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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Little Memoirs of the Nineteenth Century
+by George Paston
+
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+Title: Little Memoirs of the Nineteenth Century
+
+Author: George Paston
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+Release Date: October, 2004 [EBook #6756]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LITTLE MEMOIRS OF THE 19TH C. ***
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+Produced by Steve Schulze, Charles Franks
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+</pre>
+
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;">
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><big><br>
+</big></p>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><big><br>
+</big></p>
+<p style="font-weight: bold; text-align: center;"><big><big>LITTLE
+MEMOIRS <br>
+</big></big></p>
+<div style="font-weight: bold; text-align: center;"><big><big>OF THE<br>
+</big></big></div>
+<p style="font-weight: bold; text-align: center;"><big><big> NINETEENTH
+CENTURY</big></big></p>
+<div style="text-align: center;"> </div>
+<p style="text-align: center;">BY GEORGE PASTON</p>
+<div style="text-align: center;"> </div>
+<p style="text-align: center;"> 1902<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 20%;">
+<p style="text-align: center;"><br>
+</p>
+
+<p><br>
+</p>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;">PREFACE</p>
+
+<p><i>For these sketches of minor celebrities of the nineteenth
+century, it has been my aim to choose subjects whose experiences seem to
+illustrate the life--more especially the literary and artistic life--of
+the first half of the century; and who of late years, at any rate, have
+not been overwhelmed by the attentions of the minor biographer. Having
+some faith in the theory that the verdict of foreigners is equivalent to
+that of contemporary posterity, I have included two aliens in the group.
+A visitor to our shores, whether he be a German princeling like
+P&uuml;ckler-Muskau, or a gilded democrat like N. P. Willis, may be
+expected to observe and comment upon many traits of national life and
+manners that would escape the notice of a native chronicler.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Whereas certain readers of a former volume--'Little Memoirs of
+the Eighteenth Century'--seem to have been distressed by the fact that
+the majority of the characters died in the nineteenth century, it is
+perhaps meet that I should apologise for the chronology of this present
+volume, in which all the heroes and heroines, save one, were born in the
+last quarter of the eighteenth century. But I would venture to submit
+that a man is not, necessarily, the child of the century in which he is
+born, or of that in which he dies; rather is he the child of the century
+which sees the finest flower of his achievement.</i></p>
+
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><br>
+</p>
+
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><br>
+CONTENTS</p>
+
+<p><small><a href="#HAYDON">BENJAMIN ROBERT HAYDON</a><br>
+<a href="#MORGAN">LADY MORGAN (SYDNEY OWENSON)</a><br>
+<a href="#WILLIS">NATHANIEL PARKER WILLIS</a><br>
+<a href="#STANHOPE">LADY HESTER STANHOPE</a><br>
+<a href="#MUSKAU">PRINCE P&Uuml;CKLER-MUSKAU IN ENGLAND</a><br>
+<a href="#HOWITT">WILLIAM AND MARY HOWITT</a></small><br>
+<br>
+</p>
+
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"> LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</p>
+
+<p><small><a href="#HAYDON">BENJAMIN ROBERT HAYDON</a><br>
+<a href="#MORGAN"> LADY MORGAN</a><br>
+<a href="#WILLIS"> NATHANIEL PARKER WILLIS</a><br>
+<a href="#STANHOPE"> LADY HESTER STANHOPE ON HORSEBACK</a><br>
+<a href="#STANHOPE2"> LADY HESTER STANHOPE IN EASTERN COSTUME</a><br>
+<a href="#MUSKAU"> PRINCE P&Uuml;CKLER-MUSKAU</a><br>
+<a href="#HOWITT"> MARY HOWITT</a></small><br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;">
+
+<p><br>
+</p>
+
+<p style="font-weight: bold; text-align: center;"><a name="HAYDON"></a><big><big>
+BENJAMIN ROBERT HAYDON</big><br>
+</big><br>
+</p>
+<div style="text-align: center;"> </div>
+<div style="text-align: center;"><img src="images/Haydon.jpg"
+ title="Benjamin Robert Haydon. From a portrait by Fornlin."
