I smoked my
+pipe, or rather his, and drank his coffee, with oriental quiescence
+but British firmness. Every now and again, through three or four
+visits, I renewed the expression of my opinion that the transit
+could easily be made in twenty-four hours. At last he gave way,--and
+astonished me by the cordiality of his greeting. There was no
+longer any question of bloodshed or of resignation of office, and
+he assured me, with energetic complaisance, that it should be his
+care to see that the time was punctually kept. It was punctually
+kept, and, I believe, is so still. I must confess, however, that my
+persistency was not the result of any courage specially personal to
+myself. While the matter was being debated, it had been whispered
+to me that the Peninsular and Oriental Steamship Company had
+conceived that forty-eight hours would suit the purposes of their
+traffic better than twenty-four, and that, as they were the great
+paymasters on the railway, the Minister of the Egyptian State,
+who managed the railway, might probably wish to accommodate them.
+I often wondered who originated that frightful picture of blood
+and desolation. That it came from an English heart and an English
+hand I was always sure.
+
+From Egypt I visited the Holy Land, and on my way inspected the
+Post Offices at Malta and Gibraltar. I could fill a volume with
+true tales of my adventures. The Tales of All Countries have, most
+of them, some foundation in such occurrences. There is one called
+John Bull on the Guadalquivir, the chief incident in which occurred
+to me and a friend of mine on our way up that river to Seville. We
+both of us handled the gold ornaments of a man whom we believed to
+be a bull-fighter, but who turned out to be a duke,--and a duke,
+too, who could speak English! How gracious he was to us, and yet
+how thoroughly he covered us with ridicule!
+
+On my return home I received (pounds)400 from Messrs. Chapman & Hall for
+Doctor Thorne, and agreed to sell them The Bertrams for the same sum.
+This latter novel was written under very vagrant circumstances,--at
+Alexandria, Malta, Gibraltar, Glasgow, then at sea, and at last
+finished in Jamaica. Of my journey to the West Indies I will say
+a few words presently, but I may as well speak of these two novels
+here. Doctor Thorne has, I believe, been the most popular book that
+I have written,--if I may take the sale as a proof of comparative
+popularity. The Bertrams has had quite an opposite fortune. I do not
+know that I have ever heard it well spoken of even by my friends,
+and I cannot remember that there is any character in it that has
+dwelt in the minds of novel-readers. I myself think that they are
+of about equal merit, but that neither of them is good. They fall
+away very much from The Three Clerks, both in pathos and humour.
+There is no personage in either of them comparable to Chaffanbrass the
+lawyer. The plot of Doctor Thorne is good, and I am led therefore
+to suppose that a good plot,--which, to my own feeling, is the
+most insignificant part of a tale,--is that which will most raise
+it or most condemn it in the public judgment. The plots of Tom Jones
+and of Ivanhoe are almost perfect, and they are probably the most
+popular novels of the schools of the last and of this century; but
+to me the delicacy of Amelia, and the rugged strength of Burley
+and Meg Merrilies, say more for the power of those great novelists
+than the gift of construction shown in the two works I have named.
+A novel should give a picture of common life enlivened by humour
+and sweetened by pathos. To make that picture worthy of attention,
+the canvas should be crowded with real portraits, not of individuals
+known to the world or to the author, but of created personages
+impregnated with traits of character which are known. To my thinking,
+the plot is but the vehicle for all this; and when you have the
+vehicle without the passengers, a story of mystery in which the
+agents never spring to life, you have but a wooden show. There must,
+however, be a story. You must provide a vehicle of some sort. That
+of The Bertrams was more than ordinarily bad; and as the book was
+relieved by no special character, it failed. Its failure never
+surprised me; but I have been surprised by the success of Doctor
+Thorne.
+
+At this time there was nothing in the success of the one or the
+failure of the other to affect me very greatly. The immediate sale,
+and the notices elicited from the critics, and the feeling which
+had now come to me of a confident standing with the publishers, all
+made me know that I had achieved my object. If I wrote a novel,
+I could certainly sell it. And if I could publish three in two
+years,--confining myself to half the fecundity of that terrible
+author of whom the publisher in Paternoster Row had complained to
+me,--I might add (pounds)600 a year to my official income. I was still
+living in Ireland, and could keep a good house over my head, insure
+my life, educate my two boys, and hunt perhaps twice a week, on (pounds)1400
+a year. If more should come, it would be well;--but (pounds)600 a year I
+was prepared to reckon as success. It had been slow in coming, but
+was very pleasant when it came.
+
+On my return from Egypt I was sent down to Scotland to revise the
+Glasgow Post Office. I almost forget now what it was that I had
+to do there, but I know that I walked all over the city with the
+letter-carriers, going up to the top flats of the houses, as the
+men would have declared me incompetent to judge the extent of their
+labours had I not trudged every step with them. It was midsummer,
+and wearier work I never performed. The men would grumble, and
+then I would think how it would be with them if they had to go home
+afterwards and write a love-scene. But the love-scenes written in
+Glasgow, all belonging to The Bertrams, are not good.
+
+Then in the autumn of that year, 1858, I was asked to go to the West
+Indies, and cleanse the Augean stables of our Post Office system
+there. Up to that time, and at that time, our Colonial Post Offices
+generally were managed from home, and were subject to the British
+Postmaster-General. Gentlemen were sent out from England to be
+postmasters, surveyors, and what not; and as our West Indian islands
+have never been regarded as being of themselves happily situated
+for residence, the gentlemen so sent were sometimes more conspicuous
+for want of income than for official zeal and ability. Hence the
+stables had become Augean. I was also instructed to carry out in
+some of the islands a plan for giving up this postal authority to
+the island Governor, and in others to propose some such plan. I
+was then to go on to Cuba, to make a postal treaty with the Spanish
+authorities, and to Panama for the same purpose with the Government
+of New Grenada. All this work I performed to my satisfaction, and
+I hope to that of my masters in St. Martin's le Grand.
+
+But the trip is at the present moment of importance to my subject,
+as having enabled me to write that which, on the whole, I regard
+as the best book that has come from my pen. It is short, and, I
+think I may venture to say, amusing, useful, and true. As soon as
+I had learned from the secretary at the General Post Office that
+this journey would be required, I proposed the book to Messrs.
+Chapman & Hall, demanding (pounds)250 for a single volume. The contract
+was made without any difficulty, and when I returned home the work
+was complete in my desk. I began it on board the ship in which I
+left Kingston, Jamaica, for Cuba,--and from week to week I carried
+it on as I went. From Cuba I made my way to St. Thomas, and through
+the island down to Demerara, then back to St. Thomas,--which is
+the starting-point for all places in that part of the globe,--to
+Santa Martha, Carthagena, Aspinwall, over the Isthmus to Panama, up
+the Pacific to a little harbour on the coast of Costa Rica, thence
+across Central America, through Costa Rica, and down the Nicaragua
+river to the Mosquito coast, and after that home by Bermuda and New
+York. Should any one want further details of the voyage, are they
+not written in my book? The fact memorable to me now is that I
+never made a single note while writing or preparing it. Preparation,
+indeed, there was none. The descriptions and opinions came hot
+on to the paper from their causes. I will not say that this is the
+best way of writing a book intended to give accurate information.
+But it is the best way of producing to the eye of the reader, and
+to his ear, that which the eye of the writer has seen and his ear
+heard. There are two kinds of confidence which a reader may have
+in his author,--which two kinds the reader who wishes to use his
+reading well should carefully discriminate. There is a confidence
+in facts and a confidence in vision. The one man tells you accurately
+what has been. The other suggests to you what may, or perhaps what
+must have been, or what ought to have been. The former require simple
+faith. The latter calls upon you to judge for yourself, and form
+your own conclusions. The former does not intend to be prescient,
+nor the latter accurate. Research is the weapon used by the former;
+observation by the latter. Either may be false,--wilfully false; as
+also may either be steadfastly true. As to that, the reader must
+judge for himself. But the man who writes currente calamo, who
+works with a rapidity which will not admit of accuracy, may be as
+true, and in one sense as trustworthy, as he who bases every word
+upon a rock of facts. I have written very much as I have, travelled
+about; and though I have been very inaccurate, I have always
+written the exact truth as I saw it ;--and I have, I think, drawn
+my pictures correctly.
+
+The view I took of the relative position in the West Indies
+of black men and white men was the view of the Times newspaper at
+that period; and there appeared three articles in that journal, one
+closely after another, which made the fortune of the book. Had it
+been very bad, I suppose its fortune could not have been made for
+it even by the Times newspaper. I afterwards became acquainted with
+the writer of those articles, the contributor himself informing me
+that he had written them. I told him that he had done me a greater
+service than can often be done by one man to another, but that I was
+under no obligation to him. I do not think that he saw the matter
+quite in the same light.
+
+I am aware that by that criticism I was much raised in my position
+as an author. Whether such lifting up by such means is good or bad
+for literature is a question which I hope to discuss in a future
+chapter. But the result was immediate to me, for I at once went to
+Chapman & Hall and successfully demanded (pounds)600 for my next novel.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+THE "CORNHILL MAGAZINE" AND "FRAMLEY PARSONAGE"
+
+
+
+
+Soon after my return from the West Indies I was enabled to change
+my district in Ireland for one in England. For some time past my
+official work had been of a special nature, taking me out of my
+own district; but through all that, Dublin had been my home, and
+there my wife and children had lived. I had often sighed to return
+to England,--with a silly longing. My life in England for twenty-six
+years from the time of my birth to the day on which I left it, had
+been wretched. I had been poor, friendless, and joyless. In Ireland
+it had constantly been happy. I had achieved the respect of all
+with whom I was concerned, I had made for myself a comfortable
+home, and I had enjoyed many pleasures. Hunting itself was a great
+delight to me; and now, as I contemplated a move to England, and a
+house in the neighbourhood of London, I felt that hunting must be
+abandoned. [Footnote: It was not abandoned till sixteen more years
+had passed away.] Nevertheless I thought that a man who could
+write books ought not to live in Ireland,--ought to live within
+the reach of the publishers, the clubs, and the dinner-parties of
+the metropolis. So I made my request at headquarters, and with some
+little difficulty got myself appointed to the Eastern District of
+England,--which comprised Essex, Suffolk, Norfolk, Cambridgeshire,
+Huntingdonshire, and the greater part of Hertfordshire.
+
+At this time I did not stand very well with the dominant interest
+at the General Post Office. My old friend Colonel Maberly had
+been, some time since, squeezed into, and his place was filled by
+Mr. Rowland Hill, the originator of the penny post. With him I never
+had any sympathy, nor he with me. In figures and facts he was most
+accurate, but I never came across any one who so little understood
+the ways of men,--unless it was his brother Frederic. To the two
+brothers the servants of the Post Office,--men numerous enough to
+have formed a large army in old days,--were so many machines who
+could be counted on for their exact work without deviation, as
+wheels may be counted on, which are kept going always at the same
+pace and always by the same power. Rowland Hill was an industrious
+public servant, anxious for the good of his country; but he was
+a hard taskmaster, and one who would, I think, have put the great
+department with which he was concerned altogether out of gear by
+his hardness, had he not been at last controlled. He was the Chief
+Secretary, my brother-in-law--who afterwards succeeded him--came
+next to him, and Mr. Hill's brother was the Junior Secretary. In
+the natural course of things, I had not, from my position, anything
+to do with the management of affairs;--but from time to time I found
+myself more or less mixed up in it. I was known to be a thoroughly
+efficient public servant; I am sure I may say so much of myself
+without fear of contradiction from any one who has known the Post
+Office;--I was very fond of the department, and when matters came
+to be considered, I generally had an opinion of my own. I have
+no doubt that I often made myself very disagreeable. I know that I
+sometimes tried to do so. But I could hold my own because I knew
+my business and was useful. I had given official offence by the
+publication of The Three Clerks. I afterwards gave greater offence
+by a lecture on The Civil Service which I delivered in one of the
+large rooms at the General Post Office to the clerks there. On this
+occasion, the Postmaster-General, with whom personally I enjoyed
+friendly terms, sent for me and told me that Mr. Hill had told him
+that I ought to be dismissed. When I asked his lordship whether
+he was prepared to dismiss me, he only laughed. The threat was
+no threat to me, as I knew myself to be too good to be treated in
+that fashion. The lecture had been permitted, and I had disobeyed
+no order. In the lecture which I delivered, there was nothing
+to bring me to shame,--but it advocated the doctrine that a civil
+servant is only a servant as far as his contract goes, and that he
+is beyond that entitled to be as free a man in politics, as free in
+his general pursuits, and as free in opinion, as those who are in
+open professions and open trades. All this is very nearly admitted
+now, but it certainly was not admitted then. At that time no one
+in the Post Office could even vote for a Member of Parliament.
+
+Through my whole official life I did my best to improve the style
+of official writing. I have written, I should think, some thousands
+of reports,--many of them necessarily very long; some of them
+dealing with subjects so absurd as to allow a touch of burlesque;
+some few in which a spark of indignation or a slight glow of pathos
+might find an entrance. I have taken infinite pains with these
+reports, habituating myself always to write them in the form in
+which they should be sent,--without a copy. It is by writing thus
+that a man can throw on to his paper the exact feeling with which
+his mind is impressed at the moment. A rough copy, or that which
+is called a draft, is written in order that it may be touched and
+altered and put upon stilts. The waste of time, moreover, in such
+an operation, is terrible. If a man knows his craft with his pen,
+he will have learned to write without the necessity of changing
+his words or the form of his sentences. I had learned so to write
+my reports that they who read them should know what it was that I
+meant them to understand. But I do not think that they were regarded
+with favour. I have heard horror expressed because the old forms
+were disregarded and language used which had no savour of red-tape.
+During the whole of this work in the Post Office it was my principle
+always to obey authority in everything instantly, but never to allow
+my mouth to be closed as to the expression of my opinion. They who
+had the ordering of me very often did not know the work as I knew
+it,--could not tell as I could what would be the effect of this
+or that change. When carrying out instructions which I knew should
+not have been given, I never scrupled to point out the fatuity of
+the improper order in the strongest language that I could decently
+employ. I have revelled in these official correspondences, and look
+back to some of them as the greatest delights of my life. But I am
+not sure that they were so delightful to others.
+
+I succeeded, however, in getting the English district,--which
+could hardly have been refused to me,--and prepared to change our
+residence towards the end of 1859. At the time I was writing Castle
+Richmond, the novel which I had sold to Messrs. Chapman & Hall
+for (pounds)600. But there arose at this time a certain literary project
+which probably had a great effect upon my career. Whilst travelling
+on postal service abroad or riding over the rural districts
+in England, or arranging the mails in Ireland,--and such for the
+last eighteen years had now been my life,--I had no opportunity
+of becoming acquainted with the literary life in London. It was
+probably some feeling of this which had made me anxious to move
+my penates back to England. But even in Ireland, where I was still
+living in October, 1859, I had heard of the Cornhill Magazine, which
+was to come out on the 1st of January, 1860, under the editorship
+of Thackeray.
+
+I had at this time written from time to time certain short stories,
+which had been published in different periodicals, and which in due
+time were republished under the name of Tales of All Countries. On
+the 23d of October, 1859, I wrote to Thackeray, whom I had, I think,
+never then seen, offering to send him for the magazine certain of
+these stories. In reply to this I received two letters,--one from
+Messrs. Smith & Elder, the proprietors of the Cornhill, dated 26th
+of October, and the other from the editor, written two days later.
+That from Mr. Thackeray was as follows:--
+
+ "36 ONSLOW SQUARE, S. W.
+ October 28th.
+
+"MY DEAR MR. TROLLOPE,--Smith & Elder have sent you their proposals;
+and the business part done, let me come to the pleasure, and say
+how very glad indeed I shall be to have you as a co-operator in
+our new magazine. And looking over the annexed programme, you will
+see whether you can't help us in many other ways besides tale-telling.
+Whatever a man knows about life and its doings, that let us hear
+about. You must have tossed a good deal about the world, and have
+countless sketches in your memory and your portfolio. Please
+to think if you can furbish up any of these besides a novel. When
+events occur, and you have a good lively tale, bear us in mind. One
+of our chief objects in this magazine is the getting out of novel
+spinning, and back into the world. Don't understand me to disparage
+our craft, especially YOUR wares. I often say I am like the
+pastrycook, and don't care for tarts, but prefer bread and cheese;
+but the public love the tarts (luckily for us), and we must bake and
+sell them. There was quite an excitement in my family one evening
+when Paterfamilias (who goes to sleep on a novel almost always
+when he tries it after dinner) came up-stairs into the drawing-room
+wide awake and calling for the second volume of The Three Clerks.
+I hope the Cornhill Magazine will have as pleasant a story. And
+the Chapmans, if they are the honest men I take them to be, I've no
+doubt have told you with what sincere liking your works have been
+read by yours very faithfully,
+
+ "W. M. THACKERAY."
+
+This was very pleasant, and so was the letter from Smith & Elder
+offering me (pounds)1000 for the copyright of a three-volume novel, to
+come out in the new magazine,--on condition that the first portion
+of it should be in their hands by December 12th. There was much in
+all this that astonished me;--in the first place the price, which
+was more than double what I had yet received, and nearly double
+that which I was about to receive from Messrs. Chapman & Hall.
+Then there was the suddenness of the call. It was already the end
+of October, and a portion of the work was required to be in the
+printer's hands within six weeks. Castle Richmond was indeed half
+written, but that was sold to Chapman. And it had already been
+a principle with me in my art, that no part of a novel should
+be published till the entire story was completed. I knew, from
+what I read from month to month, that this hurried publication of
+incompleted work was frequently, I might perhaps say always, adopted
+by the leading novelists of the day. That such has been the case,
+is proved by the fact that Dickens, Thackeray, and Mrs. Gaskell
+died with unfinished novels, of which portions had been already
+published. I had not yet entered upon the system of publishing
+novels in parts, and therefore had never been tempted. But I was
+aware that an artist should keep in his hand the power of fitting
+the beginning of his work to the end. No doubt it is his first
+duty to fit the end to the beginning, and he will endeavour to do
+so. But he should still keep in his hands the power of remedying
+any defect in this respect.
+
+
+ "Servetur ad imum
+ Qualis ab incepto processerit,"
+
+
+should be kept in view as to every character and every string of
+action. Your Achilles should all through, from beginning to end,
+be "impatient, fiery, ruthless, keen." Your Achilles, such as he
+is, will probably keep up his character. But your Davus also should
+be always Davus, and that is more difficult. The rustic driving his
+pigs to market cannot always make them travel by the exact path
+which he has intended for them. When some young lady at the end
+of a story cannot be made quite perfect in her conduct, that vivid
+description of angelic purity with which you laid the first lines
+of her portrait should be slightly toned down. I had felt that the
+rushing mode of publication to which the system of serial stories
+had given rise, and by which small parts as they were written were
+sent hot to the press, was injurious to the work done. If I now
+complied with the proposition made to me, I must act against my
+own principle. But such a principle becomes a tyrant if it cannot
+be superseded on a just occasion. If the reason be "tanti," the
+principle should for the occasion be put in abeyance. I sat as
+judge, and decreed that the present reason was "tanti." On this my
+first attempt at a serial story, I thought it fit to break my own
+rule. I can say, however, that I have never broken it since.
+
+But what astonished me most was the fact that at so late a day
+this new Cornhill Magazine should be in want of a novel. Perhaps
+some of my future readers will he able to remember the great
+expectations which were raised as to this periodical. Thackeray's
+was a good name with which to conjure. The proprietors, Messrs.
+Smith & Elder, were most liberal in their manner of initiating the
+work, and were able to make an expectant world of readers believe
+that something was to be given them for a shilling very much in
+excess of anything they had ever received for that or double the
+money. Whether these hopes were or were not fulfilled it is not for
+me to say, as, for the first few years of the magazine's existence,
+I wrote for it more than any other one person. But such was certainly
+the prospect;--and how had it come to pass that, with such promises
+made, the editor and the proprietors were, at the end of October,
+without anything fixed as to what must be regarded as the chief
+dish in the banquet to be provided?
+
+I fear that the answer to this question must be found in the habits
+of procrastination which had at that time grown upon the editor.
+He had, I imagine, undertaken the work himself, and had postponed
+its commencement till there was left to him no time for commencing.
+There was still, it may be said, as much time for him as for me.
+I think there was,--for though he had his magazine to look after,
+I had the Post Office. But he thought, when unable to trust his
+own energy, that he might rely upon that of a new recruit. He was
+but four years my senior in life but he was at the top of the tree,
+while I was still at the bottom.
+
+Having made up my mind to break my principle, I started at once from
+Dublin to London. I arrived there on the morning of Thursday, 3d
+of November, and left it on the evening of Friday. In the meantime
+I had made my agreement with Messrs. Smith & Elder, and had arranged
+my plot. But when in London, I first went to Edward Chapman, at 193
+Piccadilly. If the novel I was then writing for him would suit
+the Cornhill, might I consider my arrangement with him to be at an
+end? Yes; I might. But if that story would not suit the Cornhill,
+was I to consider my arrangement with him as still standing,--that
+agreement requiring that my MS. should be in his hands in the
+following March? As to that, I might do as I pleased. In our dealings
+together Mr. Edward Chapman always acceded to every suggestion made
+to him. He never refused a book, and never haggled at a price. Then
+I hurried into the City, and had my first interview with Mr. George
+Smith. When he heard that Castle Richmond was an Irish story, he
+begged that I would endeavour to frame some other for his magazine.
+He was sure that an Irish story would not do for a commencement;--and
+he suggested the Church, as though it were my peculiar subject. I
+told him that Castle Richmond would have to "come out" while any
+other novel that I might write for him would be running through the
+magazine;--but to that he expressed himself altogether indifferent.
+He wanted an English tale, on English life, with a clerical flavour.
+On these orders I went to work, and framed what I suppose I must
+call the plot of Framley Parsonage.
+
+On my journey back to Ireland, in the railway carriage, I wrote the
+first few pages of that story. I had got into my head an idea of
+what I meant to write,--a morsel of the biography of an English
+clergyman who should not be a bad man, but one led into temptation
+by his own youth and by the unclerical accidents of the life of
+those around him. The love of his sister for the young lord was
+an adjunct necessary, because there must be love in a novel. And
+then by placing Framley Parsonage near Barchester, I was able to
+fall back upon my old friends Mrs. Proudie and the archdeacon. Out
+of these slight elements I fabricated a hodge-podge in which the
+real plot consisted at last simply of a girl refusing to marry the
+man she loved till the man's friends agreed to accept her lovingly.
+Nothing could be less efficient or artistic. But the characters
+were so well handled, that the work from the first to the last
+was popular,--and was received as it went on with still increasing
+favour by both editor and proprietor of the magazine. The story was
+thoroughly English. There was a little fox-hunting and a little
+tuft-hunting, some Christian virtue and some Christian cant. There
+was no heroism and no villainy. There was much Church, but more
+love-making. And it was downright honest love,--in which there was
+no pretence on the part of the lady that she was too ethereal to
+be fond of a man, no half-and-half inclination on the part of the
+man to pay a certain price and no more for a pretty toy. Each of
+them longed for the other, and they were not ashamed to say so.
+Consequently they in England who were living, or had lived, the
+same sort of life, liked Framley Parsonage. I think myself that
+Lucy Robarts is perhaps the most natural English girl that I ever
+drew,--the most natural, at any rate, of those who have been good
+girls. She was not as dear to me as Kate Woodward in The Three
+Clerks, but I think she is more like real human life. Indeed
+I doubt whether such a character could be made more lifelike than
+Lucy Robarts.
+
+And I will say also that in this novel there is no very weak part,--no
+long succession of dull pages. The production of novels in serial
+form forces upon the author the conviction that he should not allow
+himself to be tedious in any single part. I hope no reader will
+misunderstand me. In spite of that conviction, the writer of stories
+in parts will often be tedious. That I have been so myself is a
+fault that will lie heavy on my tombstone. But the writer when he
+embarks in such a business should feel that he cannot afford to have
+many pages skipped out of the few which are to meet the reader's
+eye at the same time. Who can imagine the first half of the first
+volume of Waverley coming out in shilling numbers? I had realised
+this when I was writing Framley Parsonage; and working on the
+conviction which had thus come home to me, I fell into no bathos
+of dulness.
+
+I subsequently came across a piece of criticism which was written
+on me as a novelist by a brother novelist very much greater than
+myself, and whose brilliant intellect and warm imagination led him
+to a kind of work the very opposite of mine. This was Nathaniel
+Hawthorne, the American, whom I did not then know, but whose works
+I knew. Though it praises myself highly, I will insert it here,
+because it certainly is true in its nature: "It is odd enough," he
+says, "that my own individual taste is for quite another class of
+works than those which I myself am able to write. If I were to meet
+with such books as mine by another writer, I don't believe I should
+be able to get through them. Have you ever read the novels of Anthony
+Trollope? They precisely suit my taste,--solid and substantial,
+written on the strength of beef and through the inspiration of
+ale, and just as real as if some giant had hewn a great lump out of
+the earth and put it under a glass case, with all its inhabitants
+going about their daily business, and not suspecting that they
+were being made a show of. And these books are just as English as
+a beef-steak. Have they ever been tried in America? It needs an
+English residence to make them thoroughly comprehensible; but still
+I should think that human nature would give them success anywhere."
+
+This was dated early in 1860, and could have had no reference to
+Framley Parsonage; but it was as true of that work as of any that
+I have written. And the criticism, whether just or unjust, describes
+with wonderful accuracy the purport that I have ever had in view
+in my writing. I have always desired to "hew out some lump of the
+earth," and to make men and women walk upon it just as they do walk
+here among us,--with not more of excellence, nor with exaggerated
+baseness,--so that my readers might recognise human beings like to
+themselves, and not feel themselves to be carried away among gods
+or demons. If I could do this, then I thought I might succeed
+in impregnating the mind of the novel-reader with a feeling that
+honesty is the best policy; that truth prevails while falsehood
+fails; that a girl will be loved as she is pure; and sweet, and
+unselfish; that a man will be honoured as he is true, and honest,
+and brave of heart; that things meanly done are ugly and odious,
+and things nobly done beautiful and gracious. I do not say that
+lessons such as these may not be more grandly taught by higher
+flights than mine. Such lessons come to us from our greatest poets.
+But there are so many who will read novels and understand them, who
+either do not read the works of our great poets, or reading them
+miss the lesson! And even in prose fiction the character whom
+the fervid imagination of the writer has lifted somewhat into the
+clouds, will hardly give so plain an example to the hasty normal
+reader as the humbler personage whom that reader unconsciously feels
+to resemble himself or herself. I do think that a girl would more
+probably dress her own mind after Lucy Robarts than after Flora
+Macdonald.
+
+There are many who would laugh at the idea of a novelist teaching
+either virtue or nobility,--those, for instance, who regard
+the reading of novels as a sin, and those also who think it to be
+simply an idle pastime. They look upon the tellers of stories as
+among the tribe of those who pander to the wicked pleasures of a
+wicked world. I have regarded my art from so different a point of
+view that I have ever thought of myself as a preacher of sermons,
+and my pulpit as one which I could make both salutary and agreeable
+to my audience. I do believe that no girl has risen from the reading
+of my pages less modest than she was before, and that some may have
+learned from them that modesty is a charm well worth preserving. I
+think that no youth has been taught that in falseness and flashness
+is to be found the road to manliness; but some may perhaps have
+learned from me that it is to be found in truth and a high but
+gentle spirit. Such are the lessons I have striven to teach; and
+I have thought it might best be done by representing to my readers
+characters like themselves,--or to which they might liken themselves.
+
+Framley Parsonage--or, rather, my connection with the Cornhill--was
+the means of introducing me very quickly to that literary world
+from which I had hitherto been severed by the fact of my residence
+in Ireland. In December, 1859, while I was still very hard at work
+on my novel, I came over to take charge of the Eastern District,
+and settled myself at a residence about twelve miles from London,
+in Hertfordshire, but on the borders both of Essex and Middlesex,--which
+was somewhat too grandly called Waltham House. This I took on
+lease, and subsequently bought after I had spent about (pounds)1000 on
+improvements. From hence I was able to make myself frequent both
+in Cornhill and Piccadilly, and to live, when the opportunity came,
+among men of my own pursuit.
+
+It was in January, 1860, that Mr. George Smith--to whose enterprise
+we owe not only the Cornhill Magazine but the Pall Mall Gazette--gave
+a sumptuous dinner to his contributors. It was a memorable banquet
+in many ways, but chiefly so to me because on that occasion I first
+met many men who afterwards became my most intimate associates.
+It can rarely happen that one such occasion can be the first
+starting-point of so many friendships. It was at that table, and
+on that day, that I first saw Thackeray, Charles Taylor (Sir)--than
+whom in latter life I have loved no man better,--Robert Bell, G. H.
+Lewes, and John Everett Millais. With all these men I afterwards
+lived on affectionate terms;--but I will here speak specially of
+the last, because from that time he was joined with me in so much
+of the work that I did.
+
+Mr. Millais was engaged to illustrate Framley Parsonage, but this
+was not the first work he did for the magazine. In the second number
+there is a picture of his accompanying Monckton Milne's Unspoken
+Dialogue. The first drawing he did for Framley Parsonage did not
+appear till after the dinner of which I have spoken, and I do not
+think that I knew at the time that he was engaged on my novel. When
+I did know it, it made me very proud. He afterwards illustrated
+Orley Farm, The Small House of Allington, Rachel Ray, and Phineas
+Finn. Altogether he drew from my tales eighty-seven drawings, and
+I do not think that more conscientious work was ever done by man.
+Writers of novels know well--and so ought readers of novels to
+have learned--that there are two modes of illustrating, either of
+which may be adopted equally by a bad and by a good artist. To
+which class Mr. Millais belongs I need not say; but, as a good
+artist, it was open to him simply to make a pretty picture, or to
+study the work of the author from whose writing he was bound to take
+his subject. I have too often found that the former alternative
+has been thought to be the better, as it certainly is the easier
+method. An artist will frequently dislike to subordinate his ideas
+to those of an author, and will sometimes be too idle to find out
+what those ideas are. But this artist was neither proud nor idle.
+In every figure that he drew it was his object to promote the
+views of the writer whose work he had undertaken to illustrate, and
+he never spared himself any pains in studying that work, so as to
+enable him to do so. I have carried on some of those characters from
+book to book, and have had my own early ideas impressed indelibly
+on my memory by the excellence of his delineations. Those illustrations
+were commenced fifteen years ago, and from that time up to this
+day my affection for the man of whom I am speaking has increased.
+To see him has always been a pleasure. His voice has been a sweet
+sound in my ears. Behind his back I have never heard him praised
+without joining the eulogist; I have never heard a word spoken
+against him without opposing the censurer. These words, should he
+ever see them, will come to him from the grave, and will tell him
+of my regard,--as one living man never tells another.
+
+Sir Charles Taylor, who carried me home in his brougham that
+evening, and thus commenced an intimacy which has since been very
+close, was born to wealth, and was therefore not compelled by the
+necessities of a profession to enter the lists as an author. But
+he lived much with those who did so,--and could have done it himself
+had want or ambition stirred him. He was our king at the Garrick
+Club, to which, however, I did not yet belong. He gave the best
+dinners of my time, and was,--happily I may say is, [Footnote:
+Alas! within a year of the writing of this he went from us.]--the
+best giver of dinners. A man rough of tongue, brusque in his manners,
+odious to those who dislike him, somewhat inclined to tyranny, he
+is the prince of friends, honest as the sun, and as openhanded as
+Charity itself.
+
+Robert Bell has now been dead nearly ten years. As I look back
+over the interval and remember how intimate we were, it seems odd
+to me that we should have known each other for no more than six
+years. He was a man who had lived by his pen from his very youth;
+and was so far successful that I do not think that want ever came
+near him. But he never made that mark which his industry and talents
+would have seemed to ensure. He was a man well known to literary
+men, but not known to readers. As a journalist he was useful
+and conscientious, but his plays and novels never made themselves
+popular. He wrote a life of Canning, and he brought out an annotated
+edition of the British poets; but he achieved no great success.
+I have known no man better read in English literature. Hence his
+conversation had a peculiar charm, but he was not equally happy
+with his pen. He will long be remembered at the Literary Fund
+Committees, of which he was a staunch and most trusted supporter.
+I think it was he who first introduced me to that board. It has
+often been said that literary men are peculiarly apt to think that
+they are slighted and unappreciated. Robert Bell certainly never
+achieved the position in literature which he once aspired to fill,
+and which he was justified in thinking that he could earn for
+himself. I have frequently discussed these subjects with him, but
+I never heard from his mouth a word of complaint as to his own
+literary fate. He liked to hear the chimes go at midnight, and he
+loved to have ginger hot in his mouth. On such occasions no sound
+ever came out of a man's lips sweeter than his wit and gentle
+revelry.
+
+George Lewes,--with his wife, whom all the world knows as George
+Eliot,--has also been and still is one of my dearest friends.
+He is, I think, the acutest critic I know,--and the severest. His
+severity, however, is a fault. His intention to be honest, even when
+honesty may give pain, has caused him to give pain when honesty has
+not required it. He is essentially a doubter, and has encouraged
+himself to doubt till the faculty of trusting has almost left him.
+I am not speaking of the personal trust which one man feels in
+another, but of that confidence in literary excellence, which is,
+I think, necessary for the full enjoyment of literature. In one
+modern writer he did believe thoroughly. Nothing can be more charming
+than the unstinted admiration which he has accorded to everything
+that comes from the pen of the wonderful woman to whom his lot has
+been united. To her name I shall recur again when speaking of the
+novelists of the present day.
+
+Of "Billy Russell," as we always used to call him, I may say
+that I never knew but one man equal to him in the quickness and
+continuance of witty speech. That one man was Charles Lever--also
+an Irishman--whom I had known from an earlier date, and also with
+close intimacy. Of the two, I think that Lever was perhaps the
+more astounding producer of good things. His manner was perhaps a
+little the happier, and his turns more sharp and unexpected. But
+"Billy" also was marvellous. Whether abroad as special correspondent,
+or at home amidst the flurry of his newspaper work, he was a charming
+companion; his ready wit always gave him the last word.
+
+Of Thackeray I will speak again when I record his death.
+
+There were many others whom I met for the first time at George
+Smith's table. Albert Smith, for the first, and indeed for the last
+time, as he died soon after; Higgins, whom all the world knew as
+Jacob Omnium, a man I greatly regarded; Dallas, who for a time was
+literary critic to the Times, and who certainly in that capacity
+did better work than has appeared since in the same department;
+George Augustus Sala, who, had he given himself fair play, would
+have risen to higher eminence than that of being the best writer
+in his day of sensational leading articles; and Fitz-James Stephen,
+a man of very different calibre, who had not yet culminated, but
+who, no doubt, will culminate among our judges. There were many
+others;--but I cannot now recall their various names as identified
+with those banquets.
+
+Of Framley Parsonage I need only further say, that as I wrote it I
+became more closely than ever acquainted with the new shire which
+I had added to the English counties. I had it all in my mind,--its
+roads and railroads, its towns and parishes, its members of Parliament,
+and the different hunts which rode over it. I knew all the great
+lords and their castles, the squires and their parks, the rectors
+and their churches. This was the fourth novel of which I had placed
+the scene in Barsetshire, and as I wrote it I made a map of the
+dear county. Throughout these stories there has been no name given
+to a fictitious site which does not represent to me a spot of which I
+know all the accessories, as though I had lived and wandered there.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+"CASTLE RICHMOND;" "BROWN, JONES, AND ROBINSON;" "NORTH AMERICA;"
+"ORLEY FARM"
+
+
+
+
+When I had half-finished Framley Parsonage, I went back to my other
+story, Castle Richmond, which I was writing for Messrs. Chapman &
+Hall, and completed that. I think that this was the only occasion
+on which I have had two different novels in my mind at the same
+time. This, however, did not create either difficulty or confusion.