+ alt="Benjamin Robert Haydon. From a portrait by Fornlin."
+ style="width: 388px; height: 536px;"><br>
+<br>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 20%;"> </div>
+<div style="text-align: center;"> </div>
+
+<p style="font-weight: bold; text-align: center;">PART I</p>
+
+<p> If it be true that the most important ingredient in the composition
+of the self-biographer is a spirit of childlike vanity, with a blend of
+unconscious egoism, few men have ever been better equipped than Haydon
+for the production of a successful autobiography. In na&iuml;ve
+simplicity of temperament he has only been surpassed by Pepys, in
+fulness of self-revelation by Rousseau, and his <i>Memoirs</i> are not
+unworthy of a place in the same category as the <i>Diary</i> and the <i>Confessions</i>.
+From the larger public, the work has hardly attracted the attention it
+deserves; it is too long, too minute, too heavily weighted with
+technical details and statements of financial embarrassments, to be
+widely or permanently popular. But as a human document, and as the
+portrait of a temperament, its value can hardly be overestimated; while
+as a tragedy it is none the less tragic because it contains elements of
+the grotesque. Haydon set out with the laudable intention of writing the
+exact truth about himself and his career, holding that every man who has
+suffered for a principle, and who has been unjustly persecuted and
+oppressed, should write his own history, and set his own case before his
+countrymen. It is a fortunate accident for his readers that he should
+have been gifted with the faculty of picturesque expression and an
+exceptionally keen power of observation. If not a scholar, he was a man
+of wide reading, of deep though desultory thinking, and a good critic
+where the work of others was concerned. He seems to have desired to
+conceal nothing, nor to set down aught in malice; if he fell into
+mistakes and misrepresentations, these were the result of unconscious
+prejudice, and the exaggerative tendency of a brain that, if not
+actually warped, trembled on the border-line of sanity. He hoped that
+his mistakes would be a warning to others, his successes a stimulus, and
+that the faithful record of his struggles and aspirations would clear
+his memory from the aspersions that his enemies had cast upon it.</p>
+
+<p>Haydon was born at Plymouth on January 26, 1786. He was the lineal
+descendant of an ancient Devonshire family, the Haydons of Cadbay, who
+had been ruined by a Chancery suit a couple of generations earlier, and
+had consequently taken a step downwards in the social scale. His
+grandfather, who married Mary Baskerville, a descendant of the famous
+printer, set up as a bookseller in Plymouth, and, dying in 1773,
+bequeathed his business to his son Benjamin, the father of our hero.
+This Benjamin, who married the daughter of a Devonshire clergyman named
+Cobley, was a man of the old-fashioned, John Bull type, who loved his
+Church and king, believed that England was the only great country in the
+world, swore that Napoleon won all his battles by bribery, and would
+have knocked down any man who dared to disagree with him. The childhood
+of the future historical painter was a picturesque and stirring period,
+filled with the echoes of revolution and the rumours of wars. The Sound
+was crowded with fighting ships preparing for sea, or returning battered
+and blackened, with wounded soldiers on board and captured vessels in
+tow. Plymouth itself was full of French prisoners, who made little
+models of guillotines out of their meat-bones, and sold them to the
+children for the then fashionable amusement of 'cutting off Louis XVI.'s
+head.'</p>
+
+<p>Benjamin was sent to the local grammar-school, whose headmaster, Dr.
+Bidlake, was a man of some culture, though not a deep classic. He wrote
+poetry, encouraged his pupils to draw, and took them for country
+excursions, with a view to fostering their love of nature. Mr. Haydon,
+though he was proud of Benjamin's early attempts at drawing, had no
+desire that he should be turned into an artist, and becoming alarmed at
+Dr. Bidlake's dilettante methods, he transferred his son to the Plympton
+Grammar-school, where Sir Joshua Reynolds had been educated, with strict
+injunctions to the headmaster that the boy was on no account to have
+drawing-lessons. On leaving school at sixteen, Benjamin, after, a few
+months with a firm of accountants at Exeter, was bound apprentice to his
+father for seven years, and it was then that his troubles began.</p>
+
+<p>'I hated day-books, ledgers, bill-books, and cashbooks,' he tells
+us. 'I hated standing behind the counter, and insulted the customers; I
+hated the town and all the people in it.' At last, after a quarrel with
+a customer who tried to drive a bargain, this proud spirit refused to
+enter the shop again. In vain his father pointed out to him the folly of
+letting a good business go to ruin, of refusing a comfortable
+independence--all argument was vain. An illness, which resulted in
+inflammation of the eyes, put a stop to the controversy for the time
+being; but on recovery, with his sight permanently injured, the boy
+still refused to work out his articles, but wandered about the town in
+search of casts and books on art. He bought a fine copy of Albinus at
+his father's expense, and in a fortnight, with his sister to aid, learnt
+all the muscles of the body, their rise and insertion, by heart. He
+stumbled accidentally on Reynold's <i>Discourses</i>, and the first
+that he read placed so much reliance on honest industry, and expressed
+so strong a conviction that all men are equal in talent, and that
+application makes all the difference, that the would-be artist, who
+hitherto had been held back by some distrust of his natural powers, felt
+that at last his destiny was irrevocably fixed. He announced his
+intention of adopting an art-career with a determination that demolished
+all argument, and, in spite of remonstrances, reproaches, tears, and
+scoldings, he wrung from his father permission to go to London, and the
+promise of support for the next two years.</p>
+
+<p>On May 14, 1804, at the age of eighteen, young Haydon took his place
+in the mail, and made his first flight into the world. Arriving at the
+lodgings that had been taken for him in the Strand in the early morning,
+he had no sooner breakfasted than he set off for Somerset House, to see
+the Royal Academy Exhibition. Looking round for historical pictures, he
+discovered that Opie's 'Gil Bias' was the centre of attraction in one
+room, and Westall's 'Shipwrecked Boy' in another.</p>
+
+<p>'I don't fear you,' he said to himself as he strode away. His next
+step was to inquire for a plaster-shop, where he bought the Laoco&ouml;n
+and other casts, and then, having unpacked his Albinus, he was hard at
+work before nine next morning drawing from the round, and breathing
+aspirations for High Art, and defiance to all opposition. 'For three
+months,' he tells us, 'I saw nothing but my books, my casts, and my
+drawings. My enthusiasm was immense, my devotion for study that of a
+martyr. I rose when I woke, at three or four, drew at anatomy till
+eight, in chalks from casts from nine till one, and from half-past two
+till five--then walked, dined, and to anatomy again from seven till ten
+or eleven. I was resolute to be a great painter, to honour my country,
+and to rescue the Art from that stigma of incapacity that was impressed
+upon it.</p>
+
+<p>After some months of solitary study, Haydon bethought him of a
+letter of introduction that had been given him to Prince Hoare, who was
+something of a critic, having himself failed as an artist. Hoare
+good-naturedly encouraged the youth in his ambitions, and gave him
+introductions to Northcote, Opie, and Fuseli.</p>
+
+<p>To Northcote, who was a Plymouth man, Haydon went first, and he
+gives a curious account of his interview with his distinguished