+Many of us live in different circles; and when we go from our friends
+in the town to our friends in the country, we do not usually fail
+to remember the little details of the one life or the other. The
+parson at Rusticum, with his wife and his wife's mother, and all
+his belongings; and our old friend, the Squire, with his family
+history; and Farmer Mudge, who has been cross with us, because we
+rode so unnecessarily over his barley; and that rascally poacher,
+once a gamekeeper, who now traps all the foxes; and pretty Mary
+Cann, whose marriage with the wheelwright we did something to
+expedite;--though we are alive to them all, do not drive out of our
+brain the club gossip, or the memories of last season's dinners, or
+any incident of our London intimacies. In our lives we are always
+weaving novels, and we manage to keep the different tales distinct.
+A man does, in truth, remember that which it interests him to
+remember; and when we hear that memory has gone as age has come on,
+we should understand that the capacity for interest in the matter
+concerned has perished. A man will be generally very old and feeble
+before he forgets how much money he has in the funds. There is
+a good deal to be learned by any one who wishes to write a novel
+well; but when the art has been acquired, I do not see why two or
+three should not be well written at the same time. I have never
+found myself thinking much about the work that I had to do till
+I was doing it. I have indeed for many years almost abandoned the
+effort to think, trusting myself, with the narrowest thread of
+a plot, to work the matter out when the pen is in my hand. But my
+mind is constantly employing itself on the work I have done. Had
+I left either Framley Parsonage or Castle Richmond half-finished
+fifteen years ago, I think I could complete the tales now with very
+little trouble. I have not looked at Castle Richmond since it was
+published; and poor as the work is, I remember all the incidents.
+
+Castle Richmond certainly was not a success,--though the plot is a
+fairly good plot, and is much more of a plot than I have generally
+been able to find. The scene is laid in Ireland, during the famine;
+and I am well aware now that English readers no longer like Irish
+stories. I cannot understand why it should be so, as the Irish
+character is peculiarly well fitted for romance. But Irish subjects
+generally have become distasteful. This novel, however, is of
+itself a weak production. The characters do not excite sympathy.
+The heroine has two lovers, one of whom is a scamp and the other
+a prig. As regards the scamp, the girl's mother is her own rival.
+Rivalry of the same nature has been admirably depicted by Thackeray
+in his Esmond; but there the mother's love seems to be justified
+by the girl's indifference. In Castle Richmond the mother strives
+to rob her daughter of the man's love. The girl herself has no
+character; and the mother, who is strong enough, is almost revolting.
+The dialogue is often lively, and some of the incidents are well
+told; but the story as a whole was a failure. I cannot remember,
+however, that it was roughly handled by the critics when it came
+out; and I much doubt whether anything so hard was said of it then
+as that which I have said here.
+
+I was now settled at Waltham Cross, in a house in which I could
+entertain a few friends modestly, where we grew our cabbages
+and strawberries, made our own butter, and killed our own pigs. I
+occupied it for twelve years, and they were years to me of great
+prosperity. In 1861 I became a member of the Garrick Club, with
+which institution I have since been much identified. I had belonged
+to it about two years, when, on Thackeray's death, I was invited
+to fill his place on the Committee, and I have been one of that
+august body ever since. Having up to that time lived very little
+among men, having known hitherto nothing of clubs, having even as
+a boy been banished from social gatherings, I enjoyed infinitely at
+first the gaiety of the Garrick. It was a festival to me to dine
+there--which I did indeed but seldom; and a great delight to play
+a rubber in the little room up-stairs of an afternoon. I am speaking
+now of the old club in King Street. This playing of whist before
+dinner has since that become a habit with me, so that unless there
+be something else special to do--unless there be hunting, or I am
+wanted to ride in the park by the young tyrant of my household--it
+is "my custom always in the afternoon." I have sometimes felt sore
+with myself for this persistency, feeling that I was making myself
+a slave to an amusement which has not after all very much to
+recommend it. I have often thought that I would break myself away
+from it, and "swear off," as Rip Van Winkle says. But my swearing
+off has been like that of Rip Van Winkle. And now, as I think of
+it coolly, I do not know but that I have been right to cling to it.
+As a man grows old he wants amusement, more even than when he is
+young; and then it becomes so difficult to find amusement. Reading
+should, no doubt, be the delight of men's leisure hours. Had I to
+choose between books and cards, I should no doubt take the books.
+But I find that I can seldom read with pleasure for above an hour
+and a half at a time, or more than three hours a day. As I write
+this I am aware that hunting must soon be abandoned. After sixty
+it is given but to few men to ride straight across country, and I
+cannot bring myself to adopt any other mode of riding. I think that
+without cards I should now be much at a loss. When I began to play
+at the Garrick, I did so simply because I liked the society of the
+men who played.
+
+I think that I became popular among those with whom I associated.
+I have long been aware of a certain weakness in my own character,
+which I may call a craving for love. I have ever had a wish to be
+liked by those around me,--a wish that during the first half of
+my life was never gratified. In my school-days no small part of my
+misery came from the envy with which I regarded the popularity of
+popular boys. They seemed to me to live in a social paradise, while
+the desolation of my pandemonium was complete. And afterwards,
+when I was in London as a young man, I had but few friends. Among
+the clerks in the Post Office I held my own fairly for the first
+two or three years; but even then I regarded myself as something of
+a pariah. My Irish life had been much better. I had had my wife and
+children, and had been sustained by a feeling of general respect.
+But even in Ireland I had in truth lived but little in society.
+Our means had been sufficient for our wants, but insufficient for
+entertaining others. It was not till we had settled ourselves at
+Waltham that I really began to live much with others. The Garrick
+Club was the first assemblage of men at which I felt myself to be
+popular.
+
+I soon became a member of other clubs. There was the Arts Club in
+Hanover Square, of which I saw the opening, but from which, after
+three or four years, I withdrew my name, having found that during
+these three or four years I had not once entered the building.
+Then I was one of the originators of the Civil Service Club--not
+from judgment, but instigated to do so by others. That also I left
+for the same reason. In 1864 I received the honour of being elected
+by the Committee at the Athenaeum. For this I was indebted to the
+kindness of Lord Stanhope; and I never was more surprised than when
+I was informed of the fact. About the same time I became a member
+of the Cosmopolitan, a little club that meets twice a week in
+Charles Street, Berkeley Square, and supplies to all its members,
+and its members' friends, tea and brandy and water without charge!
+The gatherings there I used to think very delightful. One met
+Jacob Omnium, Monckton Mimes, Tom Hughes, William Stirling, Henry
+Reeve, Arthur Russell, Tom Taylor, and such like; and generally
+a strong political element, thoroughly well mixed, gave a certain
+spirit to the place. Lord Ripon, Lord Stanley, William Forster,
+Lord Enfield, Lord Kimberley, George Bentinck, Vernon Harcourt,
+Bromley Davenport, Knatchbull Huguessen, with many others, used to
+whisper the secrets of Parliament with free tongues. Afterwards I
+became a member of the Turf, which I found to be serviceable--or
+the reverse--only for the playing of whist at high points.
+
+In August, 1861, I wrote another novel for the Cornhill Magazine.
+It was a short story, about one volume in length, and was called
+The Struggles of Brown, Jones, and Robinson. In this I attempted a
+style for which I certainly was not qualified, and to which I never
+had again recourse. It was meant to be funny, was full of slang,
+and was intended as a satire on the ways of trade. Still I think
+that there is some good fun it it, but I have heard no one else
+express such an opinion. I do not know that I ever heard any opinion
+expressed on it, except by the publisher, who kindly remarked
+that he did not think it was equal to my usual work. Though he had
+purchased the copyright, he did not republish the story in a book
+form till 1870, and then it passed into the world of letters sub
+silentio. I do not know that it was ever criticised or ever read.
+I received (pounds)600 for it. From that time to this I have been paid at
+about that rate for my work--(pounds)600 for the quantity contained in
+an ordinary novel volume, or (pounds)3000 for a long tale published in
+twenty parts, which is equal in length to five such volumes. I have
+occasionally, I think, received something more than this, never
+I think less for any tale, except when I have published my work
+anonymously. [Footnote: Since the date at which this was written
+I have encountered a diminution in price.] Having said so much, I
+need not further specify the prices as I mention the books as they
+were written. I will, however, when I am completing this memoir,
+give a list of all the sums I have received for my literary labours.
+I think that Brown, Jones and Robinson was the hardest bargain I
+ever sold to a publisher.
+
+In 1861 the War of Secession had broken out in America, and from
+the first I interested myself much in the question. My mother
+had thirty years previously written a very popular, but, as I had
+thought, a somewhat unjust book about our cousins over the water.
+She had seen what was distasteful in the manners of a young people,
+but had hardly recognised their energy. I had entertained for
+many years an ambition to follow her footsteps there, and to write
+another book. I had already paid a short visit to New York City and
+State on my way home from the West Indies, but had not seen enough
+then to justify me in the expression of any opinion. The breaking
+out of the war did not make me think that the time was peculiarly
+fit for such inquiry as I wished to make, but it did represent itself
+as an occasion on which a book might be popular. I consequently
+consulted the two great powers with whom I was concerned. Messrs.
+Chapman & Hall, the publishers, were one power, and I had no difficulty
+in arranging my affairs with them. They agreed to publish the book
+on my terms, and bade me God-speed on my journey. The other power
+was the Postmaster-General and Mr. Rowland Hill, the Secretary of
+the Post Office. I wanted leave of absence for the unusual period
+of nine months, and fearing that I should not get it by the ordinary
+process of asking the Secretary, I went direct to his lordship.
+"Is it on the plea of ill-health?" he asked, looking into my face,
+which was then that of a very robust man. His lordship knew the
+Civil Service as well as any one living, and must have seen much
+of falseness and fraudulent pretence, or he could not have asked
+that question. I told him that I was very well, but that I wanted
+to write a book. "Had I any special ground to go upon in asking for
+such indulgence?" I had, I said, done my duty well by the service.
+There was a good deal of demurring, but I got my leave for nine
+months,--and I knew that I had earned it. Mr. Hill attached to
+the minute granting me the leave an intimation that it was to be
+considered as a full equivalent for the special services rendered
+by me to the department. I declined, however, to accept the grace
+with such a stipulation, and it was withdrawn by the directions of
+the Postmaster-General. [Footnote: During the period of my service
+in the Post Office I did very much special work for which I never
+asked any remuneration,--and never received any, though payments
+for special services were common in the department at that time.
+But if there was to be a question of such remuneration, I did not
+choose that my work should be valued at the price put upon it by
+Mr. Hill.]
+
+I started for the States in August and returned in the following
+May. The war was raging during the time that I was there, and the
+country was full of soldiers. A part of the time I spent in Virginia,
+Kentucky, and Missouri, among the troops, along the line of attack.
+I visited all the States (excepting California) which had not then
+seceded,--failing to make my way into the seceding States unless I
+was prepared to visit them with an amount of discomfort I did not
+choose to endure. I worked very hard at the task I had assigned to
+myself, and did, I think, see much of the manners and institutions
+of the people. Nothing struck me more than their persistence in
+the ordinary pursuits of life in spite of the war which was around
+them. Neither industry nor amusement seemed to meet with any check.
+Schools, hospitals, and institutes were by no means neglected
+because new regiments were daily required. The truth, I take it,
+is that we, all of us, soon adapt ourselves to the circumstances
+around us. Though three parts of London were in flames I should
+no doubt expect to have my dinner served to me if I lived in the
+quarter which was free from fire.
+
+The book I wrote was very much longer than that on the West Indies,
+but was also written almost without a note. It contained much
+information, and, with many inaccuracies, was a true book. But it
+was not well done. It is tedious and confused, and will hardly,
+I think, be of future value to those who wish to make themselves
+acquainted with the United States. It was published about the
+middle of the war,--just at the time in which the hopes of those
+who loved the South were I most buoyant, and the fears of those who
+stood by the North were the strongest. But it expressed an assured
+confidence--which never quavered in a page or in a line--that the
+North would win. This assurance was based on the merits of the
+Northern cause, on the superior strength of the Northern party,
+and on a conviction that England would never recognise the South,
+and that France would be guided in her policy by England. I was
+right in my prophecies, and right, I think, on the grounds on which
+they were made. The Southern cause was bad. The South had provoked
+the quarrel because its political supremacy was checked by the election
+of Mr. Lincoln to the Presidency. It had to fight as a little man
+against a big man, and fought gallantly. That gallantry,--and a
+feeling based on a misconception as to American character that the
+Southerners are better gentlemen than their Northern brethren,--did
+create great sympathy here; but I believe that the country was too
+just to be led into political action by a spirit of romance, and
+I was warranted in that belief. There was a moment in which the
+Northern cause was in danger, and the danger lay certainly in the
+prospect of British interference. Messrs. Slidell and Mason,--two
+men insignificant in themselves,--had been sent to Europe by the
+Southern party, and had managed to get on board the British mail
+steamer called "The Trent," at the Havannah. A most undue importance
+was attached to this mission by Mr. Lincoln's government, and
+efforts were made to stop them. A certain Commodore Wilkes, doing
+duty as policeman on the seas, did stop the "Trent," and took the
+men out. They were carried, one to Boston and one to New York,
+and were incarcerated, amidst the triumph of the nation. Commodore
+Wilkes, who had done nothing in which a brave man could take glory,
+was made a hero and received a prize sword. England of course
+demanded her passengers back, and the States for a while refused
+to surrender them. But Mr. Seward was at that time the Secretary
+of State, and Mr. Seward, with many political faults, was a wise
+man. I was at Washington at the time, and it was known there that
+the contest among the leading Northerners was very sharp on the
+matter. Mr. Sumner and Mr. Seward were, under Mr. Lincoln, the two
+chiefs of the party. It was understood that Mr. Sumner was opposed
+to the rendition of the men, and Mr. Seward in favour of it. Mr.
+Seward's counsels at last prevailed with the President, and England's
+declaration of war was prevented. I dined with Mr. Seward on the
+day of the decision, meeting Mr. Sumner at his house, and was told
+as I left the dining-room what the decision had been. During the
+afternoon I and others had received intimation through the embassy
+that we might probably have to leave Washington at an hour's
+notice. This, I think, was the severest danger that the Northern
+cause encountered during the war.
+
+But my book, though it was right in its views on this subject,--and
+wrong in none other as far as I know,--was not a good book. I can
+recommend no one to read it now in order that he may be either
+instructed or amused,--as I can do that on the West Indies. It
+served its purpose at the time, and was well received by the public
+and by the critics.
+
+Before starting to America I had completed Orley Farm, a novel which
+appeared in shilling numbers,--after the manner in which Pickwick,
+Nicholas Nickleby, and many others had been published. Most of
+those among my friends who talk to me now about my novels, and are
+competent to form an opinion on the subject, say that this is the
+best I have written. In this opinion I do not coincide. I think
+that the highest merit which a novel can have consists in perfect
+delineation of character, rather than in plot, or humour, or pathos,
+and I shall before long mention a subsequent work in which I think
+the main character of the story is so well developed as to justify
+me in asserting its claim above the others. The plot of Orley Farm
+is probably the best I have ever made; but it has the fault of
+declaring itself, and thus coming to an end too early in the book.
+When Lady Mason tells her ancient lover that she did forge the
+will, the plot of Orley Farm has unravelled itself;--and this she
+does in the middle of the tale. Independently, however, of this the
+novel is good. Sir Peregrine Orme, his grandson, Madeline Stavely,
+Mr. Furnival, Mr. Chaffanbrass, and the commercial gentlemen,
+are all good. The hunting is good. The lawyer's talk is good. Mr.
+Moulder carves his turkey admirably, and Mr. Kantwise sells his
+tables and chairs with spirit. I do not know that there is a dull
+page in the book. I am fond of Orley Farm;--and am especially fond
+of its illustrations by Millais, which are the best I have seen in
+any novel in any language.
+
+I now felt that I had gained my object. In 1862 I had achieved that
+which I contemplated when I went to London in 1834, and towards which
+I made my first attempt when I began the Macdermots in 1843. I had
+created for myself a position among literary men, and had secured
+to myself an income on which I might live in ease and comfort,--which
+ease and comfort have been made to include many luxuries. From this
+time for a period of twelve years my income averaged (pounds)4500 a year.
+Of this I spent about two-thirds, and put by one. I ought perhaps
+to have done better,--to have spent one-third, and put by two; but
+I have ever been too well inclined to spend freely that which has
+come easily.
+
+This, however, has been so exactly the life which my thoughts and
+aspirations had marked out,--thoughts and aspirations which used
+to cause me to blush with shame because I was so slow in forcing
+myself to the work which they demanded,--that I have felt some pride
+in having attained it. I have before said how entirely I fail to
+reach the altitude of those who think that a man devoted to letters
+should be indifferent to the pecuniary results for which work is
+generally done. An easy income has always been regarded by me as
+a great blessing. Not to have to think of sixpences, or very much
+of shillings; not to be unhappy because the coals have been burned
+too quickly, and the house linen wants renewing; not to be debarred
+by the rigour of necessity from opening one's hands, perhaps
+foolishly, to one's friends;--all this to me has been essential to
+the comfort of life. I have enjoyed the comfort for I may almost
+say the last twenty years, though no man in his youth had less
+prospect of doing so, or would have been less likely at twenty-five
+to have had such luxuries foretold to him by his friends.
+
+But though the money has been sweet, the respect, the friendships, and
+the mode of life which has been achieved, have been much sweeter.
+In my boyhood, when I would be crawling up to school with dirty
+boots and trousers through the muddy lanes, I was always telling
+myself that the misery of the hour was not the worst of it, but
+that the mud and solitude and poverty of the time would insure me
+mud and solitude and poverty through my life. Those lads about me
+would go into Parliament, or become rectors and deans, or squires
+of parishes, or advocates thundering at the Bar. They would not
+live with me now,--but neither should I be able to live with them
+in after years. Nevertheless I have lived with them. When, at the
+age in which others go to the universities, I became a clerk in
+the Post Office, I felt that my old visions were being realised. I
+did not think it a high calling. I did not know then how very much
+good work may be done by a member of the Civil Service who will show
+himself capable of doing it. The Post Office at last grew upon me
+and forced itself into my affections. I became intensely anxious
+that people should have their letters delivered to them punctually.
+But my hope to rise had always been built on the writing of novels,
+and at last by the writing of novels I had risen.
+
+I do not think that I ever toadied any one, or that I have acquired
+the character of a tuft-hunter. But here I do not scruple to say
+that I prefer the society of distinguished people, and that even the
+distinction of wealth confers many advantages. The best education
+is to be had at a price as well as the best broadcloth. The son
+of a peer is more likely to rub his shoulders against well-informed
+men than the son of a tradesman. The graces come easier to the
+wife of him who has had great-grandfathers than they do to her
+whose husband has been less,--or more fortunate, as he may think
+it. The discerning man will recognise the information and the graces
+when they are achieved without such assistance, and will honour
+the owners of them the more because of the difficulties they have
+overcome;--but the fact remains that the society of the well-born
+and of the wealthy will as a rule be worth seeking. I say this
+now, because these are the rules by which I have lived, and these
+are the causes which have instigated me to work.
+
+I have heard the question argued--On what terms should a man of
+inferior rank live with those who are manifestly superior to him?
+If a marquis or an earl honour me, who have no rank, with his
+intimacy, am I in my intercourse with him to remember our close
+acquaintance or his high rank? I have always said that where the
+difference in position is quite marked, the overtures to intimacy
+should always come from the higher rank; but if the intimacy be
+ever fixed, then that rank should be held of no account. It seems
+to me that intimate friendship admits of no standing but that
+of equality. I cannot be the Sovereign's friend, nor probably the
+friend of many very much beneath the Sovereign, because such equality
+is impossible.
+
+When I first came to Waltham Cross in the winter of 1859-1860, I had
+almost made up my mind that my hunting was over. I could not then
+count upon an income which would enable me to carry on an amusement
+which I should doubtless find much more expensive in England than
+in Ireland. I brought with me out of Ireland one mare, but she was
+too light for me to ride in the hunting-field. As, however, the
+money came in, I very quickly fell back into my old habits. First
+one horse was bought, then another, and then a third, till it became
+established as a fixed rule that I should not have less than four
+hunters in the stable. Sometimes when my boys have been at home
+I have had as many as six. Essex was the chief scene of my sport,
+and gradually I became known there almost as well as though I had
+been an Essex squire, to the manner born. Few have investigated more
+closely than I have done the depth, and breadth, and water-holding
+capacities of an Essex ditch. It will, I think, be accorded to me
+by Essex men generally that I have ridden hard. The cause of my
+delight in the amusement I have never been able to analyse to my
+own satisfaction. In the first place, even now, I know very little
+about hunting,--though I know very much of the accessories of the
+field. I am too blind to see hounds turning, and cannot therefore
+tell whether the fox has gone this way or that. Indeed all the
+notice I take of hounds is not to ride over them. My eyes are so
+constituted that I can never see the nature of a fence. I either
+follow some one, or ride at it with the full conviction that I
+may be going into a horse-pond or a gravel-pit. I have jumped into
+both one and the other. I am very heavy, and have never ridden
+expensive horses. I am also now old for such work, being so stiff
+that I cannot get on to my horse without the aid of a block or a
+bank. But I ride still after the same fashion, with a boy's energy,
+determined to get ahead if it may possibly be done, hating the
+roads, despising young men who ride them, and with a feeling that
+life can not, with all her riches, have given me anything better
+than when I have gone through a long run to the finish, keeping a
+place, not of glory, but of credit, among my juniors.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+"THE SMALL HOUSE AT ALLINGTON," "CAN YOU FORGIVE HER?" "RACHEL
+RAY," AND THE "FORTNIGHTLY REVIEW"
+
+
+
+
+During the early months of 1862 Orley Farm was still being brought
+out in numbers, and at the same time Brown, Jones and Robinson was
+appearing in the Cornhill Magazine. In September, 1862, the Small
+House at Allington began its career in the same periodical. The
+work on North America had also come out in 1862. In August, 1863,
+the first number of Can You Forgive Her? was published as a separate
+serial, and was continued through 1864. In 1863 a short novel was
+produced in the ordinary volume form, called Rachel Ray. In addition
+to these I published during the time two volumes of stories called
+The Tales of all Countries. In the early spring of 1865 Miss Mackenzie
+was issued in the same form as Rachel Ray; and in May of the same
+year The Belton Estate was commenced with the commencement of the
+Fortnightly Review, of which periodical I will say a few words in
+this chapter.
+
+I quite admit that I crowded my wares into the market too
+quickly,--because the reading world could not want such a quantity
+of matter from the hands of one author in so short a space of
+time. I had not been quite so fertile as the unfortunate gentleman
+who disgusted the publisher in Paternoster Row,--in the story of
+whose productiveness I have always thought there was a touch of
+romance,--but I had probably done enough to make both publishers
+and readers think that I was coming too often beneath their notice.
+Of publishers, however, I must speak collectively, as my sins
+were, I think, chiefly due to the encouragement which I received
+from them individually. What I wrote for the Cornhill Magazine, I
+always wrote at the instigation of Mr. Smith. My other works were
+published by Messrs. Chapman & Hall, in compliance with contracts
+made by me with them, and always made with their good-will. Could
+I have been two separate persons at one and the same time, of whom
+one might have been devoted to Cornhill and the other to the interests
+of the firm in Piccadilly, it might have been very well;--but as
+I preserved my identity in both places, I myself became aware that
+my name was too frequent on titlepages.
+
+Critics, if they ever trouble themselves with these pages, will, of
+course, say that in what I have now said I have ignored altogether
+the one great evil of rapid production,--namely, that of inferior
+work. And of course if the work was inferior because of the too
+great rapidity of production, the critics would be right. Giving
+to the subject the best of my critical abilities, and judging of
+my own work as nearly as possible as I would that of another, I
+believe that the work which has been done quickest has been done
+the best. I have composed better stories--that is, have created
+better plots--than those of The Small House at Allington and Can
+You Forgive Her? and I have portrayed two or three better characters
+than are to be found in the pages of either of them; but taking
+these books all through, I do not think that I have ever done better
+work. Nor would these have been improved by any effort in the art
+of story telling, had each of these been the isolated labour of a
+couple of years. How short is the time devoted to the manipulation
+of a plot can be known only to those who have written plays and
+novels; I may say also, how very little time the brain is able
+to devote to such wearing work. There are usually some hours of
+agonising doubt, almost of despair,--so at least it has been with
+me,--or perhaps some days. And then, with nothing settled in my
+brain as to the final development of events, with no capability
+of settling anything, but with a most distinct conception of some
+character or characters, I have rushed at the work as a rider rushes
+at a fence which he does not see. Sometimes I have encountered
+what, in hunting language, we call a cropper. I had such a fall in
+two novels of mine, of which I have already spoken--The Bertrams
+and Castle Richmond. I shall have to speak of other such troubles.
+But these failures have not arisen from over-hurried work. When my
+work has been quicker done,--and it has sometimes been done very
+quickly--the rapidity has been achieved by hot pressure, not in
+the conception, but in the telling of the story. Instead of writing
+eight pages a day, I have written sixteen; instead of working five
+days a week, I have worked seven. I have trebled my usual average,
+and have done so in circumstances which have enabled me to give
+up all my thoughts for the time to the book I have been writing.
+This has generally been done at some quiet spot among the
+mountains,--where there has been no society, no hunting, no whist,
+no ordinary household duties. And I am sure that the work so done
+has had in it the best truth and the highest spirit that I have
+been able to produce. At such times I have been able to imbue myself
+thoroughly with the characters I have had in hand. I have wandered
+alone among the rocks and woods, crying at their grief, laughing at
+their absurdities, and thoroughly enjoying their joy. I have been
+impregnated with my own creations till it has been my only excitement
+to sit with the pen in my hand, and drive my team before me at as
+quick a pace as I could make them travel.
+
+The critics will again say that all this may be very well as to
+the rough work of the author's own brain, but it will be very far
+from well in reference to the style in which that work has been
+given to the public. After all, the vehicle which a writer uses for
+conveying his thoughts to the public should not be less important
+to him than the thoughts themselves. An author can hardly hope to
+be popular unless he can use popular language. That is quite true;
+but then comes the question of achieving a popular--in other words,
+I may say, a good and lucid style. How may an author best acquire
+a mode of writing which shall be agreeable and easily intelligible
+to the reader? He must be correct, because without correctness he
+can be neither agreeable nor intelligible. Readers will expect him
+to obey those rules which they, consciously or unconsciously, have
+been taught to regard as binding on language; and unless he does
+obey them, he will disgust. Without much labour, no writer will
+achieve such a style. He has very much to learn; and, when he has
+learned that much, he has to acquire the habit of using what he has
+learned with ease. But all this must be learned and acquired,--not
+while he is writing that which shall please, but long before. His
+language must come from him as music comes from the rapid touch of
+the great performer's fingers; as words come from the mouth of the
+indignant orator; as letters fly from the fingers of the trained
+compositor; as the syllables tinkled out by little bells form
+themselves to the ear of the telegraphist. A man who thinks much of
+his words as he writes them will generally leave behind him work
+that smells of oil. I speak here, of course, of prose; for in poetry
+we know what care is necessary, and we form our taste accordingly.
+
+Rapid writing will no doubt give rise to inaccuracy,--chiefly because
+the ear, quick and true as may be its operation, will occasionally
+break down under pressure, and, before a sentence be closed, will
+forget the nature of the composition with which it was commenced.
+A singular nominative will be disgraced by a plural verb, because
+other pluralities have intervened and have tempted the ear into
+plural tendencies. Tautologies will occur, because the ear, in
+demanding fresh emphasis, has forgotten that the desired force has
+been already expressed. I need not multiply these causes of error,
+which must have been stumbling-blocks indeed when men wrote in the
+long sentences of Gibbon, but which Macaulay, with his multiplicity
+of divisions, has done so much to enable us to avoid. A rapid writer
+will hardly avoid these errors altogether. Speaking of myself, I
+am ready to declare that, with much training, I have been unable to
+avoid them. But the writer for the press is rarely called upon--a
+writer of books should never be called upon--to send his manuscript
+hot from his hand to the printer. It has been my practice to read
+everything four times at least--thrice in manuscript and once in
+print. Very much of my work I have read twice in print. In spite
+of this I know that inaccuracies have crept through,--not single
+spies, but in battalions. From this I gather that the supervision
+has been insufficient, not that the work itself has been done too
+fast. I am quite sure that those passages which have been written
+with the greatest stress of labour, and consequently with the
+greatest haste, have been the most effective and by no means the
+most inaccurate.
+
+The Small House at Allington redeemed my reputation with the spirited
+proprietor of the Cornhill, which must, I should think, have been
+damaged by Brown, Jones, and Robinson. In it appeared Lily Dale,
+one of the characters which readers of my novels have liked the
+best. In the love with which she has been greeted I have hardly
+joined with much enthusiasm, feeling that she is somewhat of a
+French prig. She became first engaged to a snob, who jilted her;
+and then, though in truth she loved another man who was hardly
+good enough, she could not extricate herself sufficiently from the
+collapse of her first great misfortune to be able to make up her
+mind to be the wife of one whom, though she loved him, she did not
+altogether reverence. Prig as she was, she made her way into the
+hearts of many readers, both young and old; so that, from that time
+to this, I have been continually honoured with letters, the purport
+of which has always been to beg me to marry Lily Dale to Johnny
+Eames. Had I done so, however, Lily would never have so endeared
+herself to these people as to induce them to write letters to the
+author concerning her fate. It was because she could not get over
+her troubles that they loved her. Outside Lily Dale and the chief
+interest of the novel, The Small House at Allington is, I think,
+good. The De Courcy family are alive, as is also Sir Raffle Buffle,
+who is a hero of the Civil Service. Sir Raffle was intended to
+represent a type, not a man; but the man for the picture was soon
+chosen, and I was often assured that the portrait was very like.
+I have never seen the gentleman with whom I am supposed to have
+taken the liberty. There is also an old squire down at Allington,
+whose life as a country gentleman with rather straitened means is,
+I think, well described.
+
+Of Can you Forgive Her? I cannot speak with too great affection,
+though I do not know that of itself it did very much to increase
+my reputation. As regards the story, it was formed chiefly on that
+of the play which my friend Mr. Bartley had rejected long since,
+the circumstances of which the reader may perhaps remember. The
+play had been called The Noble Jilt; but I was afraid of the name
+for a novel, lest the critics might throw a doubt on the nobility.
+There was more of tentative humility in that which I at last adopted.
+The character of the girl is carried through with considerable
+strength, but is not attractive. The humorous characters, which are
+also taken from the play,--a buxom widow who with her eyes open
+chooses the most scampish of two selfish suitors because he is
+the better looking,--are well done. Mrs. Greenow, between Captain
+Bellfield and Mr. Cheeseacre, is very good fun--as far as the fun
+of novels is. But that which endears the book to me is the first
+presentation which I made in it of Plantagenet Palliser, with his
+wife, Lady Glencora.
+
+By no amount of description or asseveration could I succeed in
+making any reader understand how much these characters with their
+belongings have been to me in my latter life; or how frequently
+I have used them for the expression of my political or social
+convictions. They have been as real to me as free trade was to Mr.
+Cobden, or the dominion of a party to Mr. Disraeli; and as I have
+not been able to speak from the benches of the House of Commons,
+or to thunder from platforms, or to be efficacious as a lecturer,
+they have served me as safety-valves by which to deliver my soul.
+Mr. Plantagenet Palliser had appeared in The Small House at Allington,
+but his birth had not been accompanied by many hopes. In the last
+pages of that novel he is made to seek a remedy for a foolish
+false step in life by marrying the grand heiress of the day;--but
+the personage of the great heiress does not appear till she comes
+on the scene as a married woman in Can You Forgive Her? He is
+the nephew and heir to a duke--the Duke of Omnium--who was first
+introduced in Doctor Thorne, and afterwards in Framley Parsonage,
+and who is one of the belongings of whom I have spoken. In these
+personages and their friends, political and social, I have endeavoured
+to depict the faults and frailties and vices,--as also the virtues,
+the graces, and the strength of our highest classes; and if I have
+not made the strength and virtues predominant over the faults and
+vices, I have not painted the picture as I intended. Plantagenet
+Palliser I think to be a very noble gentleman,--such a one as justifies
+to the nation the seeming anomaly of an hereditary peerage and of
+primogeniture. His wife is in all respects very inferior to him;
+but she, too, has, or has been intended to have, beneath the thin
+stratum of her follies a basis of good principle, which enabled her
+to live down the conviction of the original wrong which was done
+to her, and taught her to endeavour to do her duty in the position
+to which she was called. She had received a great wrong,--having
+been made, when little more than a child, to marry a man for whom
+she cared nothing;--when, however, though she was little more than
+a child, her love had been given elsewhere. She had very heavy
+troubles, but they did not overcome her.
+
+As to the heaviest of these troubles, I will say a word in vindication
+of myself and of the way I handled it in my work. In the pages of
+Can You Forgive Her? the girl's first love is introduced,--beautiful,
+well-born, and utterly worthless. To save a girl from wasting
+herself, and an heiress from wasting her property on such a scamp,
+was certainly the duty of the girl's friends. But it must ever
+be wrong to force a girl into a marriage with a man she does not
+love,--and certainly the more so when there is another whom she does
+love. In my endeavour to teach this lesson I subjected the young
+wife to the terrible danger of overtures from the man to whom her
+heart had been given. I was walking no doubt on ticklish ground,
+leaving for a while a doubt on the question whether the lover
+might or might not succeed. Then there came to me a letter from a
+distinguished dignitary of our Church, a man whom all men honoured,
+treating me with severity for what I was doing. It had been one
+of the innocent joys of his life, said the clergyman, to have my
+novels read to him by his daughters. But now I was writing a book
+which caused him to bid them close it! Must I also turn away to
+vicious sensation such as this? Did I think that a wife contemplating
+adultery was a character fit for my pages? I asked him in return,
+whether from his pulpit, or at any rate from his communion-table,
+he did not denounce adultery to his audience; and if so, why should
+it not be open to me to preach the same doctrine to mine. I made
+known nothing which the purest girl could not but have learned,
+and ought not to have learned, elsewhere, and I certainly lent no
+attraction to the sin which I indicated. His rejoinder was full
+of grace, and enabled him to avoid the annoyance of argumentation
+without abandoning his cause. He said that the subject was so much
+too long for letters; that he hoped I would go and stay a week with
+him in the country,--so that we might have it out. That opportunity,
+however, has never yet arrived.
+
+Lady Glencora overcomes that trouble, and is brought, partly by her
+own sense of right and wrong, and partly by the genuine nobility
+of her husband's conduct, to attach herself to him after a certain
+fashion. The romance of her life is gone, but there remains a
+rich reality of which she is fully able to taste the flavour. She
+loves her rank and becomes ambitious, first of social, and then of
+political ascendancy. He is thoroughly true to her, after his thorough
+nature, and she, after her less perfect nature, is imperfectly true
+to him.
+
+In conducting these characters from one story to another I realised
+the necessity, not only of consistency,--which, had it been maintained
+by a hard exactitude, would have been untrue to nature,--but also
+of those changes which time always produces. There, are, perhaps,
+but few of us who, after the lapse of ten years, will be found to
+have changed our chief characteristics. The selfish man will still
+be selfish, and the false man false. But our manner of showing or
+of hiding these characteristics will be changed,--as also our power
+of adding to or diminishing their intensity. It was my study that
+these people, as they grew in years, should encounter the changes
+which come upon us all; and I think that I have succeeded. The
+Duchess of Omnium, when she is playing the part of Prime Minister's
+wife, is the same woman as that Lady Glencora who almost longs to
+go off with Burgo Fitzgerald, but yet knows that she will never do
+so; and the Prime Minister Duke, with his wounded pride and sore
+spirit, is he who, for his wife's sake, left power and place when
+they were first offered to him;--but they have undergone the changes
+which a life so stirring as theirs would naturally produce. To do
+all this thoroughly was in my heart from first to last; but I do
+not know that the game has been worth the candle.
+
+To carry out my scheme I have had to spread my picture over so wide
+a canvas that I cannot expect that any lover of such art should
+trouble himself to look at it as a whole. Who will read Can You
+Forgive Her? Phineas Finn, Phineas Redux, and The Prime Minister
+consecutively, in order that they may understand the characters of
+the Duke of Omnium, of Plantagenet Palliser, and of Lady Glencora?
+Who will ever know that they should be so read? But in the performance
+of the work I had much gratification, and was enabled from time to
+time to have in this way that fling at the political doings of the
+day which every man likes to take, if not in one fashion then in
+another. I look upon this string of characters,--carried sometimes
+into other novels than those just named,--as the best work of
+my life. Taking him altogether, I think that Plantagenet Palliser
+stands more firmly on the ground than any other personage I have
+created.
+
+On Christmas day, 1863, we were startled by the news of Thackeray's
+death. He had then for many months given up the editorship of the
+Cornhill Magazine,--a position for which he was hardly fitted either
+by his habits or temperament,--but was still employed in writing
+for its pages. I had known him only for four years, but had grown
+into much intimacy with him and his family. I regard him as one
+of the most tender-hearted human beings I ever knew, who, with an
+exaggerated contempt for the foibles of the world at large, would
+entertain an almost equally exaggerated sympathy with the joys
+and troubles of individuals around him. He had been unfortunate in
+early life--unfortunate in regard to money--unfortunate with an
+afflicted wife--unfortunate in having his home broken up before
+his children were fit to be his companions. This threw him too much
+upon clubs, and taught him to dislike general society. But it never
+affected his heart, or clouded his imagination. He could still revel
+in the pangs and joys of fictitious life, and could still feel--as
+he did to the very last--the duty of showing to his readers the
+evil consequences of evil conduct. It was perhaps his chief fault
+as a writer that he could never abstain from that dash of satire
+which he felt to be demanded by the weaknesses which he saw around
+him. The satirist who writes nothing but satire should write but
+little,--or it will seem that his satire springs rather from his
+own caustic nature than from the sins of the world in which he
+lives. I myself regard Esmond as the greatest novel in the English
+language, basing that judgment upon the excellence of its language,
+on the clear individuality of the characters, on the truth of
+its delineations in regard to the tine selected, and on its great
+pathos. There are also in it a few scenes so told that even Scott
+has never equalled the telling. Let any one who doubts this read
+the passage in which Lady Castlewood induces the Duke of Hamilton to
+think that his nuptials with Beatrice will be honoured if Colonel
+Esmond will give away the bride. When he went from us he left behind
+living novelists with great names; but I think that they who best
+understood the matter felt that the greatest master of fiction of
+this age had gone.
+
+Rachel Ray underwent a fate which no other novel of mine has
+encountered. Some years before this a periodical called Good Words
+had been established under the editorship of my friend Dr. Norman
+Macleod, a well-known Presbyterian pastor in Glasgow. In 1863 he
+asked me to write a novel for his magazine, explaining to me that
+his principles did not teach him to confine his matter to religious
+subjects, and paying me the compliment of saying that he would feel
+himself quite safe in my hands. In reply I told him I thought he
+was wrong in his choice; that though he might wish to give a novel
+to the readers of Good Words, a novel from me would hardly be what
+he wanted, and that I could not undertake to write either with
+any specially religious tendency, or in any fashion different from
+that which was usual to me. As worldly and--if any one thought me
+wicked--as wicked as I had heretofore been, I must still be, should
+I write for Good Words. He persisted in his request, and I came
+to terms as to a story for the periodical. I wrote it and sent it
+to him, and shortly afterwards received it back--a considerable
+portion having been printed--with an intimation that it would not
+do. A letter more full of wailing and repentance no man ever wrote.
+It was, he said, all his own fault. He should have taken my advice.
+He should have known better. But the story, such as it was, he
+could not give to his readers in the pages of Good Words. Would I
+forgive him? Any pecuniary loss to which his decision might subject
+me the owner of the publication would willingly make good. There
+was some loss--or rather would have been--and that money I exacted,
+feeling that the fault had in truth been with the editor. There is
+the tale now to speak for itself. It is not brilliant nor in any
+way very excellent; but it certainly is not very wicked. There is
+some dancing in one of the early chapters, described, no doubt,
+with that approval of the amusement which I have always entertained;
+and it was this to which my friend demurred. It is more true of
+novels than perhaps of anything else, that one man's food is another
+man's poison.
+
+Miss Mackenzie was written with a desire to prove that a novel may
+be produced without any love; but even in this attempt it breaks
+down before the conclusion. In order that I might be strong in my
+purpose, I took for my heroine a very unattractive old maid, who
+was overwhelmed with money troubles; but even she was in love before
+the end of the book, and made a romantic marriage with an old man.
+There is in this story an attack upon charitable bazaars, made
+with a violence which will, I think, convince any reader that such
+attempts at raising money were at the time very odious to me. I beg
+to say that since that I have had no occasion to alter my opinion.
+Miss Mackenzie was published in the early spring of 1865.
+
+At the same time I was engaged with others in establishing a
+periodical Review, in which some of us trusted much, and from which
+we expected great things. There was, however, in truth so little
+combination of idea among us, that we were not justified in our
+trust or in our expectations. And yet we were honest in our purpose,
+and have, I think, done some good by our honesty. The matter on which
+we were all agreed was freedom of speech, combined with personal
+responsibility. We would be neither conservative nor liberal, neither
+religious nor free-thinking, neither popular nor exclusive;--but
+we would let any man who had a thing to say, and knew how to say
+it, speak freely. But he should always speak with the responsibility
+of his name attached. In the very beginning I militated against this
+impossible negation of principles,--and did so most irrationally,
+seeing that I had agreed to the negation of principles,--by declaring
+that nothing should appear denying or questioning the divinity of
+Christ. It was a most preposterous claim to make for such a publication
+as we proposed, and it at once drove from us one or two who had
+proposed to join us. But we went on, and our company--limited--was
+formed. We subscribed, I think, (pounds)1250 each. I at least subscribed
+that amount, and--having agreed to bring out our publication every
+fortnight, after the manner of the well-known French publication,--we
+called it The Fortnightly. We secured the services of G. H. Lewes
+as our editor. We agreed to manage our finances by a Board, which
+was to meet once a fortnight, and of which I was the Chairman.
+And we determined that the payments for our literature should be
+made on a liberal and strictly ready-money system. We carried out
+our principles till our money was all gone, and then we sold the
+copyright to Messrs. Chapman & Hall for a trifle. But before we
+parted with our property we found that a fortnightly issue was not
+popular with the trade through whose hands the work must reach the
+public; and, as our periodical had not become sufficiently popular
+itself to bear down such opposition, we succumbed, and brought
+it out once a month. Still it was The Fortnightly, and still it
+is The Fortnightly. Of all the serial publications of the day, it
+probably is the most serious, the most earnest, the least devoted
+to amusement, the least flippant, the least jocose,--and yet it
+has the face to show itself month after month to the world, with
+so absurd a misnomer! It is, as all who know the laws of modern
+literature are aware, a very serious thing to change the name of
+a periodical. By doing so you begin an altogether new enterprise.
+Therefore should the name be well chosen;--whereas this was very
+ill chosen, a fault for which I alone was responsible.
+
+That theory of eclecticism was altogether impracticable. It was as
+though a gentleman should go into the House of Commons determined
+to support no party, but to serve his country by individual utterances.
+Such gentlemen have gone into the House of Commons, but they have
+not served their country much. Of course the project broke down.
+Liberalism, freethinking, and open inquiry will never object to appear
+in company with their opposites, because they have the conceit to
+think that they can quell those opposites; but the opposites will
+not appear in conjunction with liberalism, free-thinking, and open
+inquiry. As a natural consequence, our new publication became an
+organ of liberalism, free-thinking, and open inquiry. The result
+has been good; and though there is much in the now established
+principles of The Fortnightly with which I do not myself agree, I
+may safely say that the publication has assured an individuality,
+and asserted for itself a position in our periodical literature,
+which is well understood and highly respected.
+
+As to myself and my own hopes in the matter,--I was craving after
+some increase in literary honesty, which I think is still desirable but
+which is hardly to be attained by the means which then recommended
+themselves to me. In one of the early numbers I wrote a paper
+advocating the signature of the authors to periodical writing,
+admitting that the system should not be extended to journalistic
+articles on political subjects. I think that I made the best of
+my case; but further consideration has caused me to doubt whether
+the reasons which induced me to make an exception in favour of
+political writing do not extend themselves also to writing on other
+subjects. Much of the literary criticism which we now have is very
+bad indeed;--. so bad as to be open to the charge both of dishonesty
+and incapacity. Books are criticised without being read,--are
+criticised by favour,--and are trusted by editors to the criticism
+of the incompetent. If the names of the critics were demanded,
+editors would be more careful. But I fear the effect would be that
+we should get but little criticism, and that the public would put
+but little trust in that little. An ordinary reader would not care
+to have his books recommended to him by Jones; but the recommendation
+of the great unknown comes to him with all the weight of the Times,
+the Spectator, or the Saturday.
+
+Though I admit so much, I am not a recreant from the doctrine I then
+preached. I think that the name of the author does tend to honesty,
+and that the knowledge that it will be inserted adds much to the
+author's industry and care. It debars him also from illegitimate
+license and dishonest assertions. A man should never be ashamed
+to acknowledge that which he is not ashamed to publish. In The
+Fortnightly everything has been signed, and in this way good has,
+I think, been done. Signatures to articles in other periodicals
+have become much more common since The Fortnightly was commenced.
+
+After a time Mr. Lewes retired from the editorship, feeling that
+the work pressed too severely on his moderate strength. Our loss
+in him was very great, and there was considerable difficulty in
+finding a successor. I must say that the present proprietor has
+been fortunate in the choice he did make. Mr. John Morley has done
+the work with admirable patience, zeal, and capacity. Of course
+he has got around him a set of contributors whose modes of thought
+are what we may call much advanced; he being "much advanced" himself,
+would not work with other aids. The periodical has a peculiar tone
+of its own; but it holds its own with ability, and though there
+are many who perhaps hate it, there are none who despise it. When
+the company sold it, having spent about (pounds)9000 on it, it was worth
+little or nothing. Now I believe it to be a good property.
+
+My own last personal concern with it was on a matter, of fox-hunting.
+[Footnote: I have written various articles for it since, especially
+two on Cicero, to which I devoted great labour.] There came out in
+it an article from the pen of Mr. Freeman the historian, condemning
+the amusement, which I love, on the grounds of cruelty and general
+brutality. Was it possible, asked Mr. Freeman, quoting from Cicero,
+that any educated man should find delight in so coarse a pursuit?
+Always bearing in mind my own connection with The Fortnightly, I
+regarded this almost as a rising of a child against the father. I
+felt at any rate bound to answer Mr. Freeman in the same columns,
+and I obtained Mr. Morley's permission to do so. I wrote my defence
+of fox-hunting, and there it is. In regard to the charge of cruelty,
+Mr. Freeman seems to assert that nothing unpleasant should be
+done to any of God's creatures except f or a useful purpose. The
+protection of a lady's shoulders from the cold is a useful purpose;
+and therefore a dozen fur-bearing animals may be snared in the
+snow and left to starve to death in the wires, in order that the
+lady may have the tippet,--though a tippet of wool would serve
+the purpose as well as a tippet of fur. But the congregation and
+healthful amusement of one or two hundred persons, on whose behalf
+a single fox may or may not be killed, is not a useful purpose. I
+think that Mr. Freeman has failed to perceive that amusement is as
+needful and almost as necessary as food and raiment. The absurdity
+of the further charge as to the general brutality of the pursuit,
+and its consequent unfitness for an educated man, is to be attributed
+to Mr. Freeman's ignorance of what is really done and said in the
+hunting-field,--perhaps to his misunderstanding of Cicero's words.
+There was a rejoinder to my answer, and I asked for space for
+further remarks. I could have it, the editor said, if I much wished
+it; but he preferred that the subject should be closed. Of course
+I was silent. His sympathies were all with Mr. Freeman,--and
+against the foxes, who, but for fox-hunting, would cease to exist
+in England. And I felt that The Fortnighty was hardly the place for
+the defence of the sport. Afterwards Mr. Freeman kindly suggested
+to me that he would be glad to publish my article in a little book
+to be put out by him condemnatory of fox-hunting generally. He was
+to have the last word and the first word, and that power of picking
+to pieces which he is known to use in so masterly a manner, without
+any reply from me! This I was obliged to decline. If he would give
+me the last word, as be would have the first, then, I told him, I
+should be proud to join him in the book. This offer did not however
+meet his views.
+
+It had been decided by the Board of Management, somewhat in opposition
+to my own ideas on the subject, that the Fortnightly Review should
+always contain a novel. It was of course natural that I should write
+the first novel, and I wrote The Belton Estate. It is similar in
+its attributes to Rachel Ray and to Miss Mackenzie. It is readable,
+and contains scenes which are true to life; but it has no peculiar
+merits, and will add nothing to my reputation as a novelist. I have
+not looked at it since it was published; and now turning back to
+it in my memory, I seem to remember almost less of it than of any
+book that I have written.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+"THE CLAVERINGS," THE "PALL MALL GAZETTE," "NINA BALATKA," AND
+"LINDA TRESSEL"
+
+
+
+
+The Claverings, which came out in 1866 and 1867, was the last novel
+which I wrote for the Cornhill; and it was for this that I received
+the highest rate of pay that was ever accorded to me. It was the
+same length as Framley Parsonage, and the price was (pounds)2800. Whether
+much or little, it was offered by the proprietor of the magazine,
+and was paid in a single cheque.
+
+In The Claverings I did not follow the habit which had now become
+very common to me, of introducing personages whose names are already
+known to the readers of novels, and whose characters were familiar
+to myself. If I remember rightly, no one appears here who had
+appeared before or who has been allowed to appear since. I consider
+the story as a whole to be good, though I am not aware that the
+public has ever corroborated that verdict. The chief character
+is that of a young woman who has married manifestly for money and
+rank,--so manifestly that she does not herself pretend, even while
+she is making the marriage, that she has any other reason. The
+man is old, disreputable, and a wornout debauchee. Then comes the
+punishment natural to the offence. When she is free, the man whom
+she had loved, and who had loved her, is engaged to another woman.
+He vacillates and is weak,--in which weakness is the fault of the
+book, as he plays the part of hero. But she is strong--strong in
+her purpose, strong in her desires, and strong in her consciousness
+that the punishment which comes upon her has been deserved.
+
+But the chief merit of The Clarverings is in the genuine fun of
+some of the scenes. Humour has not been my forte, but I am inclined
+to think that the characters of Captain Boodle, Archie Clavering,
+and Sophie Gordeloup are humorous. Count Pateroff, the brother of
+Sophie, is also good, and disposes of the young hero's interference
+in a somewhat masterly manner. In The Claverings, too, there is a
+wife whose husband is a brute to her, who loses an only child--his
+heir--and who is rebuked by her lord because the boy dies. Her
+sorrow is, I think, pathetic. From beginning to end the story is
+well told. But I doubt now whether any one reads The Claverings.
+When I remember how many novels I have written, I have no right
+to expect that above a few of them shall endure even to the second
+year beyond publication. This story closed my connection with the
+Cornhill Magazine;--but not with its owner, Mr. George Smith, who
+subsequently brought out a further novel of mine in a separate
+form, and who about this time established the Pall Mall Gazette,
+to which paper I was for some years a contributor.
+
+It was in 1865 that the Pall Mall Gazette was commenced, the
+name having been taken from a fictitious periodical, which was the
+offspring of Thackeray's brain. It was set on foot by the unassisted
+energy and resources of George Smith, who had succeeded by means
+of his magazine and his publishing connection in getting around him
+a society of literary men who sufficed, as far as literary ability
+went, to float the paper at one under favourable auspices. His two
+strongest staffs probably were "Jacob Omnium," whom I regard as the
+most forcible newspaper writer of my days, and Fitz-James Stephen,
+the most conscientious and industrious. To them the Pall Mall
+Gazette owed very much of its early success,--and to the untiring
+energy and general ability of its proprietor. Among its other
+contributors were George Lewes, Hannay,--who, I think, came up
+from Edinburgh for employment on its columns,--Lord Houghton, Lord
+Strangford, Charles Merivale, Greenwood the present editor, Greg,
+myself, and very many others;--so many others, that I have met
+at a Pall Mall dinner a crowd of guests who would have filled the
+House of Commons more respectably than I have seen it filled even
+on important occasions. There are many who now remember--and no
+doubt when this is published there will be left some to remember--the
+great stroke of business which was done by the revelations of a
+visitor to one of the casual wards in London. A person had to be
+selected who would undergo the misery of a night among the usual
+occupants of a casual ward in a London poorhouse, and who should at
+the same time be able to record what he felt and saw. The choice
+fell upon Mr. Greenwood's brother, who certainly possessed the
+courage and the powers of endurance. The description, which was
+very well given, was, I think, chiefly written by the brother of
+the Casual himself. It had a great effect, which was increased by
+secrecy as to the person who encountered all the horrors of that
+night. I was more than once assured that Lard Houghton was the man.
+I heard it asserted also that I myself had been the hero. At last
+the unknown one could no longer endure that his honours should be
+hidden, and revealed the truth,--in opposition, I fear, to promises
+to the contrary, and instigated by a conviction that if known he
+could turn his honours to account. In the meantime, however, that
+record of a night passed in a workhouse had done more to establish
+the sale of the journal than all the legal lore of Stephen, or the
+polemical power of Higgins, or the critical acumen of Lewes.
+
+My work was various. I wrote much on the subject of the American
+War, on which my feelings were at the time very keen,--subscribing,
+if I remember right, my name to all that I wrote. I contributed
+also some sets of sketches, of which those concerning hunting found
+favour with the public. They were republished afterwards, and had
+a considerable sale, and may, I think, still be recommended to those
+who are fond of hunting, as being accurate in their description of
+the different classes of people who are to be met in the hunting-field.
+There was also a set of clerical sketches, which was considered to
+be of sufficient importance to bring down upon my head the critical
+wrath of a great dean of that period. The most ill-natured review
+that was ever written upon any work of mine appeared in the
+Contemporary Review with reference to these Clerical Sketches. The
+critic told me that I did not understand Greek. That charge has
+been made not unfrequently by those who have felt themselves strong
+in that pride-producing language. It is much to read Greek with
+ease, but it is not disgraceful to be unable to do so. To pretend
+to read it without being able,--that is disgraceful. The critic,
+however, had been driven to wrath by my saying that Deans of the
+Church of England loved to revisit the glimpses of the metropolitan
+moon.
+
+I also did some critical work for the Pall Mall,--as I did also for
+The Fortnightly. It was not to my taste, but was done in conformity
+with strict conscientious scruples. I read what I took in hand, and
+said what I believed to be true,--always giving to the matter time
+altogether incommensurate with the pecuniary result to myself. In
+doing this for the Pall Mall, I fell into great sorrow. A gentleman,
+whose wife was dear to me as if she were my own sister; was in
+some trouble as to his conduct in the public service. He had been
+blamed, as he thought unjustly, and vindicated himself in a pamphlet.
+This he handed to me one day, asking me to read it, and express my
+opinion about it if I found that I had an opinion. I thought the
+request injudicious, and I did not read the pamphlet. He met me
+again, and, handing me a second pamphlet, pressed me very hard. I
+promised him that I would read it, and that if I found myself able
+I would express myself;--but that I must say not what I wished
+to think, but what I did think. To this of course he assented. I
+then went very much out of my way to study the subject,--which was
+one requiring study. I found, or thought that I found, that the
+conduct of the gentleman in his office had been indiscreet; but that
+charges made against himself affecting his honour were baseless.
+This I said, emphasising much more strongly than was necessary the
+opinion which I had formed of his indiscretion,--as will so often
+be the case when a man has a pen in his hand. It is like a club
+or sledge-hammer,--in using which, either for defence or attack,
+a man can hardly measure the strength of the blows he gives. Of
+course there was offence,--and a breaking off of intercourse between
+loving friends,--and a sense of wrong received, and I must own,
+too, of wrong done. It certainly was not open to me to whitewash
+with honesty him whom I did not find to be white; but there was no
+duty incumbent on me to declare what was his colour in my eyes,--no
+duty even to ascertain. But I had been ruffled by the persistency
+of the gentleman's request,--which should not have been made,--and
+I punished him for his wrong-doing by doing a wrong myself. I must
+add, that before he died his wife succeeded in bringing us together.
+
+In the early days of the paper, the proprietor, who at that time
+acted also as chief editor, asked me to undertake a duty,--of which
+the agony would indeed at no one moment have been so sharp as that
+endured in the casual ward, but might have been prolonged until
+human nature sank under it. He suggested to me that I should during
+an entire season attend the May meetings in Exeter Hall, and give
+a graphic and, if possible, amusing description of the proceedings.
+I did attend one,--which lasted three hours,--and wrote a paper which
+I think was called A Zulu in Search of a Religion. But when the
+meeting was over I went to that spirited proprietor, and begged him
+to impose upon me some task more equal to my strength. Not even on
+behalf of the Pall Mall Gazette, which was very dear to me, could
+I go through a second May meeting,--much less endure a season of
+such martyrdom.
+
+I have to acknowledge that I found myself unfit for work on
+a newspaper. I had not taken to it early enough in life to learn
+its ways and bear its trammels. I was fidgety when any work was
+altered in accordance with the judgment of the editor, who, of
+course, was responsible for what appeared. I wanted to select my
+own subjects,--not to have them selected for me; to write when I
+pleased,--and not when it suited others. As a permanent member of
+the staff I was of no use, and after two or three years I dropped
+out of the work.
+
+From the commencement of my success as a writer, which I date
+from the beginning of the Cornhill Magazine, I had always felt an
+injustice in literary affairs which had never afflicted me or even
+suggested itself to me while I was unsuccessful. It seemed to me
+that a name once earned carried with it too much favour. I indeed
+had never reached a height to which praise was awarded as a matter
+of course; but there were others who sat on higher seats to whom
+the critics brought unmeasured incense and adulation, even when
+they wrote, as they sometimes did write, trash which from a beginner
+would not have been thought worthy of the slightest notice. I hope
+no one will think that in saying this I am actuated by jealousy
+of others. Though I never reached that height, still I had so
+far progressed that that which I wrote was received with too much
+favour. The injustice which struck me did not consist in that which
+was withheld from me, but in that which was given to me. I felt
+that aspirants coming up below me might do work as good as mine,
+and probably much better work, and yet fail to have it appreciated.
+In order to test this, I determined to be such an aspirant myself,
+and to begin a course of novels anonymously, in order that I might
+see whether I could obtain a second identity,--whether as I had made
+one mark by such literary ability as I possessed, I might succeed
+in doing so again. In 1865 I began a short tale called Nina Balatka,
+which in 1866 was published anonymously in Blackwood's Magazine.
+In 1867 this was followed by another of the same length, called
+Linda Tressel. I will speak of them together, as they are of the
+same nature and of nearly equal merit. Mr. Blackwood, who himself
+read the MS. of Nina Balatka, expressed an opinion that it would
+not from its style be discovered to have been written by me;--but
+it was discovered by Mr. Hutton of the Spectator, who found the
+repeated use of some special phrase which had rested upon his ear
+too frequently when reading for the purpose of criticism other
+works of mine. He declared in his paper that Nina Balatka was by
+me, showing I think more sagacity than good nature. I ought not,
+however, to complain of him, as of all the critics of my work he
+has been the most observant, and generally the most eulogistic.
+Nina Balatka never rose sufficiently high in reputation to make
+its detection a matter of any importance. Once or twice I heard the
+story mentioned by readers who did not know me to be the author,
+and always with praise; but it had no real success. The same may
+be said of Linda Tressel. Blackwood, who of course knew the author,
+was willing to publish them, trusting that works by an experienced
+writer would make their way, even without the writer's name, and he
+was willing to pay me for them, perhaps half what they would have
+fetched with my name. But he did not find the speculation answer,
+and declined a third attempt, though a third such tale was written
+for him.
+
+Nevertheless I am sure that the two stories are good. Perhaps the
+first is somewhat the better, as being the less lachrymose. They
+were both written very quickly, but with a considerable amount of
+labour; and both were written immediately after visits to the towns
+in which the scenes are laid,--Prague, mainly, and Nuremberg. Of
+course I had endeavoured to change not only my manner of language,
+but my manner of story-telling also; and in this, pace Mr. Hutton,
+I think that I was successful. English life in them there was none.
+There was more of romance proper than had been usual with me. And
+I made an attempt at local colouring, at descriptions of scenes
+and places, which has not been usual with me. In all this I am
+confident that I was in a measure successful. In the loves, and
+fears, and hatreds, both of Nina and of Linda, there is much that
+is pathetic. Prague is Prague, and Nuremberg is Nuremberg. I know
+that the stories are good, but they missed the object with which
+they had been written. Of course there is not in this any evidence
+that I might not have succeeded a second time as I succeeded before,
+had I gone on with the same dogged perseverance. Mr. Blackwood,
+had I still further reduced my price, would probably have continued
+the experiment. Another ten years of unpaid unflagging labour might
+have built up a second reputation. But this at any rate did seem
+clear to me, that with all the increased advantages which practice
+in my art must have given me, I could not induce English readers
+to read what I gave to them, unless I gave it with my name.
+
+I do not wish to have it supposed from this that I quarrel with public
+judgment in affairs of literature. It is a matter of course that
+in all things the public should trust to established reputation. It
+is as natural that a novel reader wanting novels should send to a
+library for those by George Eliot or Wilkie Collins, as that a lady
+when she wants a pie for a picnic should go to Fortnum & Mason.
+Fortnum & Mason can only make themselves Fortnum & Mason by dint of
+time and good pies combined. If Titian were to send us a portrait
+from the other world, as certain dead poets send their poetry by
+means of a medium, it would be some time before the art critic of
+the Times would discover its value. We may sneer at the want of
+judgment thus displayed, but such slowness of judgment is human and
+has always existed. I say all this here because my thoughts on the
+matter have forced upon me the conviction that very much consideration
+is due to the bitter feelings of disappointed authors.
+
+We who have succeeded are so apt to tell new aspirants not to
+aspire, because the thing to be done may probably be beyond their
+reach. "My dear young lady, had you not better stay at home and darn
+your stockings?" "As, sir, you have asked for my candid opinion,
+I can only counsel you to try some other work of life which may be
+better suited to your abilities." What old-established successful
+author has not said such words as these to humble aspirants for
+critical advice, till they have become almost formulas? No doubt
+there is cruelty in such answers; but the man who makes them has
+considered the matter within himself, and has resolved that such
+cruelty is the best mercy. No doubt the chances against literary
+aspirants are very great. It is so easy to aspire,--and to begin!
+A man cannot make a watch or a shoe without a variety of tools and
+many materials. He must also have learned much. But any young lady
+can write a book who has a sufficiency of pens and paper. It can
+be done anywhere; in any clothes--which is a great thing; at any
+hours--to which happy accident in literature I owe my success.
+And the success, when achieved, is so pleasant! The aspirants, of
+course, are very many; and the experienced councillor, when asked
+for his candid judgment as to this or that effort, knows that among
+every hundred efforts there will be ninety-nine failures. Then the
+answer is so ready: "My dear young lady, do darn your stockings;
+it will be for the best." Or perhaps, less tenderly, to the male
+aspirant: "You must earn some money, you say. Don't you think
+that a stool in a counting-house might be better?" The advice will
+probably be good advice,--probably, no doubt, as may be proved by
+the terrible majority of failures. But who is to be sure that he
+is not expelling an angel from the heaven to which, if less roughly
+treated, he would soar,--that he is not dooming some Milton to be
+mute and inglorious, who, but for such cruel ill-judgment, would
+become vocal to all ages?
+
+The answer to all this seems to be ready enough. The judgment,
+whether cruel or tender, should not be ill-judgment. He who
+consents to sit as judge should have capacity for judging. But in
+this matter no accuracy of judgment is possible. It may be that the
+matter subjected to the critic is so bad or so good as to make an
+assured answer possible. "You, at any rate, cannot make this your
+vocation;" or "You, at any rate, can succeed, if you will try." But
+cases as to which such certainty can be expressed are rare. The
+critic who wrote the article on the early verses of Lord Byron, which
+produced the English Bards and Scotch Reviewers, was justified in
+his criticism by the merits of the Hours of Idleness. The lines had
+nevertheless been written by that Lord Byron who became our Byron.
+In a little satire called The Biliad, which, I think, nobody knows,
+are the following well-expressed lines:--
+
+ "When Payne Knight's Taste was issued to the town,
+ A few Greek verses in the text set down
+ Were torn to pieces, mangled into hash,
+ Doomed to the flames as execrable trash,--
+ In short, were butchered rather than dissected,
+ And several false quantities detected,--
+ Till, when the smoke had vanished from the cinders,
+ 'Twas just discovered that--THE LINES WERE PINDAR'S!"
+
+There can be no assurance against cases such as these; and yet we
+are so free with our advice, always bidding the young aspirant to
+desist.
+
+There is perhaps no career or life so charming as that of a successful
+man of letters. Those little unthought of advantages which I just
+now named are in themselves attractive. If you like the town, live in
+the town, and do your work there; if you like the country, choose
+the country. It may be done on the top of a mountain or in the
+bottom of a pit. It is compatible with the rolling of the sea and
+the motion of a railway. The clergyman, the lawyer, the doctor, the
+member of Parliament, the clerk in a public office, the tradesman,
+and even his assistant in the shop, must dress in accordance with
+certain fixed laws; but the author need sacrifice to no grace,
+hardly even to Propriety. He is subject to no bonds such as those
+which bind other men. Who else is free from all shackle as to hours?
+The judge must sit at ten, and the attorney-general, who is making
+his (pounds)20,000 a year, must be there with his bag. The Prime Minister
+must be in his place on that weary front bench shortly after
+prayers, and must sit there, either asleep or awake, even though
+---- or ---- should be addressing the House. During all that Sunday
+which he maintains should be a day of rest, the active clergyman
+toils like a galley-slave. The actor, when eight o'clock comes,
+is bound to his footlights. The Civil Service clerk must sit there
+from ten till four,--unless his office be fashionable, when twelve
+to six is just as heavy on him. The author may do his work at five
+in the morning when he is fresh from his bed, or at three in the
+morning before he goes there. And the author wants no capital, and
+encounters no risks. When once he is afloat, the publisher finds
+all that;--and indeed, unless he be rash, finds it whether he be
+afloat or not. But it is in the consideration which he enjoys that
+the successful author finds his richest reward. He is, if not of
+equal rank, yet of equal standing with the highest; and if he be
+open to the amenities of society, may choose his own circles. He
+without money can enter doors which are closed against almost all
+but him and the wealthy. I have often heard it said that in this
+country the man of letters is not recognised. I believe the meaning
+of this to be that men of letters are not often invited to be
+knights and baronets. I do not think that they wish it;--and if
+they had it they would, as a body, lose much more than they would
+gain. I do not at all desire to have letters put after my name, or
+to be called Sir Anthony, but if my friends Tom Hughes and Charles
+Reade became Sir Thomas and Sir Charles, I do not know how I might
+feel,--or how my wife might feel, if we were left unbedecked. As
+it is, the man of letters who would be selected for titular honour,
+if such bestowal of honours were customary, receives from the general
+respect of those around him a much more pleasant recognition of
+his worth.
+
+If this be so,--if it be true that the career of the successful
+literary man be thus pleasant--it is not wonderful that many should
+attempt to win the prize. But how is a man to know whether or not
+he has within him the qualities necessary for such a career? He
+makes an attempt, and fails; repeats his attempt, and fails again!
+So many have succeeded at last who have failed more than once or
+twice! Who will tell him the truth as to himself? Who has power to
+find out that truth? The hard man sends him off without a scruple
+to that office-stool; the soft man assures him that there is much
+merit in his MS.
+
+Oh, my young aspirant,--if ever such a one should read these
+pages,--be sure that no one can tell you! To do so it would be
+necessary not only to know what there is now within you, but also
+to foresee what time will produce there. This, however, I think may
+be said to you, without any doubt as to the wisdom of the counsel
+given, that if it be necessary for you to live by your work, do not
+begin by trusting to literature. Take the stool in the office as
+recommended to you by the hard man; and then, in such leisure hours
+as may belong to you, let the praise which has come from the lips
+of that soft man induce you to persevere in your literary attempts.
+Should you fail, then your failure will not be fatal,--and what
+better could you have done with the leisure hours had you not so
+failed? Such double toil, you will say, is severe. Yes, but if
+you want this thing, you must submit to severe toil.
+
+Sometime before this I had become one of the Committee appointed
+for the distribution of the moneys of the Royal Literary Fund, and
+in that capacity I heard and saw much of the sufferings of authors.
+I may in a future chapter speak further of this Institution, which
+I regard with great affection, and in reference to which I should
+be glad to record certain convictions of my own; but I allude to it
+now, because the experience I have acquired in being active in its
+cause forbids me to advise any young man or woman to enter boldly
+on a literary career in search of bread. I know how utterly I
+should have failed myself had my bread not been earned elsewhere
+while I was making my efforts. During ten years of work, which I
+commenced with some aid from the fact that others of my family were
+in the same profession, I did not earn enough to buy me the pens,
+ink, and paper which I was using; and then when, with all my
+experience in my art, I began again as from a new springing point,
+I should have failed again unless again I could have given years
+to the task. Of course there have been many who have done better
+than I,--many whose powers have been infinitely greater. But then,
+too, I have seen the failure of many who were greater.
+
+The career, when success has been achieved, is certainly very
+pleasant; but the agonies which are endured in the search for that
+success are often terrible. And the author's poverty is, I think,
+harder to be borne than any other poverty. The man, whether rightly
+or wrongly, feels that the world is using him with extreme injustice.
+The more absolutely he fails, the higher, it is probable, he will
+reckon his own merits; and the keener will be the sense of injury
+in that he whose work is of so high a nature cannot get bread,
+while they whose tasks are mean are lapped in luxury. "I, with
+my well-filled mind, with my clear intellect, with all my gifts,
+cannot earn a poor crown a day, while that fool, who simpers in
+a little room behind a shop, makes his thousands every year." The
+very charity, to which he too often is driven, is bitterer to him
+than to others. While he takes it he almost spurns the hand that
+gives it to him, and every fibre of his heart within him is bleeding
+with a sense of injury.
+
+The career, when successful, is pleasant enough certainly; but when
+unsuccessful, it is of all careers the most agonising.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+ON NOVELS AND THE ART OF WRITING THEM
+
+
+
+
+It is nearly twenty years since I proposed to myself to write
+a history of English prose fiction. I shall never do it now, but
+the subject is so good a one that I recommend it heartily to some
+man of letters, who shall at the same time be indefatigable and
+light-handed. I acknowledge that I broke down in the task, because
+I could not endure the labour in addition to the other labours of
+my life. Though the book might be charming, the work was very much
+the reverse. It came to have a terrible aspect to me, as did that
+proposition that I should sit out all the May meetings of a season.
+According to my plan of such a history it would be necessary
+to read an infinity of novels, and not only to read them, but so
+to read them as to point out the excellences of those which are
+most excellent, and to explain the defects of those which, though
+defective, had still reached sufficient reputation to make them
+worthy of notice. I did read many after this fashion,--and here
+and there I have the criticisms which I wrote. In regard to many,
+they were written on some blank page within the book; I have not,
+however, even a list of the books so criticised. I think that the
+Arcadia was the first, and Ivanhoe the last. My plan, as I settled
+it at last, had been to begin with Robinson Crusoe, which is the
+earliest really popular novel which we have in our language, and
+to continue the review so as to include the works of all English
+novelists of reputation, except those who might still be living
+when my task should be completed. But when Dickens and Bulwer died,
+my spirit flagged, and that which I had already found to be very
+difficult had become almost impossible to me at my then period of
+life.
+
+I began my own studies on the subject with works much earlier than
+Robinson Crusoe, and made my way through a variety of novels which
+were necessary for my purpose, but which in the reading gave me no
+pleasure whatever. I never worked harder than at the Arcadia, or
+read more detestable trash than the stories written by Mrs. Aphra
+Behn; but these two were necessary to my purpose, which was not only
+to give an estimate of the novels as I found them, but to describe
+how it had come to pass that the English novels of the present
+day have become what they are, to point out the effects which they
+have produced, and to inquire whether their great popularity has on
+the whole done good or evil to the people who read them. I still
+think that the book is one well worthy to be written.