+fellow-countryman, who also had once cherished aspirations after high
+art. Northcote, a little wizened old man, with a broad Devonshire
+accent, exclaimed on hearing that his young visitor intended to be a
+historical painter: 'Heestorical painter! why, ye'll starve with a
+bundle of straw under yeer head.' As for anatomy, he declared that it
+was no use. 'Sir Joshua didn't know it; why should you want to know what
+he didn't? Michael Angelo! What's he to do here? You must paint
+portraits here.' 'I won't,' said young Haydon, clenching his teeth, and
+he marched off to Opie. He found a coarse-looking, intellectual man who,
+after reading the introductory letter, said quietly, 'You are studying
+anatomy--master it--were I your age, I would do the same.' The last
+visit was to Fuseli, who had a great reputation for the terrible, both
+as artist and as man. The gallery into which the visitor was ushered was
+so full of devils, witches, ghosts, blood and thunder, that it was a
+palpable relief when nothing more alarming appeared than a little old
+and lion-faced man, attired in a flannel dressing-gown, with the bottom
+of Mrs. Fuseli's work-basket on his head! Fuseli, who had just been
+appointed Keeper of Academy, received the young man kindly, praised his
+drawings, and expressed a hope that he would see him at the Academy
+School.</p>
+
+<p>After the Christmas vacation of 1805, Haydon began to attend the
+Academy classes, where he struck up a close friendship with John
+Jackson, afterwards a popular portrait-painter and Royal Academician,
+but then a student like himself. Jackson was the son of a village tailor
+in Yorkshire, and the <i>prot&eacute;ge</i> of Lord Mulgrave and Sir
+George Beaumont. The two friends told each other their plans for the
+future, drew together in the evenings, and made their first life-studies
+from a friendly coalheaver whom they persuaded to sit to them. After a
+few months of hard work, Haydon was summoned home to take leave of his
+father, who was believed to be dying. The invalid recovered, and then
+followed another period of torture for the young student--aunts, uncles,
+and cousins all trying to drive the stray sheep back into the commercial
+fold. Exhausted by the struggle, Haydon at last consented to relinquish
+his career, and enter the business. Great was his delight and surprise
+when his father refused to accept the sacrifice--which was made in
+anything but a cheerful spirit--and promised to contribute to his
+support until he was able to provide for himself.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of all these domestic convulsions came a letter from
+Jackson, containing the announcement that there was 'a raw, tall, pale,
+queer Scotchman just come up, an odd fellow, but with something in him.
+He is called Wilkie.' 'Hang the fellow!' said Haydon to himself. 'I hope
+with his "something" he is not going to be a historical painter.' On his
+return to town, our hero made the acquaintance of the queer young
+Scotchman, and was soon admitted to his friendship and intimacy.
+Wilkie's 'Village Politicians' was the sensation of the Exhibition of
+1806, and brought him two important commissions--one from Lord Mulgrave
+for the 'Blind Fiddler,' and the other from Sir George Beaumont for the
+'Rent-Day.' It was now considered that Wilkie's fortune was made, his
+fame secure, and if his two chief friends--Haydon and Jackson--could not
+help regarding him with some natural feelings of envy, it is evident
+that his early success encouraged them, and stimulated them to increased
+effort.</p>
+
+<p>Haydon had been learning fresh secrets in his art, partly from an
+anatomical 'subject' that he had obtained from a surgeon, and partly
+from his introduction, through the good offices of Jackson, to the works
+of Titian at Stafford House, and in other private collections, there
+being as yet no National Gallery where the student could study the old
+masters at his pleasure. Haydon was now panting to begin his first
+picture, his natural self-confidence having been strengthened by a
+letter from Wilkie, who reported that Lord Mulgrave, with whom he was
+staying, was much interested in what he had heard of Haydon's ambitions.