+
+I intended to write that book to vindicate my own profession as
+a novelist, and also to vindicate that public taste in literature
+which has created and nourished the profession which I follow.
+And I was stirred up to make such an attempt by a conviction that
+there still exists among us Englishmen a prejudice in respect
+to novels which might, perhaps, be lessened by such a work. This
+prejudice is not against the reading of novels, as is proved by their
+general acceptance among us. But it exists strongly in reference
+to the appreciation in which they are professed to be held; and it
+robs them of much of that high character which they may claim to
+have earned by their grace, their honesty, and good teaching.
+
+No man can work long at any trade without being brought to consider
+much, whether that which he is daily doing tends to evil or to
+good. I have written many novels, and have known many writers of
+novels, and I can assert that such thoughts have been strong with
+them and with myself. But in acknowledging that these writers have
+received from the public a full measure of credit for such genius,
+ingenuity, or perseverance as each may have displayed, I feel that
+there is still wanting to them a just appreciation of the excellence
+of their calling, and a general understanding of the high nature
+of the work which they perform.
+
+By the common consent of all mankind who have read, poetry takes
+the highest place in literature. That nobility of expression, and
+all but divine grace of words, which she is bound to attain before
+she can make her footing good, is not compatible with prose. Indeed
+it is that which turns prose into poetry. When that has been in
+truth achieved, the reader knows that the writer has soared above
+the earth, and can teach his lessons somewhat as a god might teach.
+He who sits down to write his tale in prose makes no such attempt,
+nor does he dream that the poet's honour is within his reach;--but
+his teaching is of the same nature, and his lessons all tend to
+the same end. By either, false sentiments may be fostered; false
+notions of humanity may be engendered; false honour, false love,
+false worship may be created; by either, vice instead of virtue
+may be taught. But by each, equally, may true honour, true love;
+true worship, and true humanity be inculcated; and that will be
+the greatest teacher who will spread such truth the widest. But
+at present, much as novels, as novels, are bought and read, there
+exists still an idea, a feeling which is very prevalent, that novels
+at their best are but innocent. Young men and women,--and old men
+and women too,--read more of them than of poetry, because such reading
+is easier than the reading of poetry; but they read them,--as men
+eat pastry after dinner,--not without some inward conviction that
+the taste is vain if not vicious. I take upon myself to say that
+it is neither vicious nor vain.
+
+But all writers of fiction who have desired to think well of their
+own work, will probably have had doubts on their minds before they
+have arrived at this conclusion. Thinking much of my own daily
+labour and of its nature, I felt myself at first to be much afflicted
+and then to be deeply grieved by the opinion expressed by wise and
+thinking men as to the work done by novelists. But when, by degrees,
+I dared to examine and sift the sayings of such men, I found them
+to be sometimes silly and often arrogant. I began to inquire what
+had been the nature of English novels since they first became common
+in our own language, and to be desirous of ascertaining whether they
+had done harm or good. I could well remember that, in my own young
+days, they had not taken that undisputed possession of drawing-rooms
+which they now hold. Fifty years ago, when George IV. was king, they
+were not indeed treated as Lydia had been forced to treat them in
+the preceding reign, when, on the approach of elders, Peregrine
+Pickle was hidden beneath the bolster, and Lord Ainsworth put away
+under the sofa. But the families in which an unrestricted permission
+was given for the reading of novels were very few, and from many
+they were altogether banished. The high poetic genius and correct
+morality of Walter Scott had not altogether succeeded in making men
+and women understand that lessons which were good in poetry could
+not be bad in prose. I remember that in those days an embargo was
+laid upon novel-reading as a pursuit, which was to the novelist
+a much heavier tax than that want of full appreciation of which I
+now complain.
+
+There is, we all know, no such embargo now. May we not say that
+people of an age to read have got too much power into their own
+hands to endure any very complete embargo? Novels are read right
+and left, above stairs and below, in town houses and in country
+parsonages, by young countesses and by farmers' daughters, by old
+lawyers and by young students. It has not only come to pass that
+a special provision of them has to be made for the godly, but that
+the provision so made must now include books which a few years since
+the godly would have thought to be profane. It was this necessity
+which, a few years since, induced the editor of Good Words to apply
+to me for a novel,--which, indeed, when supplied was rejected, but
+which now, probably, owing to further change in the same direction,
+would have been accepted.
+
+If such be the case--if the extension of novel-reading be so wide
+as I have described it--then very much good or harm must be done
+by novels. The amusement of the time can hardly be the only result
+of any book that is read, and certainly not so with a novel, which
+appeals especially to the imagination, and solicits the sympathy of
+the young. A vast proportion of the teaching of the day,--greater
+probably than many of us have acknowledged to ourselves,--comes
+from these books, which are in the hands of all readers. It is from
+them that girls learn what is expected from them, and what they
+are to expect when lovers come; and also from them that young men
+unconsciously learn what are, or should be, or may be, the charms
+of love,--though I fancy that few young men will think so little
+of their natural instincts and powers as to believe that I am right
+in saying so. Many other lessons also are taught. In these times,
+when the desire to be honest is pressed so hard, is so violently
+assaulted by the ambition to be great; in which riches are the
+easiest road to greatness; when the temptations to which men are
+subjected dull their eyes to the perfected iniquities of others;
+when it is so hard for a man to decide vigorously that the pitch,
+which so many are handling, will defile him if it be touched;--men's
+conduct will be actuated much by that which is from day to day
+depicted to them as leading to glorious or inglorious results. The
+woman who is described as having obtained all that the world holds
+to be precious, by lavishing her charms and her caresses unworthily
+and heartlessly, will induce other women to do the same with
+theirs,--as will she who is made interesting by exhibitions of
+bold passion teach others to be spuriously passionate. The young
+man who in a novel becomes a hero, perhaps a Member of Parliament,
+and almost a Prime Minister, by trickery, falsehood, and flash
+cleverness, will have many followers, whose attempts to rise in
+the world ought to lie heavily on the conscience of the novelists
+who create fictitious Cagliostros. There are Jack Sheppards other
+than those who break into houses and out of prisons,--Macheaths,
+who deserve the gallows more than Gay's hero.
+
+Thinking of all this, as a novelist surely must do,--as I certainly
+have done through my whole career,--it becomes to him a matter of
+deep conscience how he shall handle those characters by whose words
+and doings he hopes to interest his readers. It will very frequently
+be the case that he will be tempted to sacrifice something for
+effect, to say a word or two here, or to draw a picture there,
+for which he feels that he has the power, and which when spoken or
+drawn would be alluring. The regions of absolute vice are foul and
+odious. The savour of them, till custom has hardened the palate and
+the nose, is disgusting. In these he will hardly tread. But there
+are outskirts on these regions, on which sweet-smelling flowers
+seem to grow; and grass to be green. It is in these border-lands
+that the danger lies. The novelist may not be dull. If he commit
+that fault he can do neither harm nor good. He must please, and the
+flowers and the grass in these neutral territories sometimes seem
+to give him so easy an opportunity of pleasing!
+
+The writer of stories must please, or he will be nothing. And
+he must teach whether he wish to teach or no. How shall he teach
+lessons of virtue and at the same time make himself a delight to
+his readers? That sermons are not in themselves often thought to
+be agreeable we all know. Nor are disquisitions on moral philosophy
+supposed to be pleasant reading for our idle hours. But the novelist,
+if he have a conscience, must preach his sermons with the same
+purpose as the clergyman, and must have his own system of ethics.
+If he can do this efficiently, if he can make virtue alluring and
+vice ugly, while he charms his readers instead of wearying them,
+then I think Mr. Carlyle need not call him distressed, nor talk
+of that long ear of fiction, nor question whether he be or not the
+most foolish of existing mortals.
+
+I think that many have done so; so many that we English novelists
+may boast as a class that has been the general result of our own
+work. Looking back to the past generation, I may say with certainty
+that such was the operation of the novels of Miss Edgeworth, Miss
+Austen, and Walter Scott. Coming down to my own times, I find such
+to have been the teaching of Thackeray, of Dickens, and of George
+Eliot. Speaking, as I shall speak to any who may read these words,
+with that absence of self-personality which the dead may claim, I
+will boast that such has been the result of my own writing. Can any
+one by search through the works of the six great English novelists
+I have named, find a scene, a passage, or a word that would teach
+a girl to be immodest, or a man to be dishonest? When men in their
+pages have been described as dishonest and women as immodest, have
+they not ever been punished? It is not for the novelist to say,
+baldly and simply: "Because you lied here, or were heartless there,
+because you Lydia Bennet forgot the lessons of your honest home,
+or you Earl Leicester were false through your ambition, or you
+Beatrix loved too well the glitter of the world, therefore you shall
+be scourged with scourges either in this world or in the next;" but
+it is for him to show, as he carries on his tale, that his Lydia,
+or his Leicester, or his Beatrix, will be dishonoured in the estimation
+of all readers by his or her vices. Let a woman be drawn clever,
+beautiful, attractive,--so as to make men love her, and women
+almost envy her,--and let her be made also heartless, unfeminine,
+and ambitious of evil grandeur, as was Beatrix, what a danger is
+there not in such a character! To the novelist who shall handle it,
+what peril of doing harm! But if at last it have been so handled
+that every girl who reads of Beatrix shall say: "Oh! not like
+that;--let me not be like that!" and that every youth shall say:
+"Let me not have such a one as that to press my bosom, anything
+rather than that!"--then will not the novelist have preached his
+sermon as perhaps no clergyman can preach it?
+
+Very much of a novelist's work must appertain to the intercourse
+between young men and young women. It is admitted that a novel
+can hardly be made interesting or successful without love. Some few
+might be named, but even in those the attempt breaks down, and the
+softness of love is found to be necessary to complete the story.
+Pickwick has been named as an exception to the rule, but even
+in Pickwick there are three or four sets of lovers, whose little
+amatory longings give a softness to the work. I tried it once with
+Miss Mackenzie, but I had to make her fall in love at last. In this
+frequent allusion to the passion which most stirs the imagination
+of the young, there must be danger. Of that the writer of fiction
+is probably well aware. Then the question has to be asked, whether
+the danger may not be so averted that good may be the result,--and
+to be answered.
+
+
+
+respect the necessity of dealing with love is advantageous,--advantageous
+from the very circumstance which has made love necessary to
+all novelists. It is necessary because the passion is one which
+interests or has interested all. Every one feels it, has felt it,
+or expects to feel it,--or else rejects it with an eagerness which
+still perpetuates the interest. If the novelist, therefore, can
+so handle the subject as to do good by his handling, as to teach
+wholesome lessons in regard to love, the good which he does will
+be very wide. If I can teach politicians that they can do their
+business better by truth than by falsehood, I do a great service;
+but it is done to a limited number of persons. But if I can make
+young men and women believe that truth in love will make them
+happy, then, if my writings be popular, I shall have a very large
+class of pupils. No doubt the cause for that fear which did exist
+as to novels arose from an idea that the matter of love would be
+treated in an inflammatory and generally unwholesome manner. "Madam,"
+says Sir Anthony in the play, "a circulating library in a town is
+an evergreen tree of diabolical knowledge. It blossoms through the
+year; and depend on it, Mrs. Malaprop, that they who are so fond of
+handling the leaves will long for the fruit at last." Sir Anthony
+was no doubt right. But he takes it for granted that the longing
+for the fruit is an evil. The novelist who writes of love thinks
+differently, and thinks that the honest love of an honest man is
+a treasure which a good girl may fairly hope to win,--and that if
+she can be taught to wish only for that, she will have been taught
+to entertain only wholesome wishes.
+
+I can easily believe that a girl should be taught to wish to love
+by reading how Laura Bell loved Pendennis. Pendennis was not in
+truth a very worthy man, nor did he make a very good husband; but
+the girl's love was so beautiful, and the wife's love when she became
+a wife so womanlike, and at the same time so sweet, so unselfish,
+so wifely, so worshipful,--in the sense in which wives are told
+that they ought to worship their husband,--that I cannot believe
+that any girl can be injured, or even not benefited, by reading of
+Laura's love.
+
+There once used to be many who thought, and probably there still
+are some, even here in England, who think that a girl should hear
+nothing of love till the time come in which she is to be married.
+That, no doubt, was the opinion of Sir Anthony Absolute and of Mrs.
+Malaprop. But I am hardly disposed to believe that the old system
+was more favourable than ours to the purity of manners. Lydia
+Languish, though she was constrained by fear of her aunt to hide
+the book, yet had Peregrine Pickle in her collection. While human
+nature talks of love so forcibly it can hardly serve our turn
+to be silent on the subject. "Naturam expellas furca, tamen usque
+recurret." There are countries in which it has been in accordance
+with the manners of the upper classes that the girl should be brought
+to marry the man almost out of the nursery--or rather perhaps out
+of the convent--without having enjoyed that freedom of thought
+which the reading of novels and of poetry will certainly produce;
+but I do not know that the marriages so made have been thought to
+be happier than our own.
+
+Among English novels of the present day, and among English
+novelists, a great division is made. There are sensational novels
+and anti-sensational, sensational novelists and anti-sensational,
+sensational readers and anti-sensational. The novelists who are
+considered to be anti-sensational are generally called realistic.
+I am realistic. My friend Wilkie Collins is generally supposed
+to be sensational. The readers who prefer the one are supposed to
+take delight in the elucidation of character. Those who hold by
+the other are charmed by the continuation and gradual development
+of a plot. All this is, I think, a mistake,--which mistake arises
+from the inability of the imperfect artist to be at the same time
+realistic and sensational. A good novel should be both, and both in
+the highest degree. If a novel fail in either, there is a failure
+in art. Let those readers who believe that they do not like
+sensational scenes in novels think of some of those passages from
+our great novelists which have charmed them most:--of Rebecca in
+the castle with Ivanhoe; of Burley in the cave with Morton; of the
+mad lady tearing the veil of the expectant bride, in Jane Eyre; of
+Lady Castlewood as, in her indignation, she explains to the Duke
+of Hamilton Henry Esmond's right to be present at the marriage of
+his Grace with Beatrix;--may I add of Lady Mason, as she makes her
+confession at the feet of Sir Peregrine Orme? Will any one say that
+the authors of these passages have sinned in being over-sensational? No
+doubt, a string of horrible incidents, bound together without truth
+in detail, and told as affecting personages without character,--wooden
+blocks, who cannot make themselves known to the reader as men
+and women, does not instruct or amuse, or even fill the mind with
+awe. Horrors heaped upon horrors, and which are horrors only in
+themselves, and not as touching any recognised and known person,
+are not tragic, and soon cease even to horrify. And such would-be
+tragic elements of a story may be increased without end, and
+without difficulty. I may tell you of a woman murdered,--murdered
+in the same street with you, in the next house,--that she was a
+wife murdered by her husband,--a bride not yet a week a wife. I may
+add to it for ever. I may say that the murderer roasted her alive.
+There is no end to it. I may declare that a former wife was treated
+with equal barbarity; and may assert that, as the murderer was led
+away to execution, he declared his only sorrow, his only regret
+to be, that he could not live to treat a third wife after the same
+fashion. There is nothing so easy as the creation and the cumulation
+of fearful incidents after this fashion. If such creation and cumulation
+be the beginning and the end of the novelist's work,--and novels have
+been written which seem to be without other attractions,--nothing
+can be more dull or more useless. But not on that account are we
+averse to tragedy in prose fiction. As in poetry, so in prose, he
+who can deal adequately with tragic elements is a greater artist
+and reaches a higher aim than the writer whose efforts never carry
+him above the mild walks of everyday life. The Bride of Lammermoor
+is a tragedy throughout, in spite of its comic elements. The life
+of Lady Castlewood, of whom I have spoken, is a tragedy. Rochester's
+wretched thraldom to his mad wife, in Jane Eyre, is a tragedy.
+But these stories charm us not simply because they are tragic, but
+because we feel that men and women with flesh and blood, creatures
+with whom we can sympathise, are struggling amidst their woes. It
+all lies in that. No novel is anything, for the purposes either
+of comedy or tragedy, unless the reader can sympathise with the
+characters whose names he finds upon the pages. Let an author so
+tell his tale as to touch his reader's heart and draw his tears,
+and he has, so far, done his work well. Truth let there be,--truth
+of description, truth of character, human truth as to men and
+women. If there be such truth, I do not know that a novel can be
+too sensational.
+
+I did intend when I meditated that history of English fiction to
+include within its pages some rules for the writing of novels;--or
+I might perhaps say, with more modesty, to offer some advice on
+the art to such tyros in it as might be willing to take advantage
+of the experience of an old hand. But the matter would, I fear,
+be too long for this episode, and I am not sure that I have as yet
+got the rules quite settled in my own mind. I will, however, say
+a few words on one or two points which my own practice has pointed
+out to me.
+
+I have from the first felt sure that the writer, when he sits down
+to commence his novel, should do so, not because he has to tell
+a story, but because he has a story to tell. The novelist's first
+novel will generally have sprung from the right cause. Some series
+of events, or some development of character, will have presented
+itself to his imagination,--and this he feels so strongly that he
+thinks he can present his picture in strong and agreeable language
+to others. He sits down and tells his story because he has a story
+to tell; as you, my friend, when you have heard something which
+has at once tickled your fancy or moved your pathos, will hurry
+to tell it to the first person you meet. But when that first novel
+has been received graciously by the public and has made for itself
+a success, then the writer naturally feeling that the writing of
+novels is within his grasp, looks about for something to tell in
+another. He cudgels his brains, not always successfully, and sits
+down to write, not because he has something which he burns to
+tell, but because be feels it to be incumbent on him to be telling
+something. As you, my friend, if you are very successful in
+the telling of that first story, will become ambitious of further
+storytelling, and will look out for anecdotes,--in the narration
+of which you will not improbably sometimes distress your audience.
+
+So it has been with many novelists, who, after some good work,
+perhaps after very much good work, have distressed their audience
+because they have gone on with their work till their work has become
+simply a trade with them. Need I make a list of such, seeing that
+it would contain the names of those who have been greatest in the
+art of British novel-writing? They have at last become weary of
+that portion of a novelist's work which is of all the most essential
+to success. That a man as he grows old should feel the labour of
+writing to be a fatigue is natural enough. But a man to whom writing
+has become a habit may write well though he be fatigued. But the
+weary novelist refuses any longer to give his mind to that work of
+observation and reception from which has come his power, without
+which work his power cannot be continued,--which work should
+be going on not only when he is at his desk, but in all his walks
+abroad, in all his movements through the world, in all his intercourse
+with his fellow-creatures. He has become a novelist, as another has
+become a poet, because he has in those walks abroad, unconsciously
+for the most part, been drawing in matter from all that he has seen
+and heard. But this has not been done without labour, even when
+the labour has been unconscious. Then there comes a time when he
+shuts his eyes and shuts his ears. When we talk of memory fading
+as age comes on, it is such shutting of eyes and ears that we mean.
+The things around cease to interest us, and we cannot exercise
+our minds upon them. To the novelist thus wearied there comes the
+demand for further novels. He does not know his own defect, and
+even if he did he does not wish to abandon his own profession. He
+still writes; but he writes because he has to tell a story, not
+because he has a story to tell. What reader of novels has not felt
+the "woodenness" of this mode of telling? The characters do not
+live and move, but are cut out of blocks and are propped against the
+wall. The incidents are arranged in certain lines--the arrangement
+being as palpable to the reader as it has been to the writer--but
+do not follow each other as results naturally demanded by previous
+action. The reader can never feel--as he ought to feel--that only
+for that flame of the eye, only for that angry word, only for that
+moment of weakness, all might have been different. The course of
+the tale is one piece of stiff mechanism, in which there is no room
+for a doubt.
+
+These, it may be said, are reflections which I, being an old
+novelist, might make useful to myself for discontinuing my work,
+but can hardly be needed by those tyros of whom I have spoken. That
+they are applicable to myself I readily admit, but I also find that
+they apply to many beginners. Some of us who are old fail at last
+because we are old. It would be well that each of us should say to
+himself,
+
+
+ "Solve senescentem mature sanus equum, ne
+ Peccet ad extremum ridendus."
+
+
+But many young fail also, because they endeavour to tell stories
+when they have none to tell. And this comes from idleness rather
+than from innate incapacity. The mind has not been sufficiently at
+work when the tale has been commenced, nor is it kept sufficiently
+at work as the tale is continued. I have never troubled myself much
+about the construction of plots, and am not now insisting specially
+on thoroughness in a branch of work in which I myself have not been
+very thorough. I am not sure that the construction of a perfected
+plot has been at any period within my power. But the novelist has
+other aims than the elucidation of his plot. He desires to make
+his readers so intimately acquainted with his characters that the
+creatures of his brain should be to them speaking, moving, living,
+human creatures. This he can never do unless he know those fictitious
+personages himself, and he can never know them unless he can live
+with them in the full reality of established intimacy. They must
+be with him as he lies down to sleep, and as he wakes from his
+dreams. He must learn to hate them and to love them. He must argue
+with them, quarrel with them, forgive them, and even submit to them.
+He must know of them whether they be cold-blooded or passionate,
+whether true or false, and how far true, and how far false. The
+depth and the breadth, and the narrowness and the shallowness of
+each should be clear to him. And, as here, in our outer world, we
+know that men and women change,--become worse or better as temptation
+or conscience may guide them,--so should these creations of his
+change, and every change should be noted by him. On the last day
+of each month recorded, every person in his novel should be a month
+older than on the first. If the would-be novelist have aptitudes
+that way, all this will come to him without much struggling;--but
+if it do not come, I think he can only make novels of wood.
+
+It is so that I have lived with my characters, and thence has come
+whatever success I have obtained. There is a gallery of them, and
+of all in that gallery I may say that I know the tone of the voice,
+and the colour of the hair, every flame of the eye, and the very
+clothes they wear. Of each man I could assert whether he would have
+said these or the other words; of every woman, whether she would
+then have smiled or so have frowned. When I shall feel that this
+intimacy ceases, then I shall know that the old horse should be
+turned out to grass. That I shall feel it when I ought to feel it,
+I will by no means say. I do not know that I am at all wiser than
+Gil Blas' canon; but I do know that the power indicated is one without
+which the teller of tales cannot tell them to any good effect.
+
+The language in which the novelist is to put forth his story, the
+colours with which he is to paint his picture, must of course be to
+him matter of much consideration. Let him have all other possible
+gifts,--imagination, observation, erudition, and industry,--they
+will avail him nothing for his purpose, unless he can put forth
+his work in pleasant words. If he be confused, tedious, harsh, or
+unharmonious, readers will certainly reject him. The reading of
+a volume of history or on science may represent itself as a duty;
+and though the duty may by a bad style be made very disagreeable,
+the conscientious reader will perhaps perform it. But the novelist
+will be assisted by no such feeling. Any reader may reject his
+work without the burden of a sin. It is the first necessity of his
+position that he make himself pleasant. To do this, much more is
+necessary than to write correctly. He may indeed be pleasant without
+being correct,--as I think can be proved by the works of more than
+one distinguished novelist. But he must be intelligible,--intelligible
+without trouble; and he must be harmonious.
+
+Any writer who has read even a little will know what is meant by
+the word intelligible. It is not sufficient that there be a meaning
+that may be hammered out of the sentence, but that the language
+should be so pellucid that the meaning should be rendered without
+an effort of the reader;--and not only some proposition of meaning,
+but the very sense, no more and no less, which the writer has intended
+to put into his words. What Macaulay says should be remembered by
+all writers: "How little the all-important art of making meaning
+pellucid is studied now! Hardly any popular author except myself
+thinks of it." The language used should be as ready and as efficient
+a conductor of the mind of the writer to the mind of the reader
+as is the electric spark which passes from one battery to another
+battery. In all written matter the spark should carry everything;
+but in matters recondite the recipient will search to see that
+he misses nothing, and that he takes nothing away too much. The
+novelist cannot expect that any such search will be made. A young
+writer, who will acknowledge the truth of what I am saying, will
+often feel himself tempted by the difficulties of language to
+tell himself that some one little doubtful passage, some single
+collocation of words, which is not quite what it ought to be, will
+not matter. I know well what a stumbling-block such a passage may
+be. But he should leave none such behind him as he goes on. The
+habit of writing clearly soon comes to the writer who is a severe
+critic to himself.
+
+As to that harmonious expression which I think is required, I shall
+find it more difficult to express my meaning. It will be granted, I
+think, by readers that a style may be rough, and yet both forcible
+and intelligible; but it will seldom come to pass that a novel written
+in a rough style will be popular,--and less often that a novelist
+who habitually uses such a style will become so. The harmony which
+is required must come from the practice of the ear. There are few
+ears naturally so dull that they cannot, if time be allowed to them,
+decide whether a sentence, when read, be or be not harmonious. And
+the sense of such harmony grows on the ear, when the intelligence
+has once informed itself as to what is, and what is not harmonious.
+The boy, for instance, who learns with accuracy the prosody of a
+Sapphic stanza, and has received through his intelligence a knowledge
+of its parts, will soon tell by his ear whether a Sapphic stanza
+be or be not correct. Take a girl, endowed with gifts of music,
+well instructed in her art, with perfect ear, and read to her such
+a stanza with two words transposed, as, for instance--
+
+
+ Mercuri, nam te docilis magistro
+ Movit Amphion CANENDO LAPIDES,
+ Tuque testudo resonare septem
+ Callida nervis--
+
+
+and she will find no halt in the rhythm. But a schoolboy with
+none of her musical acquirements or capacities, who has, however,
+become familiar with the metres of the poet, will at once discover
+the fault. And so will the writer become familiar with what is
+harmonious in prose. But in order that familiarity may serve him
+in his business, he must so train his ear that he shall be able
+to weigh the rhythm of every word as it falls from his pen. This,
+when it has been done for a time, even for a short time, will become
+so habitual to him that he will have appreciated the metrical duration
+of every syllable before it shall have dared to show itself upon
+paper. The art of the orator is the same. He knows beforehand how
+each sound which he is about to utter will affect the force of his
+climax. If a writer will do so he will charm his readers, though
+his readers will probably not know how they have been charmed.
+
+In writing a novel the author soon becomes aware that a burden
+of many pages is before him. Circumstances require that he should
+cover a certain and generally not a very confined space. Short novels
+are not popular with readers generally. Critics often complain of
+the ordinary length of novels,--of the three volumes to which they
+are subjected; but few novels which have attained great success in
+England have been told in fewer pages. The novel-writer who sticks
+to novel-writing as his profession will certainly find that this
+burden of length is incumbent on him. How shall he carry his burden
+to the end? How shall he cover his space? Many great artists have
+by their practice opposed the doctrine which I now propose to
+preach;--but they have succeeded I think in spite of their fault
+and by dint of their greatness. There should be no episodes in a
+novel. Every sentence, every word, through all those pages, should
+tend to the telling of the story. Such episodes distract the
+attention of the reader, and always do so disagreeably. Who has not
+felt this to be the case even with The Curious Impertinent and with
+the History of the Man of the Hill. And if it be so with Cervantes
+and Fielding, who can hope to succeed? Though the novel which you
+have to write must be long, let it be all one. And this exclusion
+of episodes should be carried down into the smallest details.
+Every sentence and every word used should tend to the telling of
+the story. "But," the young novelist will say, "with so many pages
+before me to be filled, how shall I succeed if I thus confine
+myself;--how am I to know beforehand what space this story of mine
+will require? There must be the three volumes, or the certain number
+of magazine pages which I have contracted to supply. If I may not
+be discursive should occasion require, how shall I complete my task?
+The painter suits the size of his canvas to his subject, and must
+I in my art stretch my subject to my canas?" This undoubtedly must
+be done by the novelist; and if he will learn his business, may
+be done without injury to his effect. He may not paint different
+pictures on the same canvas, which he will do if he allow himself
+to wander away to matters outside his own story; but by studying
+proportion in his work, he may teach himself so to tell his story
+that it shall naturally fall into the required length. Though his
+story should be all one, yet it may have many parts. Though the
+plot itself may require but few characters, it may be so enlarged
+as to find its full development in many. There may be subsidiary
+plots, which shall all tend to the elucidation of the main story,
+and which will take their places as part of one and the same
+work,--as there may be many figures on a canvas which shall not to
+the spectator seem to form themselves into separate pictures.
+
+There is no portion of a novelist's work in which this fault of
+episodes is so common as in the dialogue. It is so easy to make
+any two persons talk on any casual subject with which the writer
+presumes himself to be conversant! Literature, philosophy, politics,
+or sport, may thus be handled in a loosely discursive style; and
+the writer, while indulging himself and filling his pages, is apt
+to think that he is pleasing his reader. I think he can make no
+greater mistake. The dialogue is generally the most agreeable part
+of a novel; but it is only so as long as it tends in some way to
+the telling of the main story. It need not seem to be confined to
+that, but it should always have a tendency in that direction. The
+unconscious critical acumen of a reader is both just and severe.
+When a long dialogue on extraneous matter reaches his mind, he at
+once feels that he is being cheated into taking something which he
+did not bargain to accept when he took up that novel. He does not
+at that moment require politics or philosophy, but he wants his
+story. He will not perhaps be able to say in so many words that at
+some certain point the dialogue has deviated from the story; but
+when it does so he will feel it, and the feeling will be unpleasant.
+Let the intending novel-writer, if he doubt this, read one of
+Bulwer's novels,--in which there is very much to charm,--and then
+ask himself whether he has not been offended by devious conversations.
+
+And the dialogue, on which the modern novelist in consulting the
+taste of his probable readers must depend most, has to be constrained
+also by other rules. The writer may tell much of his story in
+conversations, but he may only do so by putting such words into
+the mouths of his personages as persons so situated would probably
+use. He is not allowed for the sake of his tale to make his characters
+give utterance to long speeches, such as are not customarily heard
+from men and women. The ordinary talk of ordinary people is carried
+on in short, sharp, expressive sentences, which very frequently are
+never completed,--the language of which even among educated people
+is often incorrect. The novel-writer in constructing his dialogue
+must so steer between absolute accuracy of language--which would
+give to his conversation an air of pedantry, and the slovenly
+inaccuracy of ordinary talkers, which if closely followed would
+offend by an appearance of grimace--as to produce upon the ear of
+his readers a sense of reality. If he be quite real he will seem
+to attempt to be funny. If he be quite correct he will seem to
+be unreal. And above all, let the speeches be short. No character
+should utter much above a dozen words at a breath,--unless the writer
+can justify to himself a longer flood of speech by the specialty
+of the occasion.
+
+In all this human nature must be the novel-writer's guide. No doubt
+effective novels have been written in which human nature has been
+set at defiance. I might name Caleb Williams as one and Adam Blair
+as another. But the exceptions are not more than enough to prove
+the rule. But in following human nature he must remember that he does
+so with a pen in his hand, and that the reader who will appreciate
+human nature will also demand artistic ability and literary aptitude.
+
+The young novelist will probably ask, or more probably bethink
+himself how he is to acquire that knowledge of human nature which
+will tell him with accuracy what men and women would say in this
+or that position. He must acquire it as the compositor, who is to
+print his words, has learned the art of distributing his type--by
+constant and intelligent practice. Unless it be given to him to
+listen and to observe,--so to carry away, as it were, the manners
+of people in his memory as to be able to say to himself with assurance
+that these words might have been said in a given position, and that
+those other words could not have been said,--I do not think that
+in these days he can succeed as a novelist.
+
+And then let him beware of creating tedium! Who has not felt the
+charm of a spoken story up to a certain point, and then suddenly
+become aware that it has become too long and is the reverse of
+charming. It is not only that the entire book may have this fault,
+but that this fault may occur in chapters, in passages, in pages,
+in paragraphs. I know no guard against this so likely to be effective
+as the feeling of the writer himself. When once the sense that the
+thing is becoming long has grown upon him, he may be sure that it
+will grow upon his readers. I see the smile of some who will declare
+to themselves that the words of a writer will never be tedious to
+himself. Of the writer of whom this may be truly said, it may be
+said with equal truth that he will always be tedious to his reader.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+ON ENGLISH NOVELISTS OF THE PRESENT DAY
+
+
+
+
+In this chapter I will venture to name a few successful novelists
+of my own time, with whose works I am acquainted; and will endeavour
+to point whence their success has come, and why they have failed
+when there has been failure.
+
+I do not hesitate to name Thackeray the first. His knowledge of
+human nature was supreme, and his characters stand out as human
+beings, with a force and a truth which has not, I think, been
+within the reach of any other English novelist in any period. I know
+no character in fiction, unless it be Don Quixote, with whom the
+reader becomes so intimately acquainted as with Colonel Newcombe.
+How great a thing it is to be a gentleman at all parts! How we
+admire the man of whom so much may be said with truth! Is there
+any one of whom we feel more sure in this respect than of Colonel
+Newcombe? It is not because Colonel Newcombe is a perfect gentleman
+that we think Thackeray's work to have been so excellent, but
+because he has had the power to describe him as such, and to force
+us to love him, a weak and silly old man, on account of this grace
+of character. It is evident from all Thackeray's best work that he
+lived with the characters he was creating. He had always a story
+to tell until quite late in life; and he shows us that this was
+so, not by the interest which be had in his own plots,--for I doubt
+whether his plots did occupy much of his mind,--but by convincing
+us that his characters were alive to himself. With Becky Sharpe,
+with Lady Castlewood and her daughter, and with Esmond, with
+Warrington, Pendennis, and the Major, with Colonel Newcombe, and
+with Barry Lynon, he must have lived in perpetual intercourse.
+Therefore he has made these personages real to us.
+
+Among all our novelists his style is the purest, as to my ear it is
+also the most harmonious. Sometimes it is disfigured by a slight
+touch of affectation, by little conceits which smell of the oil;--but
+the language is always lucid. The reader, without labour, knows what
+he means, and knows all that he means. As well as I can remember,
+he deals with no episodes. I think that any critic, examining
+his work minutely, would find that every scene, and every part of
+every scene, adds something to the clearness with which the story
+is told. Among all his stories there is not one which does not
+leave on the mind a feeling of distress that women should ever
+be immodest or men dishonest,--and of joy that women should be so
+devoted and men so honest. How we hate the idle selfishness of
+Pendennis, the worldliness of Beatrix, the craft of Becky Sharpe!--how
+we love the honesty of Colonel Newcombe, the nobility of Esmond,
+and the devoted affection of Mrs. Pendennis! The hatred of evil
+and love of good can hardly have come upon so many readers without
+doing much good.
+
+Late in Thackeray's life,--he never was an old man, but towards the
+end of his career,--he failed in his power of charming, because he
+allowed his mind to become idle. In the plots which he conceived,
+and in the language which he used; I do not know that there is any
+perceptible change; but in The Virginians and in Philip the reader
+is introduced to no character with which he makes a close and undying
+acquaintance. And this, I have no doubt, is so because Thackeray
+himself had no such intimacy. His mind had come to be weary of
+that fictitious life which is always demanding the labour of new
+creation, and he troubled himself with his two Virginians and his
+Philip only when he was seated at his desk.
+
+At the present moment George Eliot is the first of English novelists,
+and I am disposed to place her second of those of my time. She
+is best known to the literary world as a writer of prose fiction,
+and not improbably whatever of permanent fame she may acquire will
+come from her novels. But the nature of her intellect is very far
+removed indeed from that which is common to the tellers of stories.
+Her imagination is no doubt strong, but it acts in analysing rather
+than in creating. Everything that comes before her is pulled
+to pieces so that the inside of it shall be seen, and be seen if
+possible by her readers as clearly as by herself. This searching
+analysis is carried so far that, in studying her latter writings,
+one feels oneself to be in company with some philosopher rather
+than with a novelist. I doubt whether any young person can read
+with pleasure either Felix Holt, Middlemarch, or Daniel Deronda.
+I know that they are very difficult to many that are not young.
+
+Her personifications of character have been singularly terse and
+graphic, and from them has come her great hold on the public,--though
+by no means the greatest effect which she has produced. The lessons
+which she teaches remain, though it is not for the sake of the
+lessons that her pages are read. Seth Bede, Adam Bede, Maggie and
+Tom Tulliver, old Silas Marner, and, much above all, Tito, in Romola,
+are characters which, when once known, can never be forgotten. I
+cannot say quite so much for any of those in her later works, because
+in them the philosopher so greatly overtops the portrait-painter,
+that, in the dissection of the mind, the outward signs seem to
+have been forgotten. In her, as yet, there is no symptom whatever
+of that weariness of mind which, when felt by the reader, induces
+him to declare that the author has written himself out. It is not
+from decadence that we do not have another Mrs. Poyser, but because
+the author soars to things which seem to her to be higher than Mrs.
+Poyser.
+
+It is, I think, the defect of George Eliot that she struggles too
+hard to do work that shall be excellent. She lacks ease. Latterly
+the signs of this have been conspicuous in her style, which has always
+been and is singularly correct, but which has become occasionally
+obscure from her too great desire to be pungent. It is impossible
+not to feel the struggle, and that feeling begets a flavour
+of affectation. In Daniel Deronda, of which at this moment only a
+portion has been published, there are sentences which I have found
+myself compelled to read three times before I have been able to
+take home to myself all that the writer has intended. Perhaps I
+may be permitted here to say, that this gifted woman was among my
+dearest and most intimate friends. As I am speaking here of novelists,
+I will not attempt to speak of George Eliot's merit as a poet.
+
+There can be no doubt that the most popular novelist of my
+time--probably the most popular English novelist of any time--has
+been Charles Dickens. He has now been dead nearly six years, and the
+sale of his books goes on as it did during his life. The certainty
+with which his novels are found in every house--the familiarity of
+his name in all English-speaking countries--the popularity of such
+characters as Mrs. Gamp, Micawber, and Pecksniff, and many others
+whose names have entered into the English language and become
+well-known words--the grief of the country at his death, and the
+honours paid to him at his funeral,--all testify to his popularity.
+Since the last book he wrote himself, I doubt whether any book
+has been so popular as his biography by John Forster. There is
+no withstanding such testimony as this. Such evidence of popular
+appreciation should go for very much, almost for everything,
+in criticism on the work of a novelist. The primary object of a
+novelist is to please; and this man's novels have been found more
+pleasant than those of any other writer. It might of course be
+objected to this, that though the books have pleased they have been
+injurious, that their tendency has been immoral and their teaching
+vicious; but it is almost needless to say that no such charge has
+ever been made against Dickens. His teaching has ever been good.
+From all which, there arises to the critic a question whether, with
+such evidence against him as to the excellence of this writer, he
+should not subordinate his own opinion to the collected opinion of
+the world of readers. To me it almost seems that I must be wrong
+to place Dickens after Thackeray and George Eliot, knowing as I do
+that so great a majority put him above those authors.
+
+My own peculiar idiosyncrasy in the matter forbids me to do so. I
+do acknowledge that Mrs. Gamp, Micawber, Pecksniff, and others have
+become household words in every house, as though they were human
+beings; but to my judgment they are not human beings, nor are any
+of the characters human which Dickens has portrayed. It has been
+the peculiarity and the marvel of this man's power, that he has
+invested, his puppets with a charm that has enabled him to dispense
+with human nature. There is a drollery about them, in my estimation,
+very much below the humour of Thackeray, but which has reached the
+intellect of all; while Thackeray's humour has escaped the intellect
+of many. Nor is the pathos of Dickens human. It is stagey and
+melodramatic. But it is so expressed that it touches every heart
+a little. There is no real life in Smike. His misery, his idiotcy,
+his devotion for Nicholas, his love for Kate, are all overdone and
+incompatible with each other. But still the reader sheds a tear.
+Every reader can find a tear for Smike. Dickens's novels are like
+Boucicault's plays. He has known how to draw his lines broadly, so
+that all should see the colour.
+
+He, too, in his best days, always lived with his characters;--and
+he, too, as he gradually ceased to have the power of doing so,
+ceased to charm. Though they are not human beings, we all remember
+Mrs. Gamp and Pickwick. The Boffins and Veneerings do not, I think,
+dwell in the minds of so many.
+
+Of Dickens's style it is impossible to speak in praise. It is jerky,
+ungrammatical, and created by himself in defiance of rules--almost
+as completely as that created by Carlyle. To readers who have taught
+themselves to regard language, it must therefore be unpleasant. But
+the critic is driven to feel the weakness of his criticism, when
+he acknowledges to himself--as he is compelled in all honesty to
+do--that with the language, such as it is, the writer has satisfied
+the great mass of the readers of his country. Both these great
+writers have satisfied the readers of their own pages; but both
+have done infinite harm by creating a school of imitators. No young
+novelist should ever dare to imitate the style of Dickens. If such
+a one wants a model for his language, let him take Thackeray.
+
+Bulwer, or Lord Lytton,--but I think that he is still better known
+by his earlier name,--was a man of very great parts. Better educated
+than either of those I have named before him, he was always able to
+use his erudition, and he thus produced novels from which very much
+not only may be but must be learned by his readers. He thoroughly
+understood the political status of his own country, a subject
+on which, I think, Dickens was marvellously ignorant, and which
+Thackeray had never studied. He had read extensively, and was always
+apt to give his readers the benefit of what he knew. The result
+has been that very much more than amusement may be obtained from
+Bulwer's novels. There is also a brightness about them--the result
+rather of thought than of imagination, of study and of care, than
+of mere intellect--which has made many of them excellent in their
+way. It is perhaps improper to class all his novels together, as
+he wrote in varied manners, making in his earlier works, such as
+Pelham and Ernest Maltravers, pictures of a fictitious life, and
+afterwards pictures of life as he believed it to be, as in My Novel
+and The Caxtons. But from all of them there comes the same flavour
+of an effort to produce effect. The effects are produced, but it
+would have been better if the flavour had not been there.
+
+I cannot say of Bulwer as I have of the other novelists whom I have
+named that he lived with his characters. He lived with his work,
+with the doctrines which at the time he wished to preach, thinking
+always of the effects which he wished to produce; but I do not
+think he ever knew his own personages,--and therefore neither do
+we know them. Even Pelham and Eugene Aram are not human beings to
+us, as are Pickwick, and Colonel Newcombe, and Mrs. Poyser.
+
+In his plots Bulwer has generally been simple, facile, and successful.
+The reader never feels with him, as he does with Wilkie Collins,
+that it is all plot, or, as with George Eliot, that there is no plot.
+The story comes naturally without calling for too much attention,
+and is thus proof of the completeness of the man's intellect. His
+language is clear, good, intelligible English, but it is defaced
+by mannerism. In all that he did, affectation was his fault.
+
+How shall I speak of my dear old friend Charles Lever, and
+his rattling, jolly, joyous, swearing Irishmen. Surely never did
+a sense of vitality come so constantly from a man's pen, nor from
+man's voice, as from his! I knew him well for many years, and
+whether in sickness or in health, I have never come across him
+without finding him to be running over with wit and fun. Of all the
+men I have encountered, he was the surest fund of drollery. I have
+known many witty men, many who could say good things, many who
+would sometimes be ready to say them when wanted, though they would
+sometimes fail;--but he never failed. Rouse him in the middle of
+the night, and wit would come from him before he was half awake.
+And yet he never monopolised the talk, was never a bore. He would
+take no more than his own share of the words spoken, and would yet
+seem to brighten all that was said during the night. His earlier
+novels--the later I have not read--are just like his conversation.
+The fun never flags, and to me, when I read them, they were never
+tedious. As to character he can hardly be said to have produced
+it. Corney Delaney, the old manservant, may perhaps be named as an
+exception.
+
+Lever's novels will not live long,--even if they may be said to
+be alive now,--because it is so. What was his manner of working I
+do not know, but I should think it must have been very quick, and
+that he never troubled himself on the subject, except when he was
+seated with a pen in his hand.
+
+Charlotte Bronte was surely a marvellous woman. If it could be
+right to judge the work of a novelist from one small portion of
+one novel, and to say of an author that he is to be accounted as
+strong as he shows himself to be in his strongest morsel of work,
+I should be inclined to put Miss Bronte very high indeed. I know
+no interest more thrilling than that which she has been able to
+throw into the characters of Rochester and the governess, in the
+second volume of Jane Eyre. She lived with those characters, and
+felt every fibre of the heart, the longings of the one and the
+sufferings of the other. And therefore, though the end of the book
+is weak, and the beginning not very good, I venture to predict that
+Jane Eyre will be read among English novels when many whose names
+are now better known shall have been forgotten. Jane Eyre, and
+Esmond, and Adam Bede will be in the hands of our grandchildren,
+when Pickwick, and Pelham, and Harry Lorrequer are forgotten;
+because the men and women depicted are human in their aspirations,
+human in their sympathies, and human in their actions.
+
+In Vilette, too, and in Shirley, there is to be found human life as
+natural and as real, though in circumstances not so full of interest
+as those told in Jane Eyre. The character of Paul in the former of
+the two is a wonderful study. She must herself have been in love
+with some Paul when she wrote the book, and have been determined to
+prove to herself that she was capable of loving one whose exterior
+circumstances were mean and in every way unprepossessing.
+
+There is no writer of the present day who has so much puzzled
+me by his eccentricities, impracticabilities, and capabilities as
+Charles Reade. I look upon him as endowed almost with genius, but
+as one who has not been gifted by nature with ordinary powers of
+reasoning. He can see what is grandly noble and admire it with
+all his heart. He can see, too, what is foully vicious and hate
+it with equal ardour. But in the common affairs of life he cannot
+see what is right or wrong; and as he is altogether unwilling to be
+guided by the opinion of others, he is constantly making mistakes
+in his literary career, and subjecting himself to reproach which he
+hardly deserves. He means to be honest. He means to be especially
+honest,--more honest than other people. He has written a book
+called The Eighth Commandment on behalf of honesty in literary
+transactions,--a wonderful work, which has I believe been read by
+a very few. I never saw a copy except that in my own library, or
+heard of any one who knew the book. Nevertheless it is a volume
+that must have taken very great labour, and have been written,--as
+indeed he declares that it was written,--without the hope of
+pecuniary reward. He makes an appeal to the British Parliament and
+British people on behalf of literary honesty, declaring that should
+he fail--"I shall have to go on blushing for the people I was born
+among." And yet of all the writers of my day he has seemed to me
+to understand literary honesty the least. On one occasion, as he
+tells us in this book, he bought for a certain sum from a French
+author the right of using a plot taken from a play,--which he
+probably might have used without such purchase, and also without
+infringing any international copyright act. The French author not
+unnaturally praises him for the transaction, telling him that he
+is "un vrai gentleman." The plot was used by Reade in a novel; and
+a critic discovering the adaptation, made known his discovery to
+the public. Whereupon the novelist became angry, called his critic
+a pseudonymuncle, and defended himself by stating the fact of his
+own purchase. In all this he seems to me to ignore what we all mean
+when we talk of literary plagiarism and literary honesty. The sin
+of which the author is accused is not that of taking another man's
+property, but of passing off as his own creation that which he
+does not himself create. When an author puts his name to a book he
+claims to have written all that there is therein, unless he makes
+direct signification to the contrary. Some years subsequently there
+arose another similar question, in which Mr. Reade's opinion was
+declared even more plainly, and certainly very much more publicly.
+In a tale which he wrote he inserted a dialogue which he took from
+Swift, and took without any acknowledgment. As might have been
+expected, one of the critics of the day fell foul of him for this
+barefaced plagiarism. The author, however, defended himself, with
+much abuse of the critic, by asserting, that whereas Swift had
+found the jewel he had supplied the setting;--an argument in which
+there was some little wit, and would have been much excellent truth,
+had he given the words as belonging to Swift and not to himself.
+
+The novels of a man possessed of so singular a mind must themselves
+be very strange,--and they are strange. It has generally been his
+object to write down some abuse with which he has been particularly
+struck,--the harshness, for instance, with which paupers or lunatics
+are treated, or the wickedness of certain classes,--and he always,
+I think, leaves upon his readers an idea of great earnestness
+of purpose. But he has always left at the same time on my mind so
+strong a conviction that he has not really understood his subject,
+that I have ever found myself taking the part of those whom he has
+accused. So good a heart, and so wrong a head, surely no novelist
+ever before had combined! In storytelling he has occasionally been
+almost great. Among his novels I would especially recommend The
+Cloister and the Hearth. I do not know that in this work, or in any,
+that he has left a character that will remain; but he has written
+some of his scenes so brightly that to read them would always be
+a pleasure.
+
+Of Wilkie Collins it is impossible for a true critic not to speak
+with admiration, because he has excelled all his contemporaries in
+a certain most difficult branch of his art; but as it is a branch
+which I have not myself at all cultivated, it is not unnatural
+that his work should be very much lost upon me individually. When
+I sit down to write a novel I do not at all know, and I do not very
+much care, how it is to end. Wilkie Collins seems so to construct
+his that he not only, before writing, plans everything on, down to
+the minutest detail, from the beginning to the end; but then plots
+it all back again, to see that there is no piece of necessary
+dove-tailing which does not dove-tail with absolute accuracy. The
+construction is most minute and most wonderful. But I can never
+lose the taste of the construction. The author seems always to be
+warning me to remember that something happened at exactly half-past
+two o'clock on Tuesday morning; or that a woman disappeared from
+the road just fifteen yards beyond the fourth mile-stone. One is
+constrained by mysteries and hemmed in by difficulties, knowing,
+however, that the mysteries will be made clear, and the difficulties
+overcome at the end of the third volume. Such work gives me no
+pleasure. I am, however, quite prepared to acknowledge that the
+want of pleasure comes from fault of my intellect.
+
+There are two ladies of whom I would fain say a word, though I feel
+that I am making my list too long, in order that I may declare how
+much I have admired their work. They are Annie Thackeray and Rhoda
+Broughton. I have known them both, and have loved the former almost
+as though she belonged to me. No two writers were ever more
+dissimilar,--except in this that they are both feminine. Miss
+Thackeray's characters are sweet, charming, and quite true to human
+nature. In her writings she is always endeavouring to prove that
+good produces good, and evil evil. There is not a line of which
+she need be ashamed,--not a sentiment of which she should not be
+proud. But she writes like a lazy writer who dislikes her work,
+and who allows her own want of energy to show itself in her pages.
+
+Miss Broughton, on the other hand, is full of energy,--though
+she too, I think, can become tired over her work. She, however,
+does take the trouble to make her personages stand upright on the
+ground. And she has the gift of making them speak as men and women
+do speak. "You beast!" said Nancy, sitting on the wall, to the man
+who was to be her husband,--thinking that she was speaking to her
+brother. Now Nancy, whether right or wrong, was just the girl who
+would, as circumstances then were, have called her brother a beast.
+There is nothing wooden about any of Miss Broughton's novels; and
+in these days so many novels are wooden! But they are not sweet-savoured
+as are those by Miss Thackeray, and are, therefore, less true to
+nature. In Miss Broughton's determination not to be mawkish and
+missish, she has made her ladies do and say things which ladies
+would not do and say. They throw themselves at men's heads, and
+when they are not accepted only think how they may throw themselves
+again. Miss Broughton is still so young that I hope she may live
+to overcome her fault in this direction.
+
+There is one other name, without which the list of the best known
+English novelists of my own time would certainly be incomplete,
+and that is the name of the present Prime Minister of England. Mr.
+Disraeli has written so many novels, and has been so popular as a
+novelist that, whether for good or for ill, I feel myself compelled
+to speak of him. He began his career as an author early in life,
+publishing Vivian Grey when he was twenty-three years old. He was
+very young for such work, though hardly young enough to justify the
+excuse that he makes in his own preface, that it is a book written
+by a boy. Dickens was, I think, younger when he wrote his Sketches
+by Boz, and as young when he was writing the Pickwick Papers. It
+was hardly longer ago than the other day when Mr. Disraeli brought
+out Lothair, and between the two there were eight or ten others.
+To me they have all had the same flavour of paint and unreality.
+In whatever he has written he has affected something which has been
+intended to strike his readers as uncommon and therefore grand.
+Because he has been bright and a man of genius, he has carried his
+object as regards the young. He has struck them with astonishment
+and aroused in their imagination ideas of a world more glorious,
+more rich, more witty, more enterprising, than their own. But the
+glory has been the glory of pasteboard, and the wealth has been
+a wealth of tinsel. The wit has been the wit of hairdressers, and
+the enterprise has been the enterprise of mountebanks. An audacious
+conjurer has generally been his hero,--some youth who, by wonderful
+cleverness, can obtain success by every intrigue that comes to
+his hand. Through it all there is a feeling of stage properties,
+a smell of hair-oil, an aspect of buhl, a remembrance of tailors,
+and that pricking of the conscience which must be the general
+accompaniment of paste diamonds. I can understand that Mr. Disraeli
+should by his novels have instigated many a young man and many a
+young woman on their way in life, but I cannot understand that he
+should have instigated any one to good. Vivian Grey has had probably
+as many followers as Jack Sheppard, and has led his followers in
+the same direction.
+
+Lothair, which is as yet Mr. Disraeli's last work, and, I think,
+undoubtedly his worst, has been defended on a plea somewhat similar
+to that by which he has defended Vivian Grey. As that was written
+when he was too young, so was the other when he was too old,--too
+old for work of that nature, though not too old to be Prime Minister.
+If his mind were so occupied with greater things as to allow him to
+write such a work, yet his judgment should have sufficed to induce
+him to destroy it when written. Here that flavour of hair-oil,
+that flavour of false jewels, that remembrance of tailors, comes
+out stronger than in all the others. Lothair is falser even than
+Vivian Grey, and Lady Corisande, the daughter of the Duchess, more
+inane and unwomanlike than Venetia or Henrietta Temple. It is the
+very bathos of story-telling. I have often lamented, and have as
+often excused to myself, that lack of public judgment which enables
+readers to put up with bad work because it comes from good or from
+lofty hands. I never felt the feeling so strongly, or was so little
+able to excuse it, as when a portion of the reading public received
+Lothair with satisfaction.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+ON CRITICISM
+
+
+
+
+Literary criticism in the present day has become a profession,--but
+it has ceased to be an art. Its object is no longer that of proving
+that certain literary work is good and other literary work is
+bad, in accordance with rules which the critic is able to define.
+English criticism at present rarely even pretends to go so far as
+this. It attempts, in the first place, to tell the public whether
+a book be or be not worth public attention; and, in the second
+place, so to describe the purport of the work as to enable those
+who have not time or inclination for reading it to feel that by a
+short cut they can become acquainted with its contents. Both these
+objects, if fairly well carried out, are salutary. Though the
+critic may not be a profound judge himself; though not unfrequently
+he be a young man making his first literary attempts, with tastes
+and judgment still unfixed, yet he probably has a conscience in the
+matter, and would not have been selected for that work had he not
+shown some aptitude for it. Though he may be not the best possible
+guide to the undiscerning, he will be better than no guide at all.
+Real substantial criticism must, from its nature, be costly, and
+that which the public wants should at any rate be cheap. Advice is
+given to many thousands, which, though it may not be the best advice
+possible, is better than no advice at all. Then that description
+of the work criticised, that compressing of the much into very
+little,--which is the work of many modern critics or reviewers,--does
+enable many to know something of what is being said, who without
+it would know nothing.
+
+I do not think it is incumbent on me at present to name periodicals
+in which this work is well done, and to make complaints of others
+by which it is scamped. I should give offence, and might probably
+be unjust. But I think I may certainly say that as some of these
+periodicals are certainly entitled to great praise for the manner
+in which the work is done generally, so are others open to very
+severe censure,--and that the praise and that the censure are
+chiefly due on behalf of one virtue and its opposite vice. It is
+not critical ability that we have a right to demand, or its absence
+that we are bound to deplore. Critical ability for the price we
+pay is not attainable. It is a faculty not peculiar to Englishmen,
+and when displayed is very frequently not appreciated. But that
+critics should be honest we have a right to demand, and critical
+dishonesty we are bound to expose. If the writer will tell us what
+he thinks, though his thoughts be absolutely vague and useless,
+we can forgive him; but when he tells us what he does not think,
+actuated either by friendship or by animosity, then there should
+be no pardon for him. This is the sin in modern English criticism
+of which there is most reason to complain.
+
+It is a lamentable fact that men and women lend themselves to this
+practice who are neither vindictive nor ordinarily dishonest. It
+has become "the custom of the trade," under the veil of which excuse
+so many tradesmen justify their malpractices! When a struggling
+author learns that so much has been done for A by the Barsetshire
+Gazette, so much for B by the Dillsborough Herald, and, again, so
+much for C by that powerful metropolitan organ the Evening Pulpit,
+and is told also that A and B and C have been favoured through personal
+interest, he also goes to work among the editors, or the editors'
+wives,--or perhaps, if he cannot reach their wives, with their
+wives' first or second cousins. When once the feeling has come upon
+an editor or a critic that he may allow himself to be influenced
+by other considerations than the duty h owes to the public, all
+sense of critical or of editorial honesty falls from him at once.
+Facilis descensus Averni. In a very short time that editorial
+honesty becomes ridiculous to himself. It is for other purpose that
+he wields the power; and when he is told what is his duty, and what
+should be his conduct, the preacher of such doctrine seems to him
+to be quixotic. "Where have you lived, my friend, for the last
+twenty years," he says in spirit, if not in word, "that you come out
+now with such stuff as old-fashioned as this?" And thus dishonesty
+begets dishonesty, till dishonesty seems to be beautiful. How nice
+to be good-natured! How glorious to assist struggling young authors,
+especially if the young author be also a pretty woman! How gracious
+to oblige a friend! Then the motive, though still pleasing, departs
+further from the border of what is good. In what way can the critic
+better repay the hospitality of his wealthy literary friend than
+by good-natured criticism,--or more certainly ensure for himself
+a continuation of hospitable favours?
+
+Some years since a critic of the day, a gentleman well known then
+in literary circles, showed me the manuscript of a book recently
+published,--the work of a popular author. It was handsomely bound,
+and was a valuable and desirable possession. It had just been given
+to him by the author as an acknowledgment for a laudatory review in
+one of the leading journals of the day. As I was expressly asked
+whether I did not regard such a token as a sign of grace both
+in the giver and in the receiver, I said that I thought it should
+neither have been given nor have been taken. My theory was repudiated
+with scorn, and I was told that I was strait-laced, visionary, and
+impracticable! In all that the damage did not lie in the fact of
+that one present, but in the feeling on the part of the critic that
+his office was not debased by the acceptance of presents from those
+whom he criticised. This man was a professional critic, bound by
+his contract with certain employers to review such books as were
+sent to him. How could he, when he had received a valuable present
+for praising one book, censure another by the same author?
+
+While I write this I well know that what I say, if it be ever
+noticed at all, will be taken as a straining at gnats, as a pretence
+of honesty, or at any rate as an exaggeration of scruples. I have
+said the same thing before, and have been ridiculed for saying it.
+But none the less am I sure that English literature generally is
+suffering much under this evil. All those who are struggling for
+success have forced upon them the idea that their strongest efforts
+should be made in touting for praise. Those who are not familiar
+with the lives of authors will hardly believe how low will be the
+forms which their struggles will take:--how little presents will
+be sent to men who write little articles; how much flattery may
+be expended even on the keeper of a circulating library; with what
+profuse and distant genuflexions approaches are made to the outside
+railing of the temple which contains within it the great thunderer
+of some metropolitan periodical publication! The evil here is not
+only that done to the public when interested counsel is given to
+them, but extends to the debasement of those who have at any rate
+considered themselves fit to provide literature for the public.
+
+I am satisfied that the remedy for this evil must lie in the conscience
+and deportment of authors themselves. If once the feeling could be
+produced that it is disgraceful for an author to ask for praise,--and
+demands for praise are, I think, disgraceful in every walk of
+life,--the practice would gradually fall into the hands only of
+the lowest, and that which is done only by the lowest soon becomes
+despicable even to them. The sin, when perpetuated with unflagging
+labour, brings with it at best very poor reward. That work of running
+after critics, editors, publishers, the keepers of circulating
+libraries, and their clerks, is very hard, and must be very disagreeable.
+He who does it must feel himself to be dishonoured,--or she. It
+may perhaps help to sell an edition, but can never make an author
+successful.
+
+I think it may be laid down as a golden rule in literature that
+there should be no intercourse at all between an author and his
+critic. The critic, as critic, should not know his author, nor the
+author, as author, his critic. As censure should beget no anger,
+so should praise beget no gratitude. The young author should feel
+that criticisms fall upon him as dew or hail from heaven,--which,
+as coming from heaven, man accepts as fate. Praise let the author
+try to obtain by wholesome effort; censure let him avoid, if
+possible, by care and industry. But when they come, let him take
+them as coming from some source which he cannot influence, and with
+which be should not meddle.
+
+I know no more disagreeable trouble into which an author may plunge
+himself than of a quarrel with his critics, or any more useless
+labour than that of answering them. It is wise to presume, at any
+rate, that the reviewer has simply done his duty, and has spoken
+of the book according to the dictates of his conscience. Nothing
+can be gained by combating the reviewer's opinion. If the book
+which he has disparaged be good, his judgment will be condemned by
+the praise of others; if bad, his judgment will he confirmed by
+others. Or if, unfortunately, the criticism of the day be in so evil
+a condition generally that such ultimate truth cannot be expected,
+the author may be sure that his efforts made on behalf of his own
+book will not set matters right. If injustice be done him, let him
+bear it. To do so is consonant with the dignity of the position
+which he ought to assume. To shriek, and scream, and sputter,
+to threaten actions, and to swear about the town that he has been
+belied and defamed in that he has been accused of bad grammar or a
+false metaphor, of a dull chapter, or even of a borrowed heroine,
+will leave on the minds of the public nothing but a sense of
+irritated impotence.
+
+If, indeed, there should spring from an author's work any assertion
+by a critic injurious to the author's honour, if the author be
+accused of falsehood or of personal motives which are discreditable
+to him, then, indeed, he may be bound to answer the charge. It is
+hoped, however, that he may be able to do so with clean hands, or
+he will so stir the mud in the pool as to come forth dirtier than
+he went into it.
+
+I have lived much among men by whom the English criticism of the day
+has been vehemently abused. I have heard it said that to the public
+it is a false guide, and that to authors it is never a trustworthy
+Mentor. I do not concur in this wholesale censure. There is, of
+course, criticism and criticism. There are at this moment one or
+two periodicals to which both public and authors may safely look
+for guidance, though there are many others from which no spark of
+literary advantage may be obtained. But it is well that both public
+and authors should know what is the advantage which they have a
+right to expect. There have been critics,--and there probably will
+be again, though the circumstances of English literature do not
+tend to produce them,--with power sufficient to entitle them to
+speak with authority. These great men have declared, tanquam ex
+cathedra, that such a book has been so far good and so far bad, or
+that it has been altogether good or altogether bad;--and the world
+has believed them. When making such assertions they have given
+their reasons, explained their causes, and have carried conviction.
+Very great reputations have been achieved by such critics, but not
+without infinite study and the labour of many years.
+
+Such are not the critics of the day, of whom we are now speaking.
+In the literary world as it lives at present some writer is selected
+for the place of critic to a newspaper, generally some young
+writer, who for so many shillings a column shall review whatever
+book is sent to him and express an opinion,--reading the book through
+for the purpose, if the amount of honorarium as measured with the
+amount of labour will enable him to do so. A labourer must measure
+his work by his pay or he cannot live. From criticism such as this
+must far the most part be, the general reader has no right to expect
+philosophical analysis, or literary judgment on which confidence
+may be placed. But he probably may believe that the books praised
+will be better than the books censured, and that those which are
+praised by periodicals which never censure are better worth his
+attention than those which are not noticed. And readers will also
+find that by devoting an hour or two on Saturday to the criticisms
+of the week, they will enable themselves to have an opinion about
+the books of the day. The knowledge so acquired will not be great,
+nor will that little be lasting; but it adds something to the
+pleasure of life to be able to talk on subjects of which others are
+speaking; and the man who has sedulously gone through the literary
+notices in the Spectator and the Saturday may perhaps be justified
+in thinking himself as well able to talk about the new book as
+his friend who has bought that new book on the tapis, and who, not
+improbably, obtained his information from the same source.
+
+As an author, I have paid careful attention to the reviews which
+have been written on my own work; and I think that now I well know
+where I may look for a little instruction, where I may expect only
+greasy adulation, where I shall be cut up into mince-meat for the
+delight of those who love sharp invective, and where I shall find
+an equal mixture of praise and censure so adjusted, without much
+judgment, as to exhibit the impartiality of the newspaper and its
+staff. Among it all there is much chaff, which I have learned bow
+to throw to the winds, with equal disregard whether it praises or
+blames;--but I have also found some corn, on which I have fed and
+nourished myself, and for which I have been thankful.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+"THE LAST CHRONICLE OF BARSET"--"LEAVING THE POST OFFICE"--"ST.
+PAUL'S MAGAZINE"
+
+
+
+
+I will now go back to the year 1867, in which I was still living at
+Waltham Cross. I had some time since bought the house there which
+I had at first hired, and added rooms to it, and made it for our
+purposes very comfortable. It was, however, a rickety old place,
+requiring much repair, and occasionally not as weathertight as it
+should be. We had a domain there sufficient for the cows, and for
+the making of our butter and hay. For strawberries, asparagus, green
+peas, out-of-door peaches, for roses especially, and such everyday
+luxuries, no place was ever more excellent. It was only twelve
+miles from London, and admitted therefore of frequent intercourse
+with the metropolis. It was also near enough to the Roothing country
+for hunting purposes. No doubt the Shoreditch Station, by which it
+had to be reached, had its drawbacks. My average distance also to
+the Essex meets was twenty miles. But the place combined as much
+or more than I had a right to expect. It was within my own postal
+district, and had, upon the whole, been well chosen.
+
+The work that I did during the twelve years that I remained there,
+from 1859 to 1871, was certainly very great. I feel confident that
+in amount no other writer contributed so much during that time to
+English literature. Over and above my novels, I wrote political
+articles, critical, social, and sporting articles, for periodicals,
+without number. I did the work of a surveyor of the General Post
+Office, and so did it as to give the authorities of the department
+no slightest pretext for fault-finding. I hunted always at least
+twice a week. I was frequent in the whist-room at the Garrick. I
+lived much in society in London, and was made happy by the presence
+of many friends at Waltham Cross. In addition to this we always
+spent six weeks at least out of England. Few men, I think, ever lived
+a fuller life. And I attribute the power of doing this altogether
+to the virtue of early hours. It was my practice to be at my table
+every morning at 5.30 A. M.; and it was also my practice to allow
+myself no mercy. An old groom, whose business it was to call me,
+and to whom I paid (pounds)5 a year extra for the duty, allowed himself no
+mercy. During all those years at Waltham Cross he was never once
+late with the coffee which it was his duty to bring me. I do not
+know that I ought not to feel that I owe more to him than to any
+one else for the success I have had. By beginning at that hour I
+could complete my literary work before I dressed for breakfast.
+
+All those I think who have lived as literary men,--working daily
+as literary labourers,--will agree with me that three hours a day
+will produce as much as a man ought to write. But then he should
+so have trained himself that he shall be able to work continuously
+during those three hours,--so have tutored his mind that it shall
+not be necessary for him to sit nibbling his pen, and gazing at the
+wall before him, till he shall have found the words with which he
+wants to express his ideas. It had at this time become my custom,--and
+it still is my custom, though of late I have become a little lenient
+to myself,--to write with my watch before me, and to require from
+myself 250 words every quarter of an hour. I have found that the 250
+words have been forthcoming as regularly as my watch went. But my
+three hours were not devoted entirely to writing. I always began
+my task by reading the work of the day before, an operation which
+would take me half an hour, and which consisted chiefly in weighing
+with my ear the sound of the words and phrases. I would strongly
+recommend this practice to all tyros in writing. That their work
+should be read after it has been written is a matter of course,--that
+it should be read twice at least before it goes to the printers,
+I take to be a matter of course. But by reading what he has last
+written, just before he recommences his task, the writer will catch
+the tone and spirit of what he is then saying, and will avoid the
+fault of seeming to be unlike himself. This division of time allowed
+me to produce over ten pages of an ordinary novel volume a day,
+and if kept up through ten months, would have given as its results
+three novels of three volumes each in the year;--the precise amount
+which so greatly acerbated the publisher in Paternoster Row, and which
+must at any rate be felt to be quite as much as the novel-readers
+of the world can want from the hands of one man.
+
+I have never written three novels in a year, but by following the
+plan above described I have written more than as much as three
+volumes; and by adhering to it over a course of years, I have been
+enabled to have always on hand,--for some time back now,--one or
+two or even three unpublished novels in my desk beside me. Were I
+to die now there are three such besides The Prime Minister, half
+of which has only yet been issued. One of these has been six years
+finished, and has never seen the light since it was first tied up
+in the wrapper which now contains it. I look forward with some grim
+pleasantry to its publication after another period of six years,
+and to the declaration of the critics that it has been the work of
+a period of life at which the power of writing novels had passed
+from me. Not improbably, however, these pages may be printed first.
+
+In 1866 and 1867 The Last Chronicle of Barset was brought out by
+George Smith in sixpenny monthly numbers. I do not know that this
+mode of publication had been tried before, or that it answered very
+well on this occasion. Indeed the shilling magazines had interfered
+greatly with the success of novels published in numbers without
+other accompanying matter. The public finding that so much might
+be had for a shilling, in which a portion of one or more novels was
+always included, were unwilling to spend their money on the novel
+alone. Feeling that this certainly had become the case in reference
+to novels published in shilling numbers, Mr. Smith and I determined
+to make the experiment with sixpenny parts. As he paid me (pounds)3000
+for the use of my MS., the loss, if any, did not fall upon me. If
+I remember right the enterprise was not altogether successful.
+
+Taking it as a whole, I regard this as the best novel I have
+written. I was never quite satisfied with the development of the
+plot, which consisted in the loss of a cheque, of a charge made
+against a clergyman for stealing it, and of absolute uncertainty
+on the part of the clergyman himself as to the manner in which the
+cheque had found its way into his hands. I cannot quite make myself
+believe that even such a man as Mr. Crawley could have forgotten
+how he got it, nor would the generous friend who was anxious to
+supply his wants have supplied them by tendering the cheque of a
+third person. Such fault I acknowledge,--acknowledging at the same
+time that I have never been capable of constructing with complete
+success the intricacies of a plot that required to be unravelled.
+But while confessing so much, I claim to have portrayed the mind
+of the unfortunate man with great accuracy and great delicacy. The
+pride, the humility, the manliness, the weakness, the conscientious
+rectitude and bitter prejudices of Mr. Crawley were, I feel, true
+to nature and well described. The surroundings too are good. Mrs.
+Proudie at the palace is a real woman; and the poor old dean dying
+at the deanery is also real. The archdeacon in his victory is very
+real. There is a true savour of English country life all through
+the book. It was with many misgivings that I killed my old friend
+Mrs. Proudie. I could not, I think, have done it, but for a resolution
+taken and declared under circumstances of great momentary pressure.
+
+It was thus that it came about. I was sitting one morning at work
+upon the novel at the end of the long drawing-room of the Athenaeum
+Club,--as was then my wont when I had slept the previous night in
+London. As I was there, two clergymen, each with a magazine in his
+hand, seated themselves, one on one side of the fire and one on
+the other, close to me. They soon began to abuse what they were
+reading, and each was reading some part of some novel of mine. The
+gravamen of their complaint lay in the fact that I reintroduced
+the same characters so often! "Here," said one, "is that archdeacon
+whom we have had in every novel he has ever written." "And here,"
+said the other, "is the old duke whom he has talked about till
+everybody is tired of him. If I could not invent new characters, I
+would not write novels at all." Then one of them fell foul of Mrs.
+Proudie. It was impossible for me not to hear their words, and
+almost impossible to hear them and be quiet. I got up, and standing
+between them, I acknowledged myself to be the culprit. "As to Mrs.
+Proudie," I said, "I will go home and kill her before the week is
+over." And so I did. The two gentlemen were utterly confounded,
+and one of them begged me to forget his frivolous observations.