+Lord Mulgrave had suggested a heroic subject--the Death of
+Dentatus--which he would like to see painted, and he wished to know if
+this commended itself to Haydon's ideas. This first commission for a
+great historical picture--for so he understood the suggestion--was a
+triumph for the young artist, who felt himself gloriously rewarded for
+two years of labour and opposition. He had, however, already decided on
+the subject of his first attempt--Joseph and Mary resting on the road to
+Egypt. On October 1,1806, after setting his palette, and taking his
+brush in hand, he knelt down, in accordance with his invariable custom
+throughout his career, and prayed fervently that God would bless his
+work, grant him energy to create a new era in art, and rouse the people
+to a just estimate of the moral value of historical painting.</p>
+
+<p>Then followed a happy time. The difficulties of a first attempt were
+increased by his lack of systematic training, but Haydon believed, with
+Sir Joshua, that application made the artist, and he certainly spared no
+pains to achieve success. He painted and repainted his heads a dozen
+times, and used to mix tints on a piece of paper, and carry them down to
+Stafford House once a week in order to compare them with the colouring
+of the Titians. While this work was in progress, Sir George and Lady
+Beaumont called to see the picture, which they declared was very
+poetical, and 'quite large enough for anything' (the canvas was six feet
+by four), and invited the artist to dinner. This first dinner-party, in
+what he regarded as 'high life,' was an alarming ordeal for the country
+youth, who made prodigious preparations, drove to the house in a state
+of abject terror, and in five minutes was sitting on an ottoman, talking
+to Lady Beaumont, and more at ease than he had ever been in his life. In
+truth, bashfulness was never one of Haydon's foibles.</p>
+
+<p>The Joseph and Mary took six months to paint, and was exhibited in
+1807. It was considered a remarkable work for a young student, and was
+bought the following year by Mr. Hope of Deepdene. During the season,
+Haydon was introduced to Lord Mulgrave, and with his friends Wilkie and
+Jackson frequently dined at the Admiralty, [Footnote: Lord Mulgrave had
+recently been appointed First Lord of the Admiralty.] where they met
+ministers, generals, great ladies and men of genius, and rose daily in
+hope and promise. Haydon now began the picture of the 'Death of Siccius
+Dentatus' that his patron had suggested, but he found the difficulties
+so overwhelming that, by Wilkie's advice, he decided to go down to
+Plymouth for a few months, and practise portrait-painting. At fifteen
+guineas a head, he got plenty of employment among his friends and
+relations, though he owns that his portraits were execrable; but as soon
+as he had obtained some facility in painting heads, he was anxious to
+return to town to finish his large picture. Mrs. Haydon was now in
+declining health, and desiring to consult a famous surgeon in London,
+she decided to travel thither with her son and daughter. Unfortunately
+her disease, angina pectoris, was aggravated by the agitation of the
+journey, and on the road, at Salt Hill, she was seized with an attack
+that proved fatal. Haydon was obliged to return to Devonshire with his
+sister, but as soon as the funeral was over he set off again for town,
+where his prospects seemed to justify his exchanging his garret in the
+Strand for a first floor in Great Marlborough Street.</p>
+
+<p>He found the practice gained in portrait-painting a substantial
+advantage, but he still felt himself incapable of composing a heroic
+figure for Dentatus. 'If I copied nature my work was mean,' he
+complains; 'and if I left her it was mannered. How was I to build a
+heroic form like life, yet above life?' He was puzzled to find, in
+painting from the living model, that the markings of the skin varied
+with the action of the limbs, variations that did not appear in the few
+specimens of the antique that had come under his notice. Was nature
+wrong, he asked himself, or the antique? During this period of
+indecision and confusion came a proposal from Wilkie that they should go
+together to inspect the Elgin Marbles then newly arrived in England, and
+deposited at Lord Elgin's house in Park Lane. Haydon carelessly agreed,
+knowing nothing of the wonders he was to see, and the two friends
+proceeded to Park Lane, where they were ushered through a yard to a
+dirty shed, in which lay the world-famous Marbles.</p>
+
+<p>'The first thing I fixed my eyes on,' to quote Haydon's own words,
+'was the wrist of a figure in one of the female groups, in which were
+visible the radius and ulna. I was astonished, for I had never seen them
+hinted at in any wrist in the antique. I darted my eye to the elbow, and