+
+I have sometimes regretted the deed, so great was my delight in
+writing about Mrs. Proudie, so thorough was my knowledge of all the
+shades of her character. It was not only that she was a tyrant,
+a bully, a would-be priestess, a very vulgar woman, and one who
+would send headlong to the nethermost pit all who disagreed with
+her; but that at the same time she was conscientious, by no means
+a hypocrite, really believing in the brimstone which she threatened,
+and anxious to save the souls around her from its horrors. And as
+her tyranny increased so did the bitterness of the moments of her
+repentance increase, in that she knew herself to be a tyrant,--till
+that bitterness killed her. Since her time others have grown up
+equally dear to me,--Lady Glencora and her husband, for instance;
+but I have never dissevered myself from Mrs. Proudie, and still
+live much in company with her ghost.
+
+I have in a previous chapter said how I wrote Can You Forgive Her?
+after the plot of a play which had been rejected,--which play had
+been called The Noble Jilt. Some year or two after the completion
+of The Last Chronicle, I was asked by the manager of a theatre to
+prepare a piece for his stage, and I did so, taking the plot of
+this novel. I called the comedy Did He Steal It? But my friend the
+manager did not approve of my attempt. My mind at this time was
+less attentive to such a matter than when dear old George Bartley
+nearly crushed me by his criticism,--so that I forget the reason
+given. I have little doubt but that the manager was right. That
+he intended to express a true opinion, and would have been glad to
+have taken the piece had he thought it suitable, I am quite sure.
+
+I have sometimes wished to see during my lifetime a combined
+republication of those tales which are occupied with the fictitious
+county of Barsetshire. These would be The Warden, Barchester
+Towers, Doctor Thorne, Framley Parsonage, and The Last Chronicle
+of Barset. But I have hitherto failed. The copyrights are in the
+hands of four different persons, including myself, and with one of
+the four I have not been able to prevail to act in concert with the
+others. [Footnote: Since this was written I have made arrangements
+for doing as I have wished, and the first volume of the series will
+now very shortly be published.]
+
+In 1867 I made up my mind to take a step in life which was not
+unattended with peril, which many would call rash, and which, when
+taken, I should be sure at some period to regret. This step was
+the resignation of my place in the Post Office. I have described
+how it was that I contrived to combine the performance of its duties
+with my other avocations in life. I got up always very early; but
+even this did not suffice. I worked always on Sundays,--as to which
+no scruple of religion made me unhappy,--and not unfrequently I
+was driven to work at night. In the winter when hunting was going
+on, I had to keep myself very much on the alert. And during the
+London season, when I was generally two or three days of the week
+in town, I found the official work to be a burden. I had determined
+some years previously, after due consideration with my wife, to
+abandon the Post Office when I had put by an income equal to the
+pension to which I should be entitled if I remained in the department
+till I was sixty. That I had now done, and I sighed for liberty.
+
+The exact time chosen, the autumn of 1867, was selected because I
+was then about to undertake other literary work in editing a new
+magazine,--of which I shall speak very shortly. But in addition to
+these reasons there was another, which was, I think, at last the
+actuating cause. When Sir Rowland Hill left the Post Office, and
+my brother-in-law, Mr. Tilley, became Secretary in his place, I
+applied for the vacant office of Under-Secretary. Had I obtained
+this I should have given up my hunting, have given up much of my
+literary work,--at any rate would have edited no magazine,--and
+would have returned to the habit of my youth in going daily to the
+General Post Office. There was very much against such a change in
+life. The increase of salary would not have amounted to above (pounds)400
+a year, and I should have lost much more than that in literary
+remuneration. I should have felt bitterly the slavery of attendance
+at an office, from which I had then been exempt for five-and-twenty
+years. I should, too, have greatly missed the sport which I loved.
+But I was attached to the department, had imbued myself with a
+thorough love of letters,--I mean the letters which are carried by
+the post,--and was anxious for their welfare as though they were
+all my own. In short, I wished to continue the connection. I did
+not wish, moreover, that any younger officer should again pass over
+my head. I believed that I bad been a valuable public servant,
+and I will own to a feeling existing at that time that I had not
+altogether been well treated. I was probably wrong in this. I had
+been allowed to hunt,--and to do as I pleased, and to say what
+I liked, and had in that way received my reward. I applied for
+the office, but Mr. Scudamore was appointed to it. He no doubt
+was possessed of gifts which I did not possess. He understood
+the manipulation of money and the use of figures, and was a great
+accountant. I think that I might have been more useful in regard
+to the labours and wages of the immense body of men employed by
+the Post Office. However, Mr. Scudamore was appointed; and I made
+up my mind that I would fall back upon my old intention, and leave
+the department. I think I allowed two years to pass before I took
+the step; and the day on which I sent the letter was to me most
+melancholy.
+
+The rule of the service in regard to pensions is very just. A man
+shall serve till he is sixty before he is entitled to a pension,--unless
+his health fail him. At that age he is entitled to one-sixtieth of
+his salary for every year he has served up to forty years. If his
+health do fail him so that he is unfit for further work before the
+age named, then he may go with a pension amounting to one-sixtieth
+for every year he has served. I could not say that my health had
+failed me, and therefore I went without any pension. I have since
+felt occasionally that it has been supposed that I left the Post
+Office under pressure,--because I attended to hunting and to my
+literary work rather than to postal matters. As it had for many
+years been my ambition to be a thoroughly good servant to the public,
+and to give to the public much more than I took in the shape of
+salary, this feeling has sometimes annoyed me. And as I am still
+a little sore on the subject, and as I would not have it imagined
+after my death that I had slighted the public service to which I
+belonged, I will venture here to give the reply which was sent to
+the letter containing my resignation.
+
+
+ "GENERAL POST OFFICE,
+ October 9th, 1867.
+
+"Sir,--I have received your letter of the 3d inst., in which you
+tender your resignation as Surveyor in the Post Office service, and
+state as your reason for this step that you have adopted another
+profession, the exigencies of which are so great as to make you
+feel you cannot give to the duties of the Post Office that amount
+of attention which you consider the Postmaster-General has a right
+to expect.
+
+"You have for many years ranked among the most conspicuous members
+of the Post Office, which, on several occasions when you have been
+employed on large and difficult matters, has reaped much benefit
+from the great abilities which you have been able to place at its
+disposal; and in mentioning this, I have been especially glad to
+record that, notwithstanding the many calls upon your time, you
+have never permitted your other avocations to interfere with your
+Post Office work, which has been faithfully and indeed energetically
+performed." (There was a touch of irony in this word "energetically,"
+but still it did not displease me.)
+
+"In accepting your resignation, which he does with much regret,
+the Duke of Montrose desires me to convey to you his own sense of
+the value of your services, and to state how alive he is to the
+loss which will be sustained by the department in which you have
+long been an ornament, and where your place will with difficulty
+be replaced.
+
+ (Signed) "J. TILLEY."
+
+
+Readers will no doubt think that this is official flummery; and
+so in fact it is. I do not at all imagine that I was an ornament
+to the Post Office, and have no doubt that the secretaries and
+assistant-secretaries very often would have been glad to be rid of
+me; but the letter may be taken as evidence that I did not allow
+my literary enterprises to interfere with my official work. A man
+who takes public money without earning it is to me so odious that
+I can find no pardon for him in my heart. I have known many such,
+and some who have craved the power to do so. Nothing would annoy
+me more than to think that I should even be supposed to have been
+among the number.
+
+And so my connection was dissolved with the department to which
+I had applied the thirty-three best years of my life;--I must not
+say devoted, for devotion implies an entire surrender, and I certainly
+had found time for other occupations. It is however absolutely true
+that during all those years I had thought very much more about the
+Post Office than I had of my literary work, and had given to it a
+more unflagging attention. Up to this time I had never been angry,
+never felt myself injured or unappreciated in that my literary
+efforts were slighted. But I had suffered very much bitterness on
+that score in reference to the Post Office; and I had suffered not
+only on my own personal behalf, but also and more bitterly when I
+could not promise to be done the things which I thought ought to be
+done for the benefit of others. That the public in little villages
+should be enabled to buy postage stamps; that they should have
+their letters delivered free and at an early hour; that pillar
+letter-boxes should be put up for them (of which accommodation
+in the streets and ways of England I was the originator, having,
+however, got the authority for the erection of the first at St.
+Heliers in Jersey); that the letter-carriers and sorters should not
+be overworked; that they should be adequately paid, and have some
+hours to themselves, especially on Sundays; above all, that they
+should be made to earn their wages and latterly that they should
+not be crushed by what I thought to be the damnable system of
+so-called merit;--these were the matters by which I was stirred to
+what the secretary was pleased to call energetic performance of my
+duties. How I loved, when I was contradicted,--as I was very often
+and, no doubt, very properly,--to do instantly as I was bid, and then
+to prove that what I was doing was fatuous, dishonest, expensive,
+and impracticable! And then there were feuds--such delicious feuds!
+I was always an anti-Hillite, acknowledging, indeed, the great thing
+which Sir Rowland Hill had done for the country, but believing him
+to be entirely unfit to manage men or to arrange labour. It was a
+pleasure to me to differ from him on all occasions;--and, looking
+back now, I think that in all such differences I was right.
+
+Having so steeped myself, as it were, in postal waters, I could not
+go out from them without a regret. I wonder whether I did anything
+to improve the style of writing in official reports! I strove to
+do so gallantly, never being contented with the language of my own
+reports unless it seemed to have been so written as to be pleasant
+to be read. I took extreme delight in writing them, not allowing
+myself to re-copy them, never having them re-copied by others, but
+sending them up with their original blots and erasures,--if blots
+and erasures there were. It is hardly manly, I think, that a
+man should search after a fine neatness at the expense of so much
+waste labour; or that he should not be able to exact from himself
+the necessity of writing words in the form in which they should be
+read. If a copy be required, let it be taken afterwards,--by hand
+or by machine, as may be. But the writer of a letter, if he wish his
+words to prevail with the reader, should send them out as written
+by himself, by his own hand, with his own marks, his own punctuation,
+correct or incorrect, with the evidence upon them that they have
+come out from his own mind.
+
+And so the cord was cut, and I was a free man to run about the
+world where I would.
+
+A little before the date of my resignation, Mr. James Virtue, the
+printer and publisher, had asked me to edit a new magazine for
+him, and had offered me a salary of (pounds)1000 a year for the work over
+and above what might be due to me for my own contributions. I had
+known something of magazines, and did not believe that they were
+generally very lucrative. They were, I thought, useful to some
+publishers as bringing grist to the mill; but as Mr. Virtue's business
+was chiefly that of a printer, in which he was very successful,
+this consideration could hardly have had much weight with him. I
+very strongly advised him to abandon the project, pointing out to
+him that a large expenditure would be necessary to carry on the magazine
+In accordance with my views,--that I could not be concerned in it
+on any other understanding, and that the chances of an adequate
+return to him of his money were very small. He came down to Waltham,
+listened to my arguments with great patience, and the told me that
+if I would not do the work he would find some other editor.
+
+Upon this I consented to undertake the duty. My terms as to salary
+were those which he had himself proposed. The special stipulations
+which I demanded were: firstly, that I should put whatever I pleased
+into the magazine, or keep whatever I pleased out of it, without
+interference; secondly, that I should, from month to month, give
+in to him a list of payments to be made to contributors, and that
+he should pay them, allowing me to fix the amounts; and, thirdly,
+that the arrangement should remain in force, at any rate, for two
+years. To all this he made no objection; and during the time that
+he and I were thus bound together he not only complied with these
+stipulations, but also with every suggestion respecting the magazine
+that I made to him. If the use of large capital, combined with wide
+liberality and absolute confidence on the part of the proprietor,
+and perpetual good humour, would have produced success, our magazine
+certainly would have succeeded.
+
+In all such enterprises the name is the first difficulty. There
+is the name which has a meaning and the name which has none--of
+which two the name that has none is certainly the better, as it
+never belies itself. The Liberal may cease to be liberal, or The
+Fortnightly, alas! to come out once a fortnight. But The Cornhill
+and The Argosy are under any set of circumstances as well adapted
+to these names as under any other. Then there is the proprietary
+name, or, possibly, the editorial name, which is only amiss because
+the publication may change hands. Blackwood's has, indeed, always
+remained Blackwood's, and Fraser's, though it has been bought and
+sold, still does not sound amiss. Mr. Virtue, fearing the too
+attractive qualities of his own name, wished the magazine to be
+called Anthony Trollope's. But to this I objected eagerly. There
+were then about the town,--still are about the town,--two or three
+literary gentlemen, by whom to have had myself editored would
+have driven me an exile from my country. After much discussion, we
+settled on St. Paul's as the name for our bantling--not as being
+in any way new, but as enabling it to fall easily into the ranks
+with many others. If we were to make ourselves in any way peculiar,
+it was not by our name that we were desirous of doing so.
+
+I do not think that we did make ourselves in any way peculiar,--and
+yet there was a great struggle made. On the part of the proprietor,
+I may say that money was spent very freely. On my own part, I
+may declare that I omitted nothing which I thought might tend to
+success. I read all manuscripts sent to me, and endeavoured to judge
+impartially. I succeeded in obtaining the services of an excellent
+literary corps. During the three years and a half of my editorship
+I was assisted by Mr. Goschen, Captain Brackenbury, Edward Dicey,
+Percy Fitzgerald, H. A. Layard, Allingham, Leslie Stephen, Mrs.
+Lynn Linton, my brother, T. A. Trollope, and his wife, Charles
+Lever, E. Arnold, Austin Dobson, R. A. Proctor, Lady Pollock, G.
+H. Lewes, C. Mackay, Hardman (of the Times), George Macdonald, W.
+R. Greg, Mrs. Oliphant, Sir Charles Trevelyan, Leoni Levi, Dutton
+Cook--and others, whose names would make the list too long. It
+might have been thought that with such aid the St. Paul's would have
+succeeded. I do not think that the failure,--for it did fail,--arose
+from bad editing. Perhaps too much editing might have been the
+fault. I was too anxious to be good, and did not enough think of
+what might be lucrative.
+
+It did fail, for it never paid its way. It reached, if I remember
+right, a circulation of nearly 10,000--perhaps on one or two occasions
+may have gone beyond that. But the enterprise had been set on foot
+on a system too expensive to be made lucrative by anything short of
+a very large circulation. Literary merit will hardly set a magazine
+afloat, though, when afloat, it will sustain it. Time is wanted--or
+the hubbub, and flurry, and excitement created by ubiquitous
+sesquipedalian advertisement. Merit and time together may be
+effective, but they must be backed by economy and patience.
+
+I think, upon the whole, that publishers themselves have been the
+best editors of magazines, when they have been able to give time
+and intelligence to the work. Nothing certainly has ever been done
+better than Blackwood's. The Cornhill, too, after Thackeray had
+left it and before Leslie Stephen had taken it, seemed to be in
+quite efficient hands--those hands being the hands of proprietor
+and publisher. The proprietor, at any rate, knows what he wants and
+what he can afford, and is not so frequently tempted to fall into
+that worst of literary quicksands, the publishing of matter not for
+the sake of the readers, but for that of the writer. I did not so
+sin very often, but often enough to feel that I was a coward. "My
+dear friend, my dear friend, this is trash!" It is so hard to speak
+thus--but so necessary for an editor! We all remember the thorn
+in his pillow of which Thackeray complained. Occasionally I know
+that I did give way on behalf of some literary aspirant whose work
+did not represent itself to me as being good; and as often as I did
+so, I broke my trust to those who employed me. Now, I think that
+such editors as Thackeray and myself,--if I may, for the moment, be
+allowed to couple men so unequal,--will always be liable to commit
+such faults, but that the natures of publishers and proprietors
+will be less soft.
+
+Nor do I know why the pages of a magazine should be considered to
+be open to any aspirant who thinks that he can write an article,
+or why the manager of a magazine should be doomed to read all that
+may be sent to him. The object of the proprietor is to produce
+a periodical that shall satisfy the public, which he may probably
+best do by securing the services of writers of acknowledged ability.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+BEVERLEY
+
+
+
+
+Very early in life, very soon after I had become a clerk in St.
+Martin's le Grand, when I was utterly impecunious and beginning
+to fall grievously into debt, I was asked by an uncle of mine, who
+was himself a clerk in the War Office, what destination I should
+like best for my future life. He probably meant to inquire whether
+I wished to live married or single, whether to remain in the Post
+Office or to leave it, whether I should prefer the town or the
+country. I replied that I should like to be a Member of Parliament.
+My uncle, who was given to sarcasm, rejoined that, as far a he knew,
+few clerks in the Post Office did become Members of Parliament. I
+think it was the remembrance of this jeer which stirred me up to
+look for a seat as soon as I had made myself capable of holding one
+by leaving the public service. My uncle was dead, but if I could
+get a seat, the knowledge that I had done so might travel to that
+bourne from whence he was not likely to return, and he might there
+feel that he had done me wrong.
+
+Independently of this, I have always thought that to sit in the
+British Parliament should be the highest object of ambition to
+every educated Englishman. I do not by this mean to suggest that
+every educated Englishman should set before himself a seat in
+Parliament as a probable or even a possible career; but that the man
+in Parliament has reached a higher position than the man out,--that
+to serve one's country without pay is the grandest work that a man
+can do,--that of all studies the study of politics is the one in
+which a man may make himself most useful to his fellow-creatures,--and
+that of all lives, public political lives are capable of the highest
+efforts. So thinking,--though I was aware that fifty-three was too
+late an age at which to commence a new career,--I resolved with
+much hesitation that I would make the attempt. Writing now at an
+age beyond sixty, I can say that my political feelings and convictions
+have never undergone any change. They are now what they became when
+I first began to have political feelings and convictions. Nor do I
+find in myself any tendency to modify them as I have found generally
+in men as they grow old. I consider myself to be an advanced, but
+still a Conservative-Liberal, which I regard not only as a possible,
+but as a rational and consistent phase of political existence.
+I can, I believe, in a very few words, make known my political
+theory; and, as I am anxious that any who know aught of me should
+know that, I will endeavour to do so.
+
+It must, I think, be painful to all men to feel inferiority. It should,
+I think, be a matter of some pain to all men to feel superiority,
+unless when it has been won by their own efforts. We do not
+understand the operations of Almighty wisdom, and are, therefore,
+unable to tell the causes of the terrible inequalities that
+we see--why some, why so many, should have so little to make life
+enjoyable, so much to make it painful, while a few others, not
+through their own merit, have had gifts poured out to them from
+a full hand. We acknowledge the hand of God and His wisdom, but
+still we are struck with awe and horror at the misery of many of
+our brethren. We who have been born to the superior condition,--for,
+in this matter, I consider myself to be standing on a platform with
+dukes and princes, and all others to whom plenty and education and
+liberty have been given,--cannot, I think, look upon the inane,
+unintellectual, and tossed-bound life of those who cannot even
+feed themselves sufficiently by their sweat, without some feeling
+of injustice, some feeling of pain.
+
+This consciousness of wrong has induced in many enthusiastic but
+unbalanced minds a desire to set all things right by a proclaimed
+equality. In their efforts such men have shown how powerless they
+are in opposing the ordinances of the Creator. For the mind of the
+thinker and the student is driven to admit, though it be awestruck
+by apparent injustice, that this inequality is the work of God.
+Make all men equal to-day, and God has so created them that they
+shall be all unequal to-morrow. The so-called Conservative, the
+conscientious, philanthropic Conservative, seeing this, and being
+surely convinced that such inequalities are of divine origin, tells
+himself that it is his duty to preserve them. He thinks that the
+preservation of the welfare of the world depends on the maintenance
+of those distances between the prince and the peasant by which he
+finds himself to be surrounded; and, perhaps, I may add, that the
+duty is not unpleasant, as he feels himself to be one of the princes.
+
+But this man, though he sees something, and sees that very clearly,
+sees only a little. The divine inequality is apparent to him, but
+not the equally divine diminution of that inequality. That such
+diminution is taking place on all sides is apparent enough; but it
+is apparent to him as an evil, the consummation of which it is his
+duty to retard. He cannot prevent it; and, therefore, the society
+to which he belongs is, in his eyes, retrograding. He will even,
+at times, assist it; and will do so conscientiously, feeling that,
+under the gentle pressure supplied by him, and with the drags and
+holdfasts which he may add, the movement would be slower than it
+would become if subjected to his proclaimed and absolute opponents.
+Such, I think, are Conservatives; and I speak of men who, with the
+fear of God before their eyes and the love of their neighbours warm
+in their hearts, endeavour to do their duty to the best of their
+ability.
+
+Using the term which is now common, and which will be best understood,
+I will endeavour to explain how the equally conscientious Liberal
+is opposed to the Conservative. He is equally aware that these
+distances are of divine origin, equally averse to any sudden
+disruption of society in quest of some Utopian blessedness; but he
+is alive to the fact that these distances are day by day becoming
+less, and he regards this continual diminution as a series of
+steps towards that human millennium of which he dreams. He is even
+willing to help the many to ascend the ladder a little, though he
+knows, as they come up towards him, he must go down to meet them.
+What is really in his mind is,--I will not say equality, for the
+word is offensive, and presents to the imagination of men ideas of
+communism, of ruin, and insane democracy,--but a tendency towards
+equality. In following that, however, he knows that he must be
+hemmed in by safeguards, lest he be tempted to travel too quickly;
+and, therefore, he is glad to be accompanied on his way by the
+repressive action of a Conservative opponent. Holding such views,
+I think I am guilty of no absurdity in calling myself an advanced
+Conservative-Liberal. A man who entertains in his mind any
+political doctrine, except as a means of improving the condition
+of his fellows, I regard as a political intriguer, a charlatan,
+and a conjurer--as one who thinks that, by a certain amount of wary
+wire-pulling, he may raise himself in the estimation of the world.
+
+I am aware that this theory of politics will seem to many to be stilted,
+overstrained, and, as the Americans would say, high-faluten. Many
+will declare that the majority even of those who call themselves
+politicians,--perhaps even of those who take an active
+part in politics,--are stirred by no such feelings as these, and
+acknowledge no such motives. Men become Tories or Whigs, Liberals
+or Conservatives, partly by education,--following their fathers,--partly
+by chance, partly as openings come, partly in accordance with the
+bent of their minds, but still without any far-fetched reasonings
+as to distances and the diminution of distances. No doubt it is
+so; and in the battle of politics, as it goes, men are led further
+and further away from first causes, till at last a measure is opposed
+by one simply because it is advocated by another, and Members of
+Parliament swarm into lobbies, following the dictation of their
+leaders, and not their own individual judgments. But the principle
+is at work throughout. To many, though hardly acknowledged, it is
+still apparent. On almost all it has its effect; though there are
+the intriguers, the clever conjurers, to whom politics is simply
+such a game as is billiards or rackets, only played with greater
+results. To the minds that create and lead and sway political
+opinion, some such theory is, I think, ever present.
+
+The truth of all this I had long since taken home to myself. I had
+now been thinking of it for thirty years, and had never doubted.
+But I had always been aware of a certain visionary weakness about
+myself in regard to politics. A man, to be useful in Parliament,
+must be able to confine himself and conform himself, to be satisfied
+with doing a little bit of a little thing at a time. He must
+patiently get up everything connected with the duty on mushrooms,
+and then be satisfied with himself when at last he has induced
+a Chancellor of the Exchequer to say that he will consider the
+impost at the first opportunity. He must be content to be beaten
+six times in order that, on a seventh, his work may be found to
+be of assistance to some one else. He must remember that he is one
+out of 650, and be content with 1-650th part of the attention of
+the nation. If he have grand ideas, he must keep them to himself,
+unless by chance, he can work his way up to the top of the tree.
+In short, he must be a practical man. Now I knew that in politics
+I could never become a practical man. I should never be satisfied
+with a soft word from the Chancellor of the Exchequer, but would
+always be flinging my overtaxed ketchup in his face.
+
+Nor did it seem to me to be possible that I should ever become a
+good speaker. I had no special gifts that way, and had not studied
+the art early enough in life to overcome natural difficulties. I
+had found that, with infinite labour, I could learn a few sentences
+by heart, and deliver them, monotonously indeed, but clearly. Or,
+again, if there were something special to be said, I could say it
+in a commonplace fashion--but always as though I were in a hurry,
+and with the fear before me of being thought to be prolix. But I
+had no power of combining, as a public speaker should always do,
+that which I had studied with that which occurred to me at the
+moment. It must be all lesson,--which I found to be best; or else
+all impromptu,--which was very bad, indeed, unless I had something
+special on my mind. I was thus aware that I could do no good by
+going into Parliament--that the time for it, if there could have
+been a time, had gone by. But still I had an almost insane desire
+to sit there, and be able to assure myself that my uncle's scorn
+had not been deserved.
+
+In 1867 it had been suggested to me that, in the event of a dissolution,
+I should stand for one division of the County of Essex; and I had
+promised that I would do so, though the promise at that time was
+as rash a one as a man could make. I was instigated to this by the
+late Charles Buxton, a man whom I greatly loved, and who was very
+anxious that the county for which his brother had sat, and with
+which the family were connected, should be relieved from what he
+regarded as the thraldom of Toryism. But there was no dissolution
+then. Mr. Disraeli passed his Reform Bill, by the help of the
+Liberal member for Newark, and the summoning of a new Parliament
+was postponed till the next year. By this new Reform Bill Essex
+was portioned out into three instead of two electoral divisions,
+one of which,--that adjacent to London,--would, it was thought,
+be altogether Liberal. After the promise which I had given,
+the performance of which would have cost me a large sum of money
+absolutely in vain, it was felt by some that I should be selected
+as one of the candidates for the new division--and as such I was
+proposed by Mr. Charles Buxton. But another gentleman, who would
+have been bound by previous pledges to support me, was put forward
+by what I believe to have been the defeating interest, and I had
+to give way. At the election this gentleman, with another Liberal,
+who had often stood for the county, was returned without a contest.
+Alas! alas! They were both unseated at the next election, when the
+great Conservative reaction took place.
+
+In the spring of 1868 I was sent to the United States on a postal
+mission, of which I will speak presently. While I was absent the
+dissolution took place. On my return I was somewhat too late to
+look out for a seat, but I had friends who knew the weakness of my
+ambition; and it was not likely, therefore, that I should escape
+the peril of being put forward for some impossible borough as to
+which the Liberal party would not choose that it should go to the
+Conservatives without a struggle. At last, after one or two others,
+Beverley was proposed to me, and to Beverley I went.
+
+I must, however, exculpate the gentleman who acted as my agent, from
+undue persuasion exercised towards me. He was a man who thoroughly
+understood Parliament, having sat there himself--and he sits there
+now at this moment. He understood Yorkshire,--or, at least, the
+East Riding of Yorkshire, in which Beverley is situated,--certainly
+better than any one alive. He understood all the mysteries of
+canvassing, and he knew well the traditions, the condition, and the
+prospect of the Liberal party. I will not give his name, but they
+who knew Yorkshire in 1868 will not be at a loss to find it. "So,"
+said he, "you are going to stand for Beverley?" I replied gravely
+that I was thinking of doing so. "You don't expect to get in?" he
+said. Again I was grave. I would not, I said, be sanguine, but,
+nevertheless, I was disposed to hope for the best. "Oh, no!"
+continued he, with good-humoured raillery, "you won't get in. I
+don't suppose you really expect it. But there is a fine career open
+to you. You will spend (pounds)1000, and lose the election. Then you will
+petition, and spend another (pounds)1000. You will throw out the elected
+members. There will be a commission, and the borough will be
+disfranchised. For a beginner such as you are, that will be a great
+success." And yet, in the teeth of this, from a man who knew all
+about it, I persisted in going to Beverley!
+
+The borough, which returned two members, had long been represented
+by Sir Henry Edwards, of whom, I think, I am justified in saying
+that he had contracted a close intimacy with it for the sake of
+the seat. There had been many contests, many petitions, many void
+elections, many members, but, through it all, Sir Henry had kept
+his seat, if not with permanence, yet with a fixity of tenure next
+door to permanence. I fancy that with a little management between
+the parties the borough might at this time have returned a member
+of each colour quietly; but there were spirits there who did not
+love political quietude, and it was at last decided that there
+should be two Liberal and two Conservative candidates. Sir Henry
+was joined by a young man of fortune in quest of a seat, and I was
+grouped with Mr. Maxwell, the eldest son of Lord Herries, a Scotch
+Roman Catholic peer, who lives in the neighbourhood.
+
+When the time came I went down to canvass, and spent, I think, the
+most wretched fortnight of my manhood. In the first place, I was
+subject to a bitter tyranny from grinding vulgar tyrants. They were
+doing what they could, or said that they were doing so, to secure
+me a seat in Parliament, and I was to be in their hands, at any
+rate, the period of my candidature. On one day both of us, Mr.
+Maxwell and I, wanted to go out hunting. We proposed to ourselves
+but the one holiday during this period of intense labour; but I
+was assured, as was he also, by a publican who was working for us,
+that if we committed such a crime he and all Beverley would desert
+us. From morning to evening every day I was taken round the lanes
+and by-ways of that uninteresting town, canvassing every voter,
+exposed to the rain, up to my knees in slush, and utterly unable
+to assume that air of triumphant joy with which a jolly, successful
+candidate should he invested. At night, every night I had to
+speak somewhere,--which was bad; and to listen to the speaking of
+others,--which was much worse. When, on one Sunday, I proposed to
+go to the Minster Church, I was told that was quite useless, as
+the Church party were all certain to support Sir Henry! "Indeed,"
+said the publican, my tyrant, "he goes there in a kind of official
+profession, and you had better not allow yourself to be seen in the
+same place." So I stayed away and omitted my prayers. No Church of
+England church in Beverley would on such an occasion have welcomed
+a Liberal candidate. I felt myself to be a kind of pariah in the
+borough, to whom was opposed all that was pretty, and all that was
+nice, and all that was--ostensibly--good.
+
+But perhaps my strongest sense of discomfort arose from the conviction
+that my political ideas were all leather and prunella to the men
+whose votes I was soliciting. They cared nothing for my doctrines,
+and could not be made to understand that I should have any. I had
+been brought to Beverley either to beat Sir Henry Edwards,--which,
+however, no one probably thought to be feasible,--or to cause him
+the greatest possible amount of trouble, inconvenience, and expense.
+There were, indeed, two points on which a portion of my wished-for
+supporters seemed to have opinions, and on both these two points
+I was driven by my opinions to oppose them. Some were anxious for
+the Ballot,--which had not then become law,--and some desired the
+Permissive Bill. I hated, and do hate, both these measures, thinking
+it to be unworthy of a great people to free itself from the evil
+results of vicious conduct by unmanly restraints. Undue influence
+on voters is a great evil from which this country had already done
+much to emancipate itself by extending electoral divisions and by
+an increase of independent feeling. These, I thought, and not secret
+voting, were the weapons by which electoral intimidation should be
+overcome. And as for drink, I believe in no Parlimentary restraint;
+but I do believe in the gradual effect of moral teaching and
+education. But a Liberal, to do any good at Beverley, should have
+been able to swallow such gnats as those. I would swallow nothing,
+and was altogether the wrong man.
+
+I knew, from the commencement of my candidature, how it would be.
+Of course that well-trained gentleman who condescended to act as
+my agent, had understood the case, and I ought to have taken his
+thoroughly kind advice. He had seen it all, and had told himself
+that it was wrong that one so innocent in such ways as I, so
+utterly unable to fight such a battle, should be carried down into
+Yorkshire merely to spend money and to be annoyed. He could not
+have said more than he did say, and I suffered for my obstinacy. Of
+course I was not elected. Sir Henry Edwards and his comrade became
+members for Beverley, and I was at the bottom of the poll. I paid
+(pounds)400 for my expenses, and then returned to London.
+
+My friendly agent in his raillery had of course exaggerated the
+cost. He had, when I arrived at Beverley, asked me for a cheque
+for (pounds)400, and told me that that sum would suffice. It did suffice.
+How it came to pass that exactly that sum should be required I never
+knew, but such was the case. Then there came a petition,--not from
+me, but from the town. The inquiry was made, the two gentlemen
+were unseated, the borough was disfranchised, Sir Henry Edwards
+was put on his trial for some kind of Parliamentary offence and
+was acquitted. In this way Beverley's privilege as a borough and
+my Parliamentary ambition were brought to an end at the same time.
+
+When I knew the result I did not altogether regret it. It may be
+that Beverley might have been brought to political confusion and
+Sir Henry Edwards relegated to private life without the expenditure
+of my hard-earned money, and without that fortnight of misery; but
+connecting the things together, as it was natural that I should
+do, I did flatter myself that I had done some good. It had seemed
+to me that nothing could be worse, nothing more unpatriotic, nothing
+more absolutely opposed to the system of representative government,
+than the time-honoured practices of the borough of Beverley. It had
+come to pass that political cleanliness was odious to the citizens.
+There was something grand in the scorn with which a leading Liberal
+there turned up his nose at me when I told him that there should
+be no bribery, no treating, not even a pot of beer on one side.
+It was a matter for study to see how at Beverley politics were
+appreciated because they might subserve electoral purposes, and
+how little it was understood that electoral purposes, which are in
+themselves a nuisance, should be endured in order that they may
+subserve politics. And then the time, the money, the mental energy,
+which had been expended in making the borough a secure seat for
+a gentleman who had realised the idea that it would become him to
+be a member of Parliament! This use of the borough seemed to be
+realised and approved in the borough generally. The inhabitants
+had taught themselves to think that it was for such purposes that
+boroughs were intended! To have assisted in putting an end to this,
+even in one town, was to a certain extent a satisfaction.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+THE AMERICAN POSTAL TREATY--THE QUESTION 0F COPYRIGHT WITH
+AMERICA--FOUR MORE NOVELS
+
+
+
+
+In the spring of 1868,--before the affair of Beverley, which,
+as being the first direct result of my resignation of office, has
+been brought in a little out of its turn,--I was requested to go
+over to the United States and make a postal treaty at Washington.
+This, as I had left the service, I regarded as a compliment, and
+of course I went. It was my third visit to America, and I have made
+two since. As far as the Post Office work was concerned, it was
+very far from being agreeable. I found myself located at Washington,
+a place I do not love, and was harassed by delays, annoyed by
+incompetence, and opposed by what I felt to be personal and not
+national views. I had to deal with two men,--with one who was a
+working officer of the American Post Office, than whom I have never
+met a more zealous, or, as far as I could judge, a more honest
+public servant. He had his views and I had mine, each of us having
+at heart the welfare of the service in regard to his own country,--each
+of us also having certain orders which we were bound to obey. But
+the other gentleman, who was in rank the superior,--whose executive
+position was dependent on his official status, as is the case with
+our own Ministers,--did not recommend himself to me equally. He
+would make appointments with me and then not keep them, which at
+last offended me so grievously, that I declared at the Washington
+Post Office that if this treatment were continued, I would write
+home to say that any further action on my part was impossible. I
+think I should have done so had it not occurred to me that I might
+in this way serve his purpose rather than my own, or the purposes
+of those who had sent me. The treaty, however, was at last made,--the
+purport of which was, that everything possible should be done, at
+a heavy expenditure on the part of England, to expedite the mails
+from England to America, and that nothing should be done by America
+to expedite the mails from thence to us. The expedition I believe
+to be now equal both ways; but it could not be maintained as it is
+without the payment of a heavy subsidy from Great Britain, whereas
+no subsidy is paid by the States. [Footnote: This was a state of
+things which may probably have appeared to American politicians
+to be exactly that which they should try to obtain. The whole
+arrangement has again been altered since the time of which I have
+spoken.]
+
+I had also a commission from the Foreign Office, for which I had
+asked, to make an effort on behalf of an international copyright
+between the United States and Great Britain,--the want of which is
+the one great impediment to pecuniary success which still stands
+in the way of successful English authors. I cannot say that I have
+never had a shilling of American money on behalf of reprints of my
+work; but I have been conscious of no such payment. Having found
+many years ago--in 1861, when I made a struggle on the subject,
+being then in the States, the details of which are sufficiently
+amusing [Footnote: In answer to a question from myself, a certain
+American publisher--he who usually reprinted my works--promised me
+that IF ANY OTHER AMERICAN PUBLISHER REPUBLISHED MY WORK ON AMERICA
+BEFORE HE HAD DONE SO, he would not bring out a competing edition,
+though there would be no law to hinder him. I then entered into an
+agreement with another American publisher, stipulating to supply
+him with early sheets; and he stipulating to supply me a certain
+royalty on his sales, and to supply me with accounts half-yearly.
+I sent the sheets with energetic punctuality, and the work was
+brought out with equal energy and precision--by my old American
+publishers. The gentleman who made the promise had not broken his
+word. No other American edition had come out before his. I never
+got any account, and, of course, never received a dollar.]--that
+I could not myself succeed in dealing with American booksellers, I
+have sold all foreign right to the English publishers; and though
+I do not know that I have raised my price against them on that
+score, I may in this way have had some indirect advantage from
+the American market. But I do know that what the publishers have
+received here is very trifling. I doubt whether Messrs. Chapman &
+Hall, my present publishers, get for early sheets sent to the States
+as much as 5 per cent. on the price they pay me for my manuscript.
+But the American readers are more numerous than the English, and
+taking them all through, are probably more wealthy. If I can get
+(pounds)1000 for a book here (exclusive of their market), I ought to be
+able to get as much there. If a man supply 600 customers with shoes
+in place of 300, there is no question as to such result. Why not,
+then, if I can supply 60,000 readers instead of 30,000?
+
+I fancied that I knew that the opposition to an international
+copyright was by no means an American feeling, but was confined to
+the bosoms of a few interested Americans. All that I did and heard
+in reference to the subject on this further visit,--and having
+a certain authority from the British Secretary of State with me I
+could hear and do something,--altogether confirmed me in this view.
+I have no doubt that if I could poll American readers, or American
+senators,--or even American representatives, if the polling could
+be unbiassed,--or American booksellers, [Footnote: I might also say
+American publishers, if I might count them by the number of heads,
+and not by the amount of work done by the firms.] that an assent
+to an international copyright would be the result. The state of
+things as it is is crushing to American authors, as the publishers
+will not pay them a liberal scale, knowing that they can supply
+their customers with modern English literature without paying for
+it. The English amount of production so much exceeds the American,
+that the rate at which the former can be published rules the
+market. it is equally injurious to American booksellers,--except
+to two or three of the greatest houses. No small man can now acquire
+the exclusive right of printing and selling an English book. If
+such a one attempt it, the work is printed instantly by one of the
+leviathans,--who alone are the gainers. The argument of course is,
+that the American readers are the gainers,--that as they can get
+for nothing the use of certain property, they would be cutting their
+own throats were they to pass a law debarring themselves from the
+power of such appropriation. In this argument all idea of honesty
+is thrown to the winds. It is not that they do not approve of
+a system of copyright,--as many great men have disapproved,--for
+their own law of copyright is as stringent as is ours. A bold
+assertion is made that they like to appropriate the goods of other
+people; and that, as in this case, they can do so with impunity,
+they will continue to do so. But the argument, as far as I have been
+able to judge, comes not from the people, but from the bookselling
+leviathans, and from those politicians whom the leviathans are able
+to attach to their interests. The ordinary American purchaser is
+not much affected by slight variations in price. He is at any rate
+too high-hearted to be affected by the prospect of such variation.
+It is the man who wants to make money, not he who fears that he may
+be called upon to spend it, who controls such matters as this in
+the United States. It is the large speculator who becomes powerful
+in the lobbies of the House, and understands how wise it may
+be to incur a great expenditure either in the creation of a great
+business, or in protecting that which he has created from competition.
+Nothing was done in 1868,--and nothing has been done since (up to
+1876). A Royal Commission on the law of copyright is now about to
+sit in this country, of which I have consented to be a member; and
+the question must then be handled, though nothing done by a Royal
+Commission here can effect American legislators. But I do believe
+that if the measure be consistently and judiciously urged, the
+enemies to it in the States will gradually be overcome. Some years
+since we had some quasi private meetings, under the presidency of
+Lord Stanhope, in Mr. John Murray's dining-room, on the subject of
+international copyright. At one of these I discussed this matter of
+American international copyright with Charles Dickens, who strongly
+declared his conviction that nothing would induce an American to
+give up the power he possesses of pirating British literature. But
+he was a man who, seeing clearly what was before him, would not
+realise the possibility of shifting views. Because in this matter
+the American decision had been, according to his thinking, dishonest,
+therefore no other than dishonest decision was to be expected from
+Americans. Against that idea I protested, and now protest. American
+dishonesty is rampant; but it is rampant only among a few. It
+is the great misfortune of the community that those few have been
+able to dominate so large a portion of the population among which
+all men can vote, but so few can understand for what they are
+voting.
+
+Since this was written the Commission on the law of copyright has
+sat and made its report. With the great body of it I agree, and
+could serve no reader by alluding here at length to matters which
+are discussed there. But in regard to this question of international
+copyright with the United States, I think that we were incorrect
+in the expression of an opinion that fair justice,--or justice
+approaching to fairness,--is now done by American publishers to
+English authors by payments made by them for early sheets. I have
+just found that (pounds)20 was paid to my publisher in England for the
+use of the early sheets of a novel for which I received (pounds)1600 in
+England. When asked why he accepted so little, he assured me that
+the firm with whom he dealt would not give more. "Why not go to
+another firm?" I asked. No other firm would give a dollar, because
+no other firm would care to run counter to that great firm which
+had assumed to itself the right of publishing my books. I soon after
+received a copy of my own novel in the American form, and found
+that it was published for 7 1/2d. That a great sale was expected
+can be argued from the fact that without a great sale the paper and
+printing necessary for the republication of a three-volume novel
+could not be supplied. Many thousand copies must have been sold.
+But from these the author received not one shilling. I need hardly
+point out that the sum of (pounds)20 would not do more than compensate
+the publisher for his trouble in making the bargain. The publisher
+here no doubt might have refused to supply the early sheets, but
+he had no means of exacting a higher price than that offered. I
+mention the circumstance here because it has been boasted, on behalf
+of the American publishers, that though there is no international
+copyright, they deal so liberally with English authors as to make
+it unnecessary that the English author should be so protected.
+With the fact of the (pounds)20 just brought to my knowledge, and with the
+copy of my book published at 7 1/2d. now in my hands, I feel that
+an international copyright is very necessary for my protection.
+
+They among Englishmen who best love and most admire the United
+States, have felt themselves tempted to use the strongest language
+in denouncing the sins of Americans. Who can but love their personal
+generosity, their active and far-seeking philanthropy, their love
+of education, their hatred of ignorance, the general convictions
+in the minds of all of them that a man should be enabled to walk
+upright, fearing no one and conscious that he is responsible for
+his own actions? In what country have grander efforts been made by
+private munificence to relieve the sufferings of humanity? Where
+can the English traveller find any more anxious to assist him than
+the normal American, when once the American shall have found the
+Englishman to be neither sullen nor fastidious? Who, lastly, is
+so much an object of heart-felt admiration of the American man and
+the American woman as the well-mannered and well-educated Englishwoman
+or Englishman? These are the ideas which I say spring uppermost
+in the minds of the unprejudiced English traveller as he makes
+acquaintance with these near relatives. Then he becomes cognisant
+of their official doings, of their politics, of their municipal
+scandals, of their great ring-robberies, of their lobbyings and
+briberies, and the infinite baseness of their public life. There
+at the top of everything he finds the very men who are the least
+fit to occupy high places. American public dishonesty is so glaring
+that the very friends he has made in the country are not slow
+to acknowledge it,--speaking of public life as a thing apart from
+their own existence, as a state of dirt in which it would be an
+insult to suppose that they are concerned! In the midst of it all
+the stranger, who sees so much that he hates and so much that he
+loves, hardly knows how to express himself.
+
+"It is not enough that you are personally clean," he says, with
+what energy and courage he can command,--"not enough though the
+clean outnumber the foul as greatly as those gifted with eyesight
+outnumber the blind, if you that can see allow the blind to lead
+you. It is not by the private lives of the millions that the outside
+world will judge you, but by the public career of those units whose
+venality is allowed to debase the name of your country. There never
+was plainer proof given than is given here, that it is the duty of
+every honest citizen to look after the honour of his State."
+
+Personally, I have to own that I have met Americans,--men, but more
+frequently women,--who have in all respects come up to my ideas of
+what men and women should be: energetic, having opinions of their
+own, quick in speech, with some dash of sarcasm at their command,
+always intelligent, sweet to look at (I speak of the women), fond
+of pleasure, and each with a personality of his or her own which
+makes no effort necessary on my own part in remembering the difference
+between Mrs. Walker and Mrs. Green, or between Mr. Smith and Mr.
+Johnson. They have faults. They are self-conscious, and are too
+prone to prove by ill-concealed struggles that they are as good as
+you,--whereas you perhaps have been long acknowledging to yourself
+that they are much better. And there is sometimes a pretence at
+personal dignity among those who think themselves to have risen
+high in the world which is deliciously ludicrous. I remember two
+old gentlemen,--the owners of names which stand deservedly high
+in public estimation,--whose deportment at a public funeral turned
+the occasion into one for irresistible comedy. They are suspicious
+at first, and fearful of themselves. They lack that simplicity of
+manners which with us has become a habit from our childhood. But
+they are never fools, and I think that they are seldom ill-natured.
+
+There is a woman, of whom not to speak in a work purporting to be
+a memoir of my own life would be to omit all allusion to one of
+the chief pleasures which has graced my later years. In the last
+fifteen years she has been, out of my family, my most chosen friend.
+She is a ray of light to me, from which I can always strike a spark
+by thinking of her. I do not know that I should please her or do
+any good by naming her. But not to allude to her in these pages
+would amount almost to a falsehood. I could not write truly of
+myself without saying that such a friend had been vouchsafed to me.
+I trust she may live to read the words I have now written, and to
+wipe away a tear as she thinks of my feeling while I write them.
+
+I was absent on this occasion something over three months, and
+on my return I went back with energy to my work at the St. Paul's
+Magazine. The first novel in it from my own pen was called Phineas
+Finn, in which I commenced a series of semi-political tales. As I
+was debarred from expressing my opinions in the House of Commons,
+I took this method of declaring myself. And as I could not take my
+seat on those benches where I might possibly have been shone upon
+by the Speaker's eye, I had humbly to crave his permission for a
+seat in the gallery, so that I might thus become conversant with
+the ways and doings of the House in which some of my scenes were
+to be placed. The Speaker was very gracious, and gave me a running
+order for, I think, a couple of months. It was enough, at any rate,
+to enable me often to be very tired,--and, as I have been assured
+by members, to talk of the proceedings almost as well as though
+Fortune had enabled me to fall asleep within the House itself.
+
+In writing Phineas Finn, and also some other novels which followed
+it, I was conscious that I could not make a tale pleasing chiefly,
+or perhaps in any part, by politics. If I write politics for my
+own sake, I must put in love and intrigue, social incidents, with
+perhaps a dash of sport, for the benefit of my readers. In this
+way I think I made my political hero interesting. It was certainly
+a blunder to take him from Ireland--into which I was led by the
+circumstance that I created the scheme of the book during a visit
+to Ireland. There was nothing to be gained by the peculiarity, and
+there was an added difficulty in obtaining sympathy and affection
+for a politician belonging to a nationality whose politics are not
+respected in England. But in spite of this Phineas succeeded. It
+was not a brilliant success,--because men and women not conversant
+with political matters could not care much for a hero who spent
+so much of his time either in the House of Commons or in a public
+office. But the men who would have lived with Phineas Finn read the
+book, and the women who would have lived with Lady Laura Standish
+read it also. As this was what I had intended, I was contented. It
+is all fairly good except the ending,--as to which till I got to
+it I made no provision. As I fully intended to bring my hero again
+into the world, I was wrong to marry him to a simple pretty Irish
+girl, who could only be felt as an encumbrance on such return. When
+he did return I had no alternative but to kill the simple pretty
+Irish girl, which was an unpleasant and awkward necessity.
+
+In writing Phineas Finn I had constantly before me the necessity
+of progression in character,--of marking the changes in men and
+women which would naturally be produced by the lapse of years. In
+most novels the writer can have no such duty, as the period occupied
+is not long enough to allow of the change of which I speak. In
+Ivanhoe, all the incidents of which are included in less than a
+month, the characters should be, as they are, consistent throughout.
+Novelists who have undertaken to write the life of a hero or heroine
+have generally considered their work completed at the interesting
+period of marriage, and have contented themselves with the advance
+in taste and manners which are common to all boys and girls as
+they become men and women. Fielding, no doubt, did more than this
+in Tom Jones, which is one of the greatest novels in the English
+language, for there he has shown how a noble and sanguine nature
+may fall away under temptation and be again strengthened and made
+to stand upright. But I do not think that novelists have often
+set before themselves the state of progressive change,--nor should
+I have done it, had I not found myself so frequently allured back
+to my old friends. So much of my inner life was passed in their
+company, that I was continually asking myself how this woman would
+act when this or that event had passed over her head, or how that
+man would carry himself when his youth had become manhood, or
+his manhood declined to old age. It was in regard to the old Duke
+of Omnium, of his nephew and heir, and of his heir's wife, Lady
+Glencora, that I was anxious to carry out this idea; but others added
+themselves to my mind as I went on, and I got round me a circle of
+persons as to whom I knew not only their present characters, but
+how those characters were to be affected by years and circumstances.
+The happy motherly life of Violet Effingham, which was due to the
+girl's honest but long-restrained love; the tragic misery of Lady
+Laura, which was equally due to the sale she made of herself in her
+wretched marriage; and the long suffering but final success of the
+hero, of which he had deserved the first by his vanity, and the
+last by his constant honesty, had been foreshadowed to me from
+the first. As to the incidents of the story, the circumstances by
+which these personages were to be affected, I knew nothing. They
+were created for the most part as they were described. I never
+could arrange a set of events before me. But the evil and the good
+of my puppets, and how the evil would always lead to evil, and the
+good produce good,--that was clear to me as the stars on a summer
+night.
+
+Lady Laura Standish is the best character in Phineas Finn and its
+sequel Phineas Redux,--of which I will speak here together. They
+are, in fact, but one novel though they were brought out at a
+considerable interval of time and in different form. The first was
+commenced in the St. Paul's Magazine in 1867, and the other was
+brought out in the Graphic in 1873. In this there was much bad
+arrangement, as I had no right to expect that novel readers would
+remember the characters of a story after an interval of six years,
+or that any little interest which might have been taken in the
+career of my hero could then have been renewed. I do not know that
+such interest was renewed. But I found that the sequel enjoyed the
+same popularity as the former part, and among the same class of
+readers. Phineas, and Lady Laura, and Lady Chiltern--as Violet
+had become--and the old duke,--whom I killed gracefully, and the
+new duke, and the young duchess, either kept their old friends or
+made new friends for themselves. Phineas Finn, I certainly think,
+was successful from first to last. I am aware, however, that there
+was nothing in it to touch the heart like the abasement of Lady
+Mason when confessing her guilt to her old lover, or any approach
+in delicacy of delineation to the character of Mr. Crawley.
+
+Phineas Finn, the first part of the story, was completed in
+May, 1867. In June and July I wrote Linda Tressel for Blackwood's
+Magazine, of which I have already spoken. In September and October
+I wrote a short novel, called The Golden Lion of Granpere, which
+was intended also for Blackwood,--with a view of being published
+anonymously; but Mr. Blackwood did not find the arrangement to be
+profitable, and the story remained on my hands, unread and unthought
+of, for a few years. It appeared subsequently in Good Words. It
+was written on the model of Nina Balatka and Linda Tressel, but
+is very inferior to either of them. In November of the same year,
+1867, I began a very long novel, which I called He Knew He Was
+Right, and which was brought out by Mr. Virtue, the proprietor of
+the St. Paul's Magazine, in sixpenny numbers, every week. I do not
+know that in any literary effort I ever fell more completely short
+of my own intention than in this story. It was my purpose to create
+sympathy for the unfortunate man who, while endeavouring to do
+his duty to all around him, should be led constantly astray by his
+unwillingness to submit his own judgment to the opinion of others.
+The man is made to be unfortunate enough, and the evil which he
+does is apparent. So far I did not fail, but the sympathy has not
+been created yet. I look upon the story as being nearly altogether
+bad. It is in part redeemed by certain scenes in the house and
+vicinity of an old maid in Exeter. But a novel which in its main
+parts is bad cannot, in truth, be redeemed by the vitality of
+subordinate characters.
+
+This work was finished while I was at Washington in the spring of
+1868, and on the day after I finished it, I commenced The Vicar of
+Bullhampton, a novel which I wrote for Messrs. Bradbury & Evans.
+This I completed in November, 1868, and at once began Sir Harry
+Hotspur of Humblethwaite, a story which I was still writing at the
+close of the year. I look upon these two years, 1867 and 1868, of
+which I have given a somewhat confused account in this and the two
+preceding chapters, as the busiest in my life. I had indeed left
+the Post Office, but though I had left it I had been employed by
+it during a considerable portion of the time. I had established the
+St. Paul's Magazine, in reference to which I had read an enormous
+amount of manuscript, and for which, independently of my novels, I
+had written articles almost monthly. I had stood for Beverley and
+had made many speeches. I had also written five novels, and had
+hunted three times a week during each of the winters. And how happy
+I was with it all! I had suffered at Beverley, but I had suffered
+as a part of the work which I was desirous of doing, and I had gained
+my experience. I had suffered at Washington with that wretched
+American Postmaster, and with the mosquitoes, not having been able
+to escape from that capital till July; but all that had added to
+the activity of my life. I had often groaned over those manuscripts;
+but I had read them, considering it--perhaps foolishly--to be a
+part of my duty as editor. And though in the quick production of my
+novels I had always ringing in my ears that terrible condemnation
+and scorn produced by the great man in Paternoster Row, I
+was nevertheless proud of having done so much. I always had a pen
+in my hand. Whether crossing the seas, or fighting with American
+officials, or tramping about the streets of Beverley, I could do a
+little, and generally more than a little. I had long since convinced
+myself that in such work as mine the great secret consisted
+in acknowledging myself to be bound to rules of labour similar to
+those which an artisan or a mechanic is forced to obey. A shoemaker
+when he has finished one pair of shoes does not sit down and
+contemplate his work in idle satisfaction. "There is my pair of
+shoes finished at last! What a pair of shoes it is!" The shoemaker
+who so indulged himself would be without wages half his time. It
+is the same with a professional writer of books. An author may of
+course want time to study a new subject. He will at any rate assure
+himself that there is some such good reason why he should pause.
+He does pause, and will be idle for a month or two while he tells
+himself how beautiful is that last pair of shoes which he has
+finished! Having thought much of all this, and having made up my
+mind that I could be really happy only when I was at work, I had
+now quite accustomed myself to begin a second pair as soon as the
+first was out of my hands.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+"THE VICAR OF BULLHAMPTON"--"SIR HARRY HOTSPUR"--"AN EDITOR'S
+TALES"--"CAESAR"
+
+
+
+
+In 1869 I was called on to decide, in council with my two boys and
+their mother, what should be their destination in life. In June of
+that year the elder, who was then twenty-three, was called to the
+Bar; and as he had gone through the regular courses of lecturing
+tuition and study, it might be supposed that his course was already
+decided. But, just as he was called, there seemed to be an opening
+for him in another direction; and this, joined to the terrible
+uncertainty of the Bar, the terror of which was not in his case
+lessened by any peculiar forensic aptitudes, induced us to sacrifice
+dignity in quest of success. Mr. Frederic Chapman, who was then
+the sole representative of the publishing house known as Messrs.
+Chapman & Hall, wanted a partner, and my son Henry went into the
+firm. He remained there three years and a half; but he did not like
+it, nor do I think he made a very good publisher. At any rate he
+left the business with perhaps more pecuniary success than might
+have been expected from the short period of his labours, and has
+since taken himself to literature as a profession. Whether he will
+work at it so hard as his father, and write as many books, may be
+doubted.
+
+My second son, Frederic, had very early in life gone to Australia,
+having resolved on a colonial career when he found that boys who did
+not grow so fast as he did got above him at school. This departure
+was a great pang to his mother and me; but it was permitted on the
+understanding that he was to come back when he was twenty-one, and
+then decide whether he would remain in England or return to the
+Colonies. In the winter of 1868 he did come to England, and had a
+season's hunting in the old country; but there was no doubt in his
+own mind as to his settling in Australia. His purpose was fixed,
+and in the spring of 1869 he made his second journey out. As I
+have since that date made two journeys to see him,--of one of which
+at any rate I shall have to speak, as I wrote a long book on the
+Australasian Colonies,--I will have an opportunity of saying a word
+or two further on of him and his doings.
+
+The Vicar of Bullhampton was written in 1868 for publication in Once
+a Week, a periodical then belonging to Messrs. Bradbury & Evans.
+It was not to come out till 1869, and I, as was my wont had made
+my terms long previously to the proposed date. I had made my terms
+and written my story and sent it to the publisher long before it
+was wanted; and so far my mind was at rest. The date fixed was the
+first of July, which date had been named in accordance with the
+exigencies of the editor of the periodical. An author who writes
+for these publications is bound to suit himself to these exigencies,
+and can generally do so without personal loss or inconvenience, if
+he will only take time by the forelock. With all the pages that I
+have written for magazines I have never been a day late, nor have
+I ever caused inconvenience by sending less or more matter than I
+had stipulated to supply. But I have sometimes found myself compelled
+to suffer by the irregularity of others. I have endeavoured to
+console myself by reflecting that such must ever be the fate of
+virtue. The industrious must feed the idle. The honest and simple
+will always be the prey of the cunning and fraudulent. The punctual,
+who keep none waiting for them, are doomed to wait perpetually for
+the unpunctual. But these earthly sufferers know that they are making
+their way heavenwards,--and their oppressors their way elsewards.
+If the former reflection does not suffice for consolation, the
+deficiency is made up by the second. I was terribly aggrieved on
+the matter of the publication of my new Vicar, and had to think
+very much of the ultimate rewards of punctuality and its opposite.
+About the end of March, 1869, I got a dolorous letter from the
+editor. All the Once a Week people were in a terrible trouble. They
+had bought the right of translating one of Victor Hugo's modern
+novels, L'Homme Qui Rit; they bad fixed a date, relying on positive
+pledges from the French publishers; and now the great French author
+had postponed his work from week to week and from month to month,
+and it had so come to pass that the Frenchman's grinning hero would
+have to appear exactly at the same time as my clergyman. Was it
+not quite apparent to me, the editor asked, that Once a Week could
+not hold the two? Would I allow my clergyman to make his appearance
+in the Gentleman's Magazine instead?
+
+My disgust at this proposition was, I think, chiefly due to Victor
+Hugo's latter novels, which I regard as pretentious and untrue to
+nature. To this perhaps was added some feeling of indignation that
+I should be asked to give way to a Frenchman. The Frenchman had
+broken his engagement. He had failed to have his work finished by
+the stipulated time. From week to week and from month to month he
+had put off the fulfilment of his duty. And because of these laches
+on his part,--on the part of this sententious French Radical,--I was
+to be thrown over! Virtue sometimes finds it difficult to console
+herself even with the double comfort. I would not come out in the
+Gentleman's Magazine, and as the Grinning Man could not be got out
+of the way, by novel was published in separate numbers.
+
+The same thing has occurred to me more than once since. "You no
+doubt are regular," a publisher has said to me, "but Mr. ---- is
+irregular. He has thrown me out, and I cannot be ready for you till
+three months after the time named." In these emergencies I have
+given perhaps half what was wanted, and have refused to give the
+other half. I have endeavoured to fight my own battle fairly, and
+at the same time not to make myself unnecessarily obstinate. But
+the circumstances have impressed on my mind the great need there is
+that men engaged in literature should feel themselves to be bound
+to their industry as men know that they are bound in other callings.
+There does exist, I fear, a feeling that authors, because they are
+authors, are relieved from the necessity of paying attention to
+everyday rules. A writer, if he be making (pounds)800 a year, does not think
+himself bound to live modestly on (pounds)600, and put by the remainder
+for his wife and children. He does not understand that he should
+sit down at his desk at a certain hour. He imagines that publishers
+and booksellers should keep all their engagements with him to
+the letter;--but that he, as a brain-worker, and conscious of the
+subtle nature of the brain, should be able to exempt himself from
+bonds when it suits him. He has his own theory about inspiration
+which will not always come,--especially will not come if wine-cups
+overnight have been too deep. All this has ever been odious to
+me, as being unmanly. A man may be frail in health, and therefore
+unable to do as he has contracted in whatever grade of life. He who
+has been blessed with physical strength to work day by day, year
+by year--as has been my case--should pardon deficiencies caused
+by sickness or infirmity. I may in this respect have been a little
+hard on others,--and, if so, I here record my repentance. But
+I think that no allowance should be given to claims for exemption
+from punctuality, made if not absolutely on the score still with
+the conviction of intellectual superiority.
+
+The Vicar of Bullhampton was written chiefly with the object of
+exciting not only pity but sympathy for fallen woman, and of raising
+a feeling of forgiveness for such in the minds of other women. I
+could not venture to make this female the heroine of my story. To
+have made her a heroine at all would have been directly opposed
+to my purpose. It was necessary therefore that she should be
+a second-rate personage in the tale;--but it was with reference to
+her life that the tale was written, and the hero and the heroine with
+their belongings are all subordinate. To this novel I affixed a
+preface,--in doing which I was acting in defiance of my old-established
+principle. I do not know that any one read it; but as I wish to
+have it read, I will insert it here again:--
+
+
+"I have introduced in the Vicar of Bullhampton the character of a
+girl whom I will call,--for want of a truer word that shall not in
+its truth be offensive,--a castaway. I have endeavoured to endow
+her with qualities that may create sympathy, and I have brought
+her back at last from degradation, at least to decency. I have not
+married her to a wealthy lover, and I have endeavoured to explain
+that though there was possible to her a way out of perdition, still
+things could not be with her as they would have been had she not
+fallen.
+
+"There arises, of course, the question whether a novelist, who
+professes to write for the amusement of the young of both sexes,
+should allow himself to bring upon his stage a character such as
+that of Carry Brattle. It is not long since,--it is well within the
+memory of the author,--that the very existence of such a condition
+of life as was hers, was supposed to be unknown to our sisters and
+daughters, and was, in truth, unknown to many of them. Whether that
+ignorance was good may be questioned; but that it exists no longer
+is beyond question. Then arises the further question,--how far the
+conditions of such unfortunates should be made a matter of concern
+to the sweet young hearts of those whose delicacy and cleanliness
+of thought is a matter of pride to so many of us. Cannot women,
+who are good, pity the sufferings of the vicious, and do something
+perhaps to mitigate and shorten them without contamination from the
+vice? It will be admitted probably by most men who have thought
+upon the subject that no fault among us is punished so heavily
+as that fault, often so light in itself but so terrible in its
+consequences to the less faulty of the two offenders, by which a
+woman falls. All of her own sex is against her, and all those of
+the other sex in whose veins runs the blood which she is thought
+to have contaminated, and who, of nature, would befriend her, were
+her trouble any other than it is.
+
+"She is what she is, and she remains in her abject, pitiless,
+unutterable misery, because this sentence of the world has placed
+her beyond the helping hand of Love and Friendship. It may be said,
+no doubt, that the severity of this judgment acts as a protection
+to female virtue,--deterring, as all known punishments do deter, from
+vice. But this punishment, which is horrible beyond the conception
+of those who have not regarded it closely, is not known beforehand.
+Instead of the punishment, there is seen a false glitter of gaudy
+life,--a glitter which is damnably false,--and which, alas I has
+been more often portrayed in glowing colours, for the injury of
+young girls, than have those horrors which ought to deter, with
+the dark shadowings which belong to them.
+
+"To write in fiction of one so fallen as the noblest of her sex,
+as one to be rewarded because of her weakness, as one whose life
+is, happy, bright, and glorious, is certainly to allure to vice
+and misery. But it may perhaps be possible that if the matter be
+handled with truth to life, some girl, who would have been thoughtless,
+may be made thoughtful, or some parent's heart may be softened."
+
+
+Those were my ideas when I conceived the story, and with that
+feeling I described the characters of Carry Brattle and of her
+family. I have not introduced her lover on the scene, nor have I
+presented her to the reader in the temporary enjoyment of any of
+those fallacious luxuries, the longing for which is sometimes more
+seductive to evil than love itself. She is introduced as a poor
+abased creature, who hardly knows how false were her dreams, with
+very little of the Magdalene about her--because though there may
+be Magdalenes they are not often found--but with an intense horror
+of the sufferings of her position. Such being her condition, will
+they who naturally are her friends protect her? The vicar who has
+taken her by the hand endeavours to excite them to charity; but
+father, and brother, and sister are alike hard-hearted. It had
+been my purpose at first that the hand of every Brattle should be
+against her; but my own heart was too soft to enable me to make
+the mother cruel,--or the unmarried sister who had been the early
+companion of the forlorn one.
+
+As regards all the Brattles, the story is, I think, well told.
+The characters are true, and the scenes at the mill are in keeping
+with human nature. For the rest of the book I have little to say.
+It is not very bad, and it certainly is not very good. As I have
+myself forgotten what the heroine does and says--except that she
+tumbles into a ditch--I cannot expect that any one else should
+remember her. But I have forgotten nothing that was done or said
+by any of the Brattles.
+
+The question brought in argument is one of fearful importance. As
+to the view to be taken first, there can, I think, be no doubt. In
+regard to a sin common to the two sexes, almost all the punishment
+and all the disgrace is heaped upon the one who in nine cases out
+of ten has been the least sinful. And the punishment inflicted is
+of such a nature that it hardly allows room for repentance. How is
+the woman to return to decency to whom no decent door is opened?
+Then comes the answer: It is to the severity of the punishment alone
+that we can trust to keep women from falling. Such is the argument
+used in favour of the existing practice, and such the excuse
+given for their severity by women who will relax nothing of their
+harshness. But in truth the severity of the punishment is not known
+beforehand; it is not in the least understood by women in general,
+except by those who suffer it. The gaudy dirt, the squalid plenty,
+the contumely of familiarity, the absence of all good words and all
+good things, the banishment from honest labour, the being compassed
+round with lies, the flaunting glare of fictitious revelry, the
+weary pavement, the horrid slavery to some horrid tyrant,--and then
+the quick depreciation of that one ware of beauty, the substituted
+paint, garments bright without but foul within like painted sepulchres,
+hunger, thirst, and strong drink, life without a hope, without the
+certainty even of a morrow's breakfast, utterly friendless, disease,
+starvation, and a quivering fear of that coming hell which still
+can hardly be worse than all that is suffered here! This is the
+life to which we doom our erring daughters, when because of their
+error we close our door upon them! But for our erring sons we find
+pardon easily enough.
+
+Of course there are houses of refuge, from which it has been
+thought expedient to banish everything pleasant, as though the only
+repentance to which we can afford to give a place must necessarily
+be one of sackcloth and ashes. It is hardly thus that we can hope
+to recall those to decency who, if they are to be recalled at
+all, must be induced to obey the summons before they have reached
+the last stage of that misery which I have attempted to describe.
+To me the mistake which we too often make seems to be this,--that
+the girl who has gone astray is put out of sight, out of mind if
+possible, at any rate out of speech, as though she had never existed,
+and that this ferocity comes not only from hatred of the sin, put
+in part also from a dread of the taint which the sin brings with
+it. Very low as is the degradation to which a girl is brought when
+she falls through love or vanity, or perhaps from a longing for
+luxurious ease, still much lower is that to which she must descend
+perforce when, through the hardness of the world around her,
+she converts that sin into a trade. Mothers and sisters, when the
+misfortune comes upon them of a fallen female from among their
+number, should remember this, and not fear contamination so strongly
+as did Carry Brattle's married sister and sister-in-law.
+
+In 1870 I brought out three books,--or rather of the latter of
+the three I must say that it was brought out by others, for I had
+nothing to do with it except to write it. These were Sir Harry
+Hotspur of Humblethwaite, An Editor's Tales, and a little volume
+on Julius Caesar. Sir Harry Hotspur was written on the same plan as
+Nina Balatka and Linda Tressel, and had for its object the telling
+of some pathetic incident in life rather than the portraiture of a
+number of human beings. Nina and Linda Tressel and The Golden Lion
+had been placed in foreign countries, and this was an English story.
+In other respects it is of the same nature, and was not, I think,
+by any means a failure. There is much of pathos in the love of
+the girl, and of paternal dignity and affection in the father.
+
+It was published first in Macmillan's Magazine, by the intelligent
+proprietor of which I have since been told that it did not make
+either his fortune or that of his magazine. I am sorry that it
+should have been so; but I fear that the same thing may be said of
+a good many of my novels. When it had passed through the magazine,
+the subsequent use of it was sold to other publishers by Mr.
+Macmillan, and then I learned that it was to be brought out by them
+as a novel in two volumes. Now it had been sold by me as a novel
+in one volume, and hence there arose a correspondence.
+
+I found it very hard to make the purchasers understand that I had
+reasonable ground for objection to the process. What was it to me?
+How could it injure me if they stretched my pages by means of lead
+and margin into double the number I had intended. I have heard the
+same argument on other occasions. When I have pointed out that in
+this way the public would have to suffer, seeing that they would
+have to pay Mudie for the use of two volumes in reading that which
+ought to have been given to them in one, I have been assured that
+the public are pleased with literary short measure, that it is
+the object of novel-readers to get through novels as fast as they
+can, and that the shorter each volume is the better! Even this,
+however, did not overcome me, and I stood to my guns. Sir Harry
+was published in one volume, containing something over the normal
+300 pages, with an average of 220 words to a page,--which I
+had settled with my conscience to be the proper length of a novel
+volume. I may here mention that on one occasion, and one occasion
+only, a publisher got the better of me in a matter of volumes. He
+had a two-volume novel of mine running through a certain magazine,
+and had it printed complete in three volumes before I knew where I
+was,--before I had seen a sheet of the letterpress. I stormed for
+a while, but I had not the heart to make him break up the type.
+
+The Editor's Tales was a volume republished from the St. Paul's
+Magazine, and professed to give an editor's experience of his
+dealings with contributors. I do not think that there is a single
+incident in the book which could bring back to any one concerned
+the memory of a past event. And yet there is not an incident in it
+the outline of which was not presented to my mind by the remembrance
+of some fact:--how an ingenious gentleman got into conversation
+with me, I not knowing that he knew me to be an editor, and pressed
+his little article on my notice; how I was addressed by a lady with
+a becoming pseudonym and with much equally becoming audacity; how
+I was appealed to by the dearest of little women whom here I have
+called Mary Gresley; how in my own early days there was a struggle
+over an abortive periodical which was intended to be the best
+thing ever done; how terrible was the tragedy of a poor drunkard,
+who with infinite learning at his command made one sad final effort
+to reclaim himself, and perished while he was making it; and lastly
+how a poor weak editor was driven nearly to madness by threatened
+litigation from a rejected contributor. Of these stories, The Spotted
+Dog, with the struggles of the drunkard scholar, is the best. I
+know now, however, that when the things were good they came out
+too quick one upon another to gain much attention;--and so also,
+luckily, when they were bad.
+
+The Caesar was a thing of itself. My friend John Blackwood had set
+on foot a series of small volumes called Ancient Classics for English
+Readers, and had placed the editing of them, and the compiling of
+many of them, in the hands of William Lucas Collins, a clergyman
+who, from my connection with the series, became a most intimate
+friend. The Iliad and the Odyssey had already come out when I was
+at Edinburgh with John Blackwood, and, on my expressing my very strong
+admiration for those two little volumes,--which I here recommend
+to all young ladies as the most charming tales they can read,--he
+asked me whether I would not undertake one myself. Herodotus was
+in the press, but, if I could get it ready, mine should be next.
+Whereupon I offered to say what might be said to the readers of
+English on The Commentaries of Julius Caesar.