+saw the outer condyle visibly affecting the shape, as in nature. That
+combination of nature and repose which I had felt was so much wanting
+for high art was here displayed to midday conviction. My heart beat. If
+I had seen nothing else, I had beheld sufficient to help me to nature
+for the rest of my life. But when I turned to the Theseus, and saw that
+every form was altered by action or repose-when I saw that the two sides
+of his back varied as he rested on his elbow; and again, when in the
+figure of the fighting metope, I saw the muscle shown under one armpit
+in that instantaneous action of darting out, and left out in the other
+armpits; when I saw, in short, the most heroic style of art, combined
+with all the essential detail of everyday life, the thing was done at
+once and for ever.... Here were the principles which the great Greeks in
+their finest time established, and here was I, the most prominent
+historical student, perfectly qualified to appreciate all this by my own
+determined mode of study.'</p>
+
+<p>On returning to his painting-room, Haydon, feeling utterly disgusted
+with his attempt at the heroic in the form and action of Dentatus,
+obliterated what he calls 'the abominable mass,' and breathed as if
+relieved of a nuisance. Through Lord Mulgrave he obtained an order to
+draw from the Marbles, and devoted the next three months to mastering
+their secrets, and bringing his hand and mind into subjection to the
+principles that they displayed. 'I rose with the sun,' he writes, with
+the glow of his first enthusiasm still upon him, 'and opened my eyes to
+the light only to be conscious of my high pursuit. I sprang from my bed,
+dressed like one possessed, and passed the day, noon, and the night, in
+the same dream of abstracted enthusiasm; secluded from the world,
+regardless of its feelings, impregnable to disease, insensible to
+contempt.' He painted his heads, figures, and draperies over and over
+again, feeling that to obliterate was the only way to improve. His
+studio soon filled with fashionable folk, who came to see the
+'extraordinary picture painted by a young man who had never had the
+advantages of foreign travel.' Haydon believed, with the simplicity of a
+child, in all these flattering prophecies of glory and fame, and
+imagined that the Academy would welcome with open arms so promising a
+student, one, moreover, who had been trained in its own school. He
+redoubled his efforts, and in March 1809, 'Dentatus' was finished.</p>
+
+<p>'The production of this picture,' he naively explains, 'must and
+will be considered as an epoch in English art. The drawing in it was
+correct and elevated, and the perfect forms and system of the antique
+were carried into painting, united with the fleshy look of everyday
+life. The colour, light and shadow, the composition and the telling of
+the story were complete.' His contemporaries did not form quite so
+flattering an estimate of the work. It was badly hung, a fate to which
+many an artist of three-and-twenty has had to submit, before and since;
+but Haydon writes as if no such injustice had been committed since the
+world began, and was persuaded that the whole body of Academicians was
+leagued in spite and jealousy against him. Lord Mulgrave gave him sixty
+guineas in addition to the hundred he had first promised, which seems a
+fair price for the second work of an obscure artist, but poor Haydon
+fancied that his professional prospects had suffered from the treatment
+of the Academy, that people of fashion (on whose attentions he set great
+store) were neglecting him, and that he was a marked man. A sea-trip to
+Plymouth with Wilkie gave his thoughts a new and more healthy turn.
+Together, the friends visited Sir Joshua's birthplace, and roamed over
+the moors and combes of Devonshire. Before returning to town, they spent
+a delightful fortnight with Sir George Beaumont at Coleorton, where,
+says Haydon, 'we dined with the Claude and Rembrandt before us, and
+breakfasted with the Rubens landscape, and did nothing, morning, noon,
+and night, but think of painting, talk of painting, and wake to paint
+again.'</p>
+
+<p>During this visit, Sir George gave Haydon a commission for a picture
+on a subject from <i>Macbeth</i>. After it was begun, he objected to
+the size, but our artist, who, throughout his life, detested painting
+cabinet pictures, refused to attempt anything on a smaller scale. He
+persuaded Sir George to withhold his decision until the picture was
+finished, and promised that if he still objected to the size, he would
+paint him another on any scale he pleased. While engaged on 'Macbeth,'
+he competed with 'Dentatus' for a hundred guinea prize offered by the
+Directors of the British Gallery for the best historical picture.
+'Dentatus' won the prize, but this piece of good fortune was
+counterbalanced by a letter from Mr. Haydon, senior, containing the
+announcement that he could no longer afford to maintain his son. This
+was a heavy blow, but after turning over pros and cons in his own mind,
+Haydon came to the conclusion that since he had won the hundred guinea
+prize, he had a good chance of winning a three hundred guinea prize,
+which the Directors now offered, with his 'Macbeth,' and consequently
+that he had no occasion to dread starvation. 'Thus reasoning,' he says,
+'I borrowed, and praying God to bless my emotions, went on more
+vigorously than ever. <i>And here began debt and obligation, out of
+which I have never been, and shall never be, extricated, as long as I
+live.'</i></p>
+
+<p>This prophecy proved only too true. But Haydon, though he afterwards
+bitterly regretted his folly in exchanging independence for debt, and
+his pride in refusing to paint pot-boilers in the intervals of his great
+works, firmly believed that he, with his high aims and fervent desire to
+serve the cause of art, was justified in continuing his ambitious
+course, and depending for maintenance on the contributions of his
+friends. Nothing could exceed the approbation of his own conduct, or
+shake his faith in his own powers. 'I was a virtuous and diligent
+youth,' he assures us; 'I never touched wine, dined at reasonable
+chop-houses, lived principally in my study, and cleaned my own brushes,
+like the humblest student.' He goes to see Sebastian del Piombo's
+'Lazarus' in the Angerstein collection, and, after writing a careful
+criticism of the work, concludes: 'It is a grand picture; a great
+acquisition to the country, and an honour to Mr. Angerstein's taste and
+spirit in buying it; yet if God cut not my life permanently short, I
+hope I shall leave one behind me that will do more honour to my country
+than this has done to Rome. In short, if I live, I will--I feel I shall,
+(God pardon me if this is presumption. June 31, 1810.)'</p>
+
+<p>At this time Haydon devoted a good deal of his leisure to reading
+classic authors, Homer, &AElig;schylus, and Virgil, in order to tune his
+mind to high thoughts. Nearly every day he spent a few hours in drawing
+from the Elgin Marbles, and he piously thanks God that he was in
+existence on their arrival. He spared no pains to ensure that his
+'Macbeth' should be perfect in poetry, expression, form and colour,
+making casts and studies without end. His friends related, as a
+wonderful specimen of his conscientiousness, that, after having
+completed the figure of Macbeth, he took it out in order to raise it
+higher in the picture, believing that this would improve the effect.
+'The wonder in ancient Athens would have been if I had suffered him to
+remain,' he observes. 'Such is the state of art in this country!'</p>
+
+<p>In 1811 Haydon entered into his first journalistic controversy, an
+unfortunate departure, as it turned out, since it gave him a taste for
+airing his ideas in print. Leigh Hunt, to whom he had been introduced a
+year or two before, had attacked one of his theories, relative to a
+standard figure, in the <i>Examiner</i>. Haydon replied, was replied to
+himself, and thoroughly enjoyed the controversy which, he says,
+consolidated his powers of verbal expression. Leigh Hunt he describes as
+a fine specimen of a London editor, with his bushy hair, black eyes,
+pale face, and 'nose of taste.' He was assuming yet moderate, sarcastic
+yet genial, with a smattering of everything and mastery of nothing;
+affecting the dictator, the poet, the politician, the critic, and the
+sceptic, whichever would, at the moment, give him the air, to inferior
+minds, of a very superior man.' Although Haydon disliked Hunt's 'Cockney
+peculiarities,' and disapproved of his republican principles, yet the
+fearless honesty of his opinions, the unhesitating sacrifice of his own
+interests, the unselfish perseverance of his attacks upon all abuses,
+whether royal or religious, noble or democratic, made a deep impression
+on the young artist's mind.</p>
+
+<p>Towards the end of 1811 the new picture, which represents Macbeth
+stepping between the sleeping grooms to murder the king, was finished,
+and sent to the British Gallery. It was well hung, and was praised by
+the critics, but Sir George declined to take it, though he offered to
+pay Haydon a hundred pounds for his trouble, or to give him a commission
+for a picture on a smaller scale. Haydon petulantly refused both offers,
+and thus after three years' work, and incurring debts to the amount of
+six hundred pounds, he found himself penniless, with his picture
+returned on his hands. This disappointment was only the natural result
+of his own impracticable temperament, but to Haydon's exaggerative sense
+the whole world seemed joined in a conspiracy against him. 'Exasperated
+by the neglect of my family,' he writes, 'tormented by the consciousness
+of debt, cut to the heart by the cruelty of Sir George, and enraged at
+the insults of the Academy, I became furious.' His fury, unfortunately,
+found vent in an attack upon the Academy and its methods, through the
+medium of the <i>Examiner</i>, which was the recognised vehicle of all
+attacks upon authority. The onslaught seems to have been justified,
+though whether it was judicious is another question. The ideals of
+English artists during the early years of the nineteenth century had
+sunk very low, and the standard of public taste was several degrees
+lower. Portrait-painting was the only lucrative branch of art, and the
+Academy was almost entirely in the hands of the portrait-painters, who
+gave little encouragement to works of imagination. The burden of the
+patron, which had been removed from literature, still rested upon
+painting, and the Academicians found it more to their interest to foster
+the ignorance than to educate the taste of the patron.</p>
+
+<p>Over the signature of 'An English Student,' Haydon not only exposed
+the inefficiency of the Academy, but advocated numerous reforms, chief
+among them being an improved method of election, the establishment of
+schools of design, a reduction in the power of the Council, and an
+annual grant of public money for purposes of art. In these days, when
+the Academicians are no longer regarded as a sacred body, it is hard to
+realise the commotion that these letters made in art circles, whether
+professional or amateur. The identity of the 'English Student' was soon
+discovered, and 'from that moment,' writes Haydon, 'the destiny of my
+life was changed. My picture was caricatured, my name detested, my peace
+harassed. I was looked at like a monster, abused like a plague, and
+avoided like a maniac.' There is probably some characteristic
+exaggeration in this statement, but considering the power wielded at
+this time by the Academy and its supporters, Haydon would undoubtedly
+have done better, from a worldly point of view, to keep clear of these
+controversies. The prudent and sensible Wilkie was much distressed at
+his friend's ebullition of temper, and earnestly advised him to follow
+up the reputation his brush had gained for him, and leave the pen alone.
+'In moments of depression,' wrote Haydon, many years later, 'I often
+wished I had followed Wilkie's advice, but then I should never have
+acquired that grand and isolated reputation, solitary and unsupported,
+which, while it encumbers the individual, inspires him with vigour
+proportioned to the load.'</p>
+
+<p>On April 3, 1812, Haydon records in his journal: 'My canvas came
+home for Solomon, twelve feet ten inches by ten feet ten inches--a grand
+size. God in heaven, grant me strength of body and vigour of mind to
+cover it with excellence. Amen--on my knees.' His design was to paint a
+series of great ideal works, that should stand comparison with the
+productions of the old masters, and he had chosen the somewhat
+stereotyped subject of the Judgment of Solomon, because Raphael and
+Rubens had both tried it, and he intended to tell the story better! He
+was now, at the beginning of this ambitious project, entirely without
+means. His father had died, and left him nothing, and his 'Macbeth' had
+not won the &pound;300 premium at the British Gallery. His