+
+I at once went to work, and in three months from that day the little
+book had been written. I began by reading through the Commentaries
+twice, which I did without any assistance either by translation
+or English notes. Latin was not so familiar to me then as it has
+since become,--for from that date I have almost daily spent an
+hour with some Latin author, and on many days many hours. After
+the reading what my author had left behind him, I fell into the
+reading of what others had written about him, in Latin, in English,
+and even in French,--for I went through much of that most futile
+book by the late Emperor of the French. I do not know that for a
+short period I ever worked harder. The amount I had to write was
+nothing. Three weeks would have done it easily. But I was most
+anxious, in this soaring out of my own peculiar line, not to disgrace
+myself. I do not think that I did disgrace myself. Perhaps I was
+anxious for something more. If so, I was disappointed.
+
+The book I think to be a good little book. It is readable by all, old
+and young, and it gives, I believe accurately, both an account of
+Caesar's Commentaries,--which of course was the primary intention,--and
+the chief circumstances of the great Roman's life. A well-educated
+girl who had read it and remembered it would perhaps know as much
+about Caesar and his writings as she need know. Beyond the consolation
+of thinking as I do about it, I got very little gratification from
+the work. Nobody praised it. One very old and very learned friend
+to whom I sent it thanked me for my "comic Caesar," but said no
+more. I do not suppose that he intended to run a dagger into me.
+Of any suffering from such wounds, I think, while living, I never
+showed a sign; but still I have suffered occasionally. There
+was, however, probably present to my friend's mind, and to that
+of others, a feeling that a man who had spent his life in writing
+English novels could not be fit to write about Caesar. It was as
+when an amateur gets a picture hung on the walls of the Academy.
+What business had I there? Ne sutor ultra crepidam. In the press it
+was most faintly damned by most faint praise. Nevertheless, having
+read the book again within the last month or two, I make bold to say
+that it is a good book. The series, I believe, has done very well.
+I am sure that it ought to do well in years to come, for, putting
+aside Caesar, the work has been done with infinite scholarship, and
+very generally with a light hand. With the leave of my sententious
+and sonorous friend, who had not endured that subjects which had
+been grave to him should be treated irreverently, I will say that
+such a work, unless it be light, cannot answer the purpose for which
+it is intended. It was not exactly a schoolbook that was wanted,
+but something that would carry the purposes of the schoolroom even
+into the leisure hours of adult pupils. Nothing was ever better
+suited for such a purpose than the Iliad and the Odyssey, as done
+by Mr. Collins. The Virgil, also done by him, is very good; and so
+is the Aristophanes by the same hand.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+"RALPH THE HEIR"--"THE EUSTACE DIAMONDS"--"LADY ANNA"--"AUSTRALIA"
+
+
+
+
+In the spring of 1871 we,--I and my wife,--had decided that we
+would go to Australia to visit our shepherd son. Of course before
+doing so I made a contract with a publisher for a book about the
+Colonies. For such a work as this I had always been aware that
+I could not fairly demand more than half the price that would be
+given for the same amount of fiction; and as such books have an
+indomitable tendency to stretch themselves, so that more is given
+than what is sold, and as the cost of travelling is heavy, the
+writing of them is not remunerative. This tendency to stretch comes
+not, I think, generally from the ambition of the writer, but from
+his inability to comprise the different parts in their allotted
+spaces. If you have to deal with a country, a colony, a city, a
+trade, or a political opinion, it is so much easier to deal with
+it in twenty than in twelve pages! I also made an engagement with
+the editor of a London daily paper to supply him with a series of
+articles,--which were duly written, duly published, and duly paid
+for. But with all this, travelling with the object of writing is
+not a good trade. If the travelling author can pay his bills, he
+must be a good manager on the road.
+
+Before starting there came upon us the terrible necessity of coming
+to some resolution about our house at Waltham. It had been first
+hired, and then bought, primarily because it suited my Post Office
+avocations. To this reason had been added other attractions,--in the
+shape of hunting, gardening, and suburban hospitalities. Altogether
+the house had been a success, and the scene of much happiness. But
+there arose questions as to expense. Would not a house in London
+be cheaper? There could be no doubt that my income would decrease,
+and was decreasing. I had thrown the Post Office, as it were,
+away, and the writing of novels could not go on for ever. Some of
+my friends told me already that at fifty-five I ought to give up
+the fabrication of love-stories. The hunting, I thought, must soon
+go, and I would not therefore allow that to keep me in the country.
+And then, why should I live at Waltham Cross now, seeing that
+I had fixed on that place in reference to the Post Office? It was
+therefore determined that we would flit, and as we were to be away
+for eighteen months, we determined also to sell our furniture. So
+there was a packing up, with many tears, and consultations as to
+what should be saved out of the things we loved.
+
+As must take place on such an occasion, there was some heart-felt
+grief. But the thing was done, and orders were given for the letting
+or sale of the house. I may as well say here that it never was let
+and that it remained unoccupied for two years before it was sold.
+I lost by the transaction about (pounds)800. As I continually hear that
+other men make money by buying and selling houses, I presume I am
+not well adapted for transactions of that sort. I have never made
+money by selling anything except a manuscript. In matters of
+horseflesh I am so inefficient that I have generally given away
+horses that I have not wanted.
+
+When we started from Liverpool, in May, 1871, Ralph the Heir was
+running through the St. Paul's. This was the novel of which Charles
+Reade afterwards took the plot and made on it a play. I have always
+thought it to be one of the worst novels I have written, and almost
+to have justified that dictum that a novelist after fifty should
+not write love-stories. It was in part a political novel; and
+that part which appertains to politics, and which recounts the
+electioneering experiences of the candidates at Percycross, is well
+enough. Percycross and Beverley were, of course, one and the same
+place. Neefit, the breeches-maker, and his daughter, are also good
+in their way,--and Moggs, the daughter's lover, who was not only
+lover, but also one of the candidates at Percycross as well. But
+the main thread of the story,--that which tells of the doings of the
+young gentlemen and young ladies,--the heroes and the heroines,--is
+not good. Ralph the heir has not much life about him; while Ralph
+who is not the heir, but is intended to be the real hero, has
+none. The same may be said of the young ladies,--of whom one, she
+who was meant to be the chief, has passed utterly out of my mind,
+without leaving a trace of remembrance behind.
+
+I also left in the hands of the editor of The Fortnightly, ready for
+production on the 1st of July following, a story called The Eustace
+Diamonds. In that I think that my friend's dictum was disproved.
+There is not much love in it; but what there is, is good. The
+character of Lucy Morris is pretty; and her love is as genuine and
+as well told as that of Lucy Robarts of Lily Dale.
+
+But The Eustace Diamonds achieved the success which it certainly
+did attain, not as a love-story, but as a record of a cunning little
+woman of pseudo-fashion, to whom, in her cunning, there came a
+series of adventures, unpleasant enough in themselves, but pleasant
+to the reader. As I wrote the book, the idea constantly presented
+itself to me that Lizzie Eustace was but a second Becky Sharpe; but
+in planning the character I had not thought of this, and I believe
+that Lizzie would have been just as she is though Becky Sharpe had
+never been described. The plot of the diamond necklace is, I think,
+well arranged, though it produced itself without any forethought.
+I had no idea of setting thieves after the bauble till I had got
+my heroine to bed in the inn at Carlisle; nor of the disappointment
+of the thieves, till Lizzie had been wakened in the morning with
+the news that her door had been broken open. All these things, and
+many more, Wilkie Collins would have arranged before with infinite
+labour, preparing things present so that they should fit in with
+things to come. I have gone on the very much easier plan of making
+everything as it comes fit in with what has gone before. At any
+rate, the book was a success, and did much to repair the injury
+which I felt had come to my reputation in the novel-market by the
+works of the last few years. I doubt whether I had written anything
+so successful as The Eustace Diamonds. since The Small House at
+Allington. I had written what was much better,--as, for instance,
+Phineas Finn and Nina Balatka; but that is by no means the same
+thing.
+
+I also left behind, in a strong box, the manuscript of Phineas Redux,
+a novel of which I have already spoken, and which I subsequently
+sold to the proprietors of the Graphic newspaper. The editor of
+that paper greatly disliked the title, assuring me that the public
+would take Redux for the gentleman's surname,--and was dissatisfied
+with me when I replied that I had no objection to them doing
+so. The introduction of a Latin word, or of a word from any other
+language, into the title of an English novel is undoubtedly in
+bad taste; but after turning the matter much over in my own mind,
+I could find no other suitable name.
+
+I also left behind me, in the same strong box, another novel, called
+An Eye for an Eye, which then had been some time written, and of
+which, as it has not even yet been published, I will not further
+speak. It will probably be published some day, though, looking
+forward, I can see no room for it, at any rate, for the next two
+years.
+
+If therefore the Great Britain, in which we sailed for Melbourne,
+had gone to the bottom, I had so provided that there would be new
+novels ready to come out under my name for some years to come. This
+consideration, however, did not keep me idle while I was at sea.
+When making long journeys, I have always succeeded in getting
+a desk put up in my cabin, and this was done ready for me in the
+Great Britain, so that I could go to work the day after we left
+Liverpool. This I did; and before I reached Melbourne I had finished
+a story called Lady Anna. Every word of this was written at sea,
+during the two months required for our voyage, and was done day by
+day--with the intermission of one day's illness--for eight weeks,
+at the rate of 66 pages of manuscript in each week, every page of
+manuscript containing 250 words. Every word was counted. I have
+seen work come back to an author from the press with terrible
+deficiencies as to the amount supplied. Thirty-two pages have
+perhaps been wanted for a number, and the printers with all their
+art could not stretch the matter to more than twenty-eight or -nine!
+The work of filling up must be very dreadful. I have sometimes been
+ridiculed for the methodical details of my business. But by these
+contrivances I have been preserved from many troubles; and I have
+saved others with whom I have worked--editors, publishers, and
+printers--from much trouble also.
+
+A month or two after my return home, Lady Anna appeared in The
+Fortnightly, following The Eustace Diamonds. In it a young girl,
+who is really a lady of high rank and great wealth, though in her
+youth she enjoyed none of the privileges of wealth or rank, marries
+a tailor who had been good to her, and whom she had loved when she
+was poor and neglected. A fine young noble lover is provided for
+her, and all the charms of sweet living with nice people are thrown
+in her way, in order that she may be made to give up the tailor.
+And the charms are very powerful with her. But the feeling that
+she is bound by her troth to the man who had always been true to
+her overcomes everything,--and she marries the tailor. It was my
+wish of course to justify her in doing so, and to carry my readers
+along with me in my sympathy with her. But everybody found fault
+with me for marrying her to the tailor. What would they have said
+if I had allowed her to jilt the tailor and marry the good-looking
+young lord? How much louder, then, would have been the censure!
+The book was read, and I was satisfied. If I had not told my story
+well, there would have been no feeling in favour of the young lord.
+The horror which was expressed to me at the evil thing I had done,
+in giving the girl to the tailor, was the strongest testimony I
+could receive of the merits of the story.
+
+I went to Australia chiefly in order that I might see my son among
+his sheep. I did see him among his sheep, and remained with him for
+four or five very happy weeks. He was not making money, nor has he
+made money since. I grieve to say that several thousands of pounds
+which I had squeezed out of the pockets of perhaps too liberal
+publishers have been lost on the venture. But I rejoice to say
+that this has been in no way due to any fault of his. I never knew
+a man work with more persistent honesty at his trade than he has
+done.
+
+I had, however, the further intentions of writing a book about the
+entire group of Australasian Colonies; and in order that I might
+be enabled to do that with sufficient information, I visited them
+all. Making my headquarters at Melbourne, I went to Queensland, New
+South Wales, Tasmania, then to the very little known territory of
+Western Australia, and then, last of all, to New Zealand. I was
+absent in all eighteen months, and think that I did succeed in
+learning much of the political, social, and material condition of
+these countries. I wrote my book as I was travelling and brought
+it back with me to England all but completed in December, 1872.
+
+It was a better book than that which I had written eleven years
+before on the American States, but not so good as that on the West
+Indies in 1859. As regards the information given, there was much
+more to be said about Australia than the West Indies. Very much
+more is said,--and very much more may be learned from the latter
+than from the former book. I am sure that any one who will take
+the trouble to read the book on Australia, will learn much from
+it. But the West Indian volume was readable. I am not sure that
+either of the other works are, in the proper sense of that word.
+When I go back to them I find that the pages drag with me;--and if
+so with me, how must it be with others who have none of that love
+which a father feels even for his ill-favoured offspring. Of all
+the needs a book has the chief need is that it be readable.
+
+Feeling that these volumes on Australia were dull and long, I was
+surprised to find that they had an extensive sale. There were, I
+think, 2000 copies circulated of the first expensive edition; and
+then the book was divided into four little volumes, which were
+published separately, and which again had a considerable circulation.
+That some facts were stated inaccurately, I do not doubt; that many
+opinions were crude, I am quite sure; that I had failed to understand
+much which I attempted to explain, is possible. But with all these
+faults the book was a thoroughly honest book, and was the result of
+unflagging labour for a period of fifteen months. I spared myself
+no trouble in inquiry, no trouble in seeing, and no trouble in
+listening. I thoroughly imbued my mind with the subject, and wrote
+with the simple intention of giving trustworthy information on
+the state of the Colonies. Though there be inaccuracies,--those
+inaccuracies to which work quickly done must always be subject,--I
+think I did give much valuable information.
+
+I came home across America from San Francisco to New York, visiting
+Utah and Brigham Young on the way. I did not achieve great intimacy
+with the great polygamist of the Salt Lake City. I called upon
+him, sending to him my card, apologising for doing so without an
+introduction, and excusing myself by saying that I did not like
+to pass through the territory without seeing a man of whom I had
+heard so much. He received me in his doorway, not asking me to
+enter, and inquired whether I were not a miner. When I told him
+that I was not a miner, he asked me whether I earned my bread. I
+told him I did. "I guess you're a miner," said he. I again assured
+him that I was not. "Then how do you earn your bread?" I told him
+I did so by writing books. "I'm sure you're a miner," said he. Then
+he turned upon his heel, went back into the house, and closed the
+door. I was properly punished, as I was vain enough to conceive
+that he would have heard my name.
+
+I got home in December, 1872, and in spite of any resolution made
+to the contrary, my mind was full of hunting as I came back. No
+real resolutions had in truth been made, for out of a stud of four
+horses I kept three, two of which were absolutely idle through the
+two summers and winter of my absence. Immediately on my arrival
+I bought another, and settled myself down to hunting from London
+three days a week. At first I went back to Essex, my old country,
+but finding that to be inconvenient, I took my horses to Leighton
+Buzzard, and became one of that numerous herd of sportsmen who rode
+with the "Baron" and Mr. Selby Lowndes. In those days Baron Meyer
+was alive, and the riding with his hounds was very good. I did not
+care so much for Mr. Lowndes. During the winters of 1873, 1874, and
+1875, I had my horses back in Essex, and went on with my hunting,
+always trying to resolve that I would give it up. But still I
+bought fresh horses, and, as I did not give it up, I hunted more
+than ever. Three times a week the cab has been at my door in London
+very punctually, and not unfrequently before seven in the morning.
+In order to secure this attendance, the man has always been invited
+to have his breakfast in the hall. I have gone to the Great Eastern
+Railway,--ah! so often with the fear that frost would make all my
+exertions useless, and so often too with that result! And then,
+from one station or another station, have travelled on wheels at
+least a dozen miles. After the day's sport, the same toil has been
+necessary to bring me home to dinner at eight. This has been work
+for a young man and a rich man, but I have done it as an old man
+and comparatively a poor man. Now at last, in April, 1876, I do
+think that my resolution has been taken. I am giving away my old
+horses, and anybody is welcome to my saddles and horse-furniture.
+
+
+ "Singula de nobis anni praedantur euntes;
+ Eripuere jocos, venerem, convivia, ladum;
+ Tendunt extorquere poemata."
+
+ "Our years keep taking toll as they move on;
+ My feasts, my frolics, are already gone,
+ And now, it seems, my verses must go too."
+
+
+This Is Conington's translation, but it seems to me to be a little
+flat.
+
+
+ "Years as they roll cut all our pleasures short;
+ Our pleasant mirth, our loves, our wine, our sport,
+ And then they stretch their power, and crush at last
+ Even the power of singing of the past."
+
+
+I think that I may say with truth that I rode hard to my end.
+
+
+ "Vixi puellis nuper idoneus,
+ Et militavi non sine gloria;
+ Nunc arma defunctumque bello
+ Barbiton hic paries habebit."
+
+ "I've lived about the covert side,
+ I've ridden straight, and ridden fast;
+ Now breeches, boots, and scarlet pride
+ Are but mementoes of the past."
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+"THE WAY WE LIVE NOW" AND "THE PRIME MINISTER"--CONCLUSION
+
+
+
+
+In what I have said at the end of the last chapter about my hunting,
+I have been carried a little in advance of the date at which I
+had arrived. We returned from Australia in the winter of 1872, and
+early in 1873 I took a house in Montagu Square,--in which I hope
+to live and hope to die. Our first work in settling there was to
+place upon new shelves the books which I had collected round myself
+at Waltham. And this work, which was in itself great, entailed
+also the labour of a new catalogue. As all who use libraries know,
+a catalogue is nothing unless it show the spot on which every
+book is to be found,--information which every volume also ought to
+give as to itself. Only those who have done it know how great is
+the labour of moving and arranging a few thousand volumes. At the
+present moment I own about 5000 volumes, and they are dearer to
+me even than the horses which are going, or than the wine in the
+cellar, which is very apt to go, and upon which I also pride myself.
+
+When this was done, and the new furniture had got into its place,
+and my little book-room was settled sufficiently for work, I
+began a novel, to the writing of which I was instigated by what I
+conceived to be the commercial profligacy of the age. Whether the
+world does or does not become more wicked as years go on, is a
+question which probably has disturbed the minds of thinkers since
+the world began to think. That men have become less cruel, less
+violent, less selfish, less brutal, there can be no doubt;--but
+have they become less honest? If so, can a world, retrograding from
+day to day in honesty, be considered to be in a state of progress?
+We know the opinion on this subject of our philosopher Mr. Carlyle.
+If he be right, we are all going straight away to darkness and the
+dogs. But then we do not put very much faith in Mr. Carlyle,--nor
+in Mr. Ruskin and his other followers. The loudness and extravagance
+of their lamentations, the wailing and gnashing of teeth which comes
+from them, over a world which is supposed to have gone altogether
+shoddy-wards, are so contrary to the convictions of men who cannot
+but see how comfort has been increased, how health has been improved,
+and education extended,--that the general effect of their teaching
+is the opposite of what they have intended. It is regarded simply
+as Carlylism to say that the English-speaking world is growing
+worse from day to day. And it is Carlylism to opine that the general
+grand result of increased intelligence is a tendency to deterioration.
+
+Nevertheless a certain class of dishonesty, dishonesty magnificent
+in its proportions, and climbing into high places, has become at
+the same time so rampant and so splendid that there seems to be
+reason for fearing that men and women will be taught to feel that
+dishonesty, if it can become splendid, will cease to be abominable.
+If dishonesty can live in a gorgeous palace with pictures on all
+its walls, and gems in all its cupboards, with marble and ivory
+in all its corners, and can give Apician dinners, and get into
+Parliament, and deal in millions, then dishonesty is not disgraceful,
+and the man dishonest after such a fashion is not a low scoundrel.
+Instigated, I say, by some such reflections as these, I sat down
+in my new house to write The Way We Live Now. And as I had ventured
+to take the whip of the satirist into my hand, I went beyond the
+iniquities of the great speculator who robs everybody, and made an
+onslaught also on other vices;--on the intrigues of girls who want
+to get married, on the luxury of young men who prefer to remain
+single, and on the puffing propensities of authors who desire to
+cheat the public into buying their volumes.
+
+The book has the fault which is to be attributed to almost all
+satires, whether in prose or verse. The accusations are exaggerated.
+The vices are coloured, so as to make effect rather than to represent
+truth. Who, when the lash of objurgation is in his hands, can
+so moderate his arm as never to strike harder than justice would
+require? The spirit which produces the satire is honest enough, but
+the very desire which moves the satirist to do his work energetically
+makes him dishonest. In other respects The Way We Live Now
+was, as a satire, powerful and good. The character of Melmotte is
+well maintained. The Beargarden is amusing,--and not untrue. The
+Longestaffe girls and their friend, Lady Monogram, are amusing,--but
+exaggerated. Dolly Longestaffe, is, I think, very good. And Lady
+Carbury's literary efforts are, I am sorry to say, such as are too
+frequently made. But here again the young lady with her two lovers
+is weak and vapid. I almost doubt whether it be not impossible to
+have two absolutely distinct parts in a novel, and to imbue them
+both with interest. If they be distinct, the one will seem to be
+no more than padding to the other. And so it was in The Way We Live
+Now. The interest of the story lies among the wicked and foolish
+people,--with Melmotte and his daughter, with Dolly and his family,
+with the American woman, Mrs. Hurtle, and with John Crumb and the
+girl of his heart. But Roger Carbury, Paul Montague, and Henrietta
+Carbury are uninteresting. Upon the whole, I by no means look upon
+the book as one of my failures; nor was it taken as a failure by
+the public or the press.
+
+While I was writing The Way We Live Now, I was called upon by the
+proprietors of the Graphic for a Christmas story. I feel, with regard
+to literature, somewhat as I suppose an upholsterer and undertaker
+feels when he is called upon to supply a funeral. He has to supply
+it, however distasteful it may be. It is his business, and he will
+starve if he neglects it. So have I felt that, when anything in the
+shape of a novel was required, I was bound to produce it. Nothing
+can be more distasteful to me than to have to give a relish of
+Christmas to what I write. I feel the humbug implied by the nature
+of the order. A Christmas story, in the proper sense, should be
+the ebullition of some mind anxious to instil others with a desire
+for Christmas religious thought, or Christmas festivities,--or,
+better still, with Christmas charity. Such was the case with Dickens
+when he wrote his two first Christmas stories. But since that the
+things written annually--all of which have been fixed to Christmas
+like children's toys to a Christmas tree--have had no real savour
+of Christmas about them. I had done two or three before. Alas!
+at this very moment I have one to write, which I have promised to
+supply within three weeks of this time,--the picture-makers always
+require a long interval,--as to which I have in vain been cudgelling
+my brain for the last month. I can't send away the order to another
+shop, but I do not know how I shall ever get the coffin made.
+
+For the Graphic, in 1873, I wrote a little story about Australia.
+Christmas at the antipodes is of course midsummer, and I was not
+loth to describe the troubles to which my own son had been subjected,
+by the mingled accidents of heat and bad neighbours, on his station
+in the bush. So I wrote Harry Heathcote of Gangoil, and was well
+through my labour on that occasion. I only wish I may have no
+worse success in that which now hangs over my head.
+
+When Harry Heathcote was over, I returned with a full heart to
+Lady Glencora and her husband. I had never yet drawn the completed
+picture of such a statesman as my imagination had conceived. The
+personages with whose names my pages had been familiar, and perhaps
+even the minds of some of my readers--the Brocks, De Terriers, Monks,
+Greshams, and Daubeneys--had been more or less portraits, not of
+living men, but of living political characters. The strong-minded,
+thick-skinned, useful, ordinary member, either of the Government or
+of the Opposition, had been very easy to describe, and had required
+no imagination to conceive. The character reproduces itself from
+generation to generation; and as it does so, becomes shorn in
+a wonderful way of those little touches of humanity which would
+be destructive of its purposes. Now and again there comes a burst
+of human nature, as in the quarrel between Burke and Fox; but, as
+a rule, the men submit themselves to be shaped and fashioned, and
+to be formed into tools, which are used either for building up or
+pulling down, and can generally bear to be changed from this box
+into the other, without, at any rate, the appearance of much personal
+suffering. Four-and-twenty gentlemen will amalgamate themselves
+into one whole, and work for one purpose, having each of them to
+set aside his own idiosyncrasy, and to endure the close personal
+contact of men who must often be personally disagreeable, having
+been thoroughly taught that in no other way can they serve either
+their country or their own ambition. These are the men who are
+publicly useful, and whom the necessities of the age supply,--as
+to whom I have never ceased to wonder that stones of such strong
+calibre should be so quickly worn down to the shape and smoothness
+of rounded pebbles.
+
+Such have been to me the Brocks and the Mildmays, about whom I have
+written with great pleasure, having had my mind much exercised in
+watching them. But had I also conceived the character of a statesman
+of a different nature--of a man who should be in something perhaps
+superior, but in very much inferior, to these men--of one who could
+not become a pebble, having too strong an identity of his own. To
+rid one's self of fine scruples--to fall into the traditions of
+a party--to feel the need of subservience, not only in acting but
+also even in thinking--to be able to be a bit, and at first only a
+very little bit,--these are the necessities of the growing statesman.
+The time may come, the glorious time when some great self action
+shall be possible, and shall be even demanded, as when Peel gave
+up the Corn Laws; but the rising man, as he puts on his harness,
+should not allow himself to dream of this. To become a good, round,
+smooth, hard, useful pebble is his duty, and to achieve this he
+must harden his skin and swallow his scruples. But every now and
+again we see the attempt, made by men who cannot get their skins to
+be hard--who after a little while generally fall out of the ranks.
+The statesman of whom I was thinking--of whom I had long thought--was
+one who did not fall out of the ranks, even though his skin would
+not become hard. He should have rank, and intellect, and parliamentary
+habits, by which to bind him to the service of his country; and he
+should also have unblemished, unextinguishable, inexhaustible love
+of country. That virtue I attribute to our statesmen generally.
+They who are without it are, I think, mean indeed. This man should
+have it as the ruling principle of his life; and it should so rule
+him that all other things should be made to give way to it. But he
+should be scrupulous, and, being scrupulous, weak. When called to
+the highest place in the council of his Sovereign, he should feel
+with true modesty his own insufficiency; but not the less should
+the greed of power grow upon him when he had once allowed himself
+to taste and enjoy it. Such was the character I endeavoured to
+depict in describing the triumph, the troubles, and the failure
+of my Prime Minister. And I think that I have succeeded. What the
+public may think, or what the press may say, I do not yet know,
+the work having as yet run but half its course. [Footnote: Writing
+this note in 1878, after a lapse of nearly three years, I am obliged
+to say that, as regards the public, The Prime Minister was a failure.
+It was worse spoken of by the press than any novel I had written.
+I was specially hurt by a criticism on it in the Spectator. The
+critic who wrote the article I know to be a good critic, inclined
+to be more than fair to me; but in this case I could not agree with
+him, so much do I love the man whose character I had endeavoured
+to portray.]
+
+That the man's character should be understood as I understand
+it--or that of his wife's, the delineation of which has also been
+a matter of much happy care to me--I have no right to expect, seeing
+that the operation of describing has not been confined to one novel,
+which might perhaps be read through by the majority of those who
+commenced it. It has been carried on through three or four, each
+of which will be forgotten even by the most zealous reader almost
+as soon as read. In The Prime Minister, my Prime Minister will not
+allow his wife to take office among, or even over, those ladies who
+are attached by office to the Queen's court. "I should not choose,"
+he says to her, "that my wife should have any duties unconnected
+with our joint family and home." Who will remember in reading
+those words that, in a former story, published some years before,
+he tells his wife, when she has twitted him with his willingness
+to clean the Premier's shoes, that he would even allow her to clean
+them if it were for the good of the country? And yet it is by such
+details as these that I have, for many years past, been manufacturing
+within my own mind the characters of the man and his wife.
+
+I think that Plantagenet Palliser, Duke of Omnium, is a perfect
+gentleman. If he be not, then am I unable to describe a gentleman.
+She is by no means a perfect lady; but if she be not all over
+a woman, then am I not able to describe a woman. I do not think
+it probable that my name will remain among those who in the next
+century will be known as the writers of English prose fiction;--but
+if it does, that permanence of success will probably rest on the
+character of Plantagenet Palliser, Lady Glencora, and the Rev. Mr.
+Crawley.
+
+I have now come to the end of that long series of books written by
+myself with which the public is already acquainted. Of those which
+I may hereafter be able to add to them I cannot speak; though I
+have an idea that I shall even yet once more have recourse to my
+political hero as the mainstay of another story. When The Prime
+Minister was finished, I at once began another novel, which is now
+completed in three volumes, and which is called Is He Popenjoy?
+There are two Popenjoys in the book, one succeeding to the title
+held by the other; but as they are both babies, and do not in the
+course of the story progress beyond babyhood, the future readers,
+should the tale ever be published, will not be much interested in
+them. Nevertheless the story, as a story, is not, I think, amiss.
+Since that I have written still another three-volume novel, to
+which, very much in opposition to my publisher, I have given the
+name of The American Senator. [Footnote: The American Senator and
+Popenjoy have appeared, each with fair success. Neither of them has
+encountered that reproach which, in regard to The Prime Minister,
+seemed to tell me that my work as a novelist should be brought to
+a close. And yet I feel assured that they are very inferior to The
+Prime Minister.] It is to appear in Temple Bar, and is to commence
+its appearance on the first of next month. Such being its
+circumstances, I do not know that I can say anything else about it
+here.
+
+And so I end the record of my literary performances,--which I
+think are more in amount than the works of any other living English
+author. If any English authors not living have written more--as
+may probably have been the case--I do not know who they are. I find
+that, taking the books which have appeared under our names, I have
+published much more than twice as much as Carlyle. I have also
+published considerably more than Voltaire, even including his
+letters. We are told that Varro, at the age of eighty, had written
+480 volumes, and that he went on writing for eight years longer.
+I wish I knew what was the length of Varro's volumes; I comfort
+myself by reflecting that the amount of manuscript described as a
+book in Varro's time was not much. Varro, too, is dead, and Voltaire;
+whereas I am still living, and may add to the pile.
+
+The following is a list of the books I have written, with the dates
+of publication and the sums I have received for them. The dates
+given are the years in which the works were published as a whole,
+most of them having appeared before in some serial form.
+
+
+Names of Works. Date of Publication. Total Sums Received.
+
+The Macdermots of Ballycloran, 1847 (pounds)48 6 9
+The Kellys and the O'Kellys, 1848 123 19 5
+La Vendee, 1850 20 0 0
+The Warden, 1855 \ 727 11 3
+Barchester Towers, 1857 /
+The Three Clerks, 1858 250 0 0
+Doctor Thorne, 1858 400 0 0
+The West Indies and the
+Spanish Main, 1859 250 0 0
+The Bertrams, 1859 400 0 0
+
+ Carried forward, (pounds)2219 16 17
+
+Names of Works. Date of Publication. Total Sums Received.
+
+ Brought Forward, (pounds)2219 16 17
+Castle Richmond, 1860 600 0 0
+Framley Parsonage, 1861 1000 0 0
+Tales of All
+Countries--1st Series, 1861 \
+ " " 2d 1863 > 1830 0 0
+ " " 3d 1870 /
+Orley Farm, 1862 3135 0 0
+North America, 1862 1250 0 0
+Rachel Ray, 1863 1645 0 0
+The Small House at Allington, 1864 3000 0 0
+Can You Forgive Her? 1864 3525 0 0
+Miss Mackenzie, 1865 1300 0 0
+The Belton Estate, 1866 1757 0 0
+The Claverings, 1867 2800 0 0
+The Last Chronicle of Barset, 1867 3000 0 0
+Nina Balatka, 1867 450 0 0
+Linda Tressel, 1868 450 0 0
+Phineas Finn, 1869 3200 0 0
+He Knew He Was Right, 1869 3200 0 0
+Brown, Jones, and Robinson, 1870 600 0 0
+The Vicar of Bullhampton, 1870 2500 0 0
+An Editor's Tales, 1870 378 0 0
+Caesar (Ancient Classics), 1870 0 0 0
+[Footnote: This was given by me as a present to
+my friend John Blackwood]
+
+Sir Harry Hotspur of Humblethwaite, 1871 750 0 0
+Ralph the Heir, 1871 2500 0 0
+The Golden Lion of Granpere, 1872 550 0 0
+The Eustace Diamonds, 1873 2500 0 0
+Australia and New Zealand, 1873 1300 0 0
+Phineas Redux, 1874 2500 0 0
+Harry Heathcote of Gangoil, 1874 450 0 0
+
+ Carry forward, (pounds)48,389 17 5
+
+Names of Works. Date of Publication. Total Sums Received.
+
+ Brought forward, (pounds)48,389 17 5
+Lady Anna, 1874 1200 0 0
+The Way We Live Now, 1875 3000 0 0
+The Prime Minister, 1876 2500 0 0
+The American Senator, 1877 1800 0 0
+Is He Popenjoy? 1878 1600 0 0
+South Africa, 1878 850 0 0
+John Caldigate, 1879 1800 0 0
+Sundries, 7800 0 0
+ ____________
+ (pounds)68,939 17 5
+ ------------
+
+It will not, I am sure, be thought that, in making my boast as
+to the quantity, I have endeavoured to lay claim to any literary
+excellence. That, in the writing of books, quantity without quality is
+a vice and a misfortune, has been too manifestly settled to leave
+a doubt on such a matter. But I do lay claim to whatever merit
+should be accorded to me for persevering diligence in my profession.
+And I make the claim, not with a view to my own glory, but for
+the benefit of those who may read these pages, and when young may
+intend to follow the same career. Nulla dies sine linea. Let that
+be their motto. And let their work be to them as is his common work
+to the common labourer. No gigantic efforts will then be necessary.
+He need tie no wet towels round his brow, nor sit for thirty hours
+at his desk without moving,--as men have sat, or said that they
+have sat. More than nine-tenths of my literary work has been done
+in the last twenty years, and during twelve of those years I followed
+another profession. I have never been a slave to this work, giving
+due time, if not more than due time, to the amusements I have loved.
+But I have been constant,--and constancy in labour will conquer
+all difficulties. Gutta cavat lapidem non vi, sed saepe cadendo.
+
+It may interest some if I state that during the last twenty years
+I have made by literature something near (pounds)70,000. As I have said
+before in these pages, I look upon the result as comfortable, but
+not splendid.
+
+It will not, I trust, be supposed by any reader that I have intended
+in this so-called autobiography to give a record of my inner life.
+No man ever did so truly,--and no man ever will. Rousseau probably
+attempted it, but who doubts but that Rousseau has confessed
+in much the thoughts and convictions rather than the facts of his
+life? If the rustle of a woman's petticoat has ever stirred my
+blood; if a cup of wine has been a joy to me; if I have thought
+tobacco at midnight in pleasant company to be one of the elements
+of an earthly paradise; if now and again I have somewhat recklessly
+fluttered a (pounds)5 note over a card-table;--of what matter is that to
+any reader? I have betrayed no woman. Wine has brought me to no
+sorrow. It has been the companionship of smoking that I have loved,
+rather than the habit. I have never desired to win money, and I
+have lost none. To enjoy the excitement of pleasure, but to be free
+from its vices and ill effects,--to have the sweet, and leave the
+bitter untasted,--that has been my study. The preachers tell us that
+this is impossible. It seems to me that hitherto I have succeeded
+fairly well. I will not say that I have never scorched a finger,--but
+I carry no ugly wounds.
+
+For what remains to me of life I trust for my happiness still
+chiefly to my work--hoping that when the power of work be over with
+me, God may be pleased to take me from a world in which, according
+to my view, there can be no joy; secondly, to the love of those who
+love me; and then to my books. That I can read and be happy while
+I am reading, is a great blessing. Could I remember, as some men
+do, what I read, I should have been able to call myself an educated
+man. But that power I have never possessed. Something is always
+left,--something dim and inaccurate,--but still something sufficient
+to preserve the taste for more. I am inclined to think that it is
+so with most readers.
+
+Of late years, putting aside the Latin classics, I have found
+my greatest pleasure in our old English dramatists,--not from any
+excessive love of their work, which often irritates me by its want
+of truth to nature, even while it shames me by its language,--but
+from curiosity in searching their plots and examining their character.
+If I live a few years longer, I shall, I think, leave in my copies
+of these dramatists, down to the close of James I., written criticisms
+on every play. No one who has not looked closely into it knows how
+many there are.
+
+Now I stretch out my hand, and from the further shore I bid adieu
+to all who have cared to read any among the many words that I have
+written.
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF ANTHONY TROLLOPE ***
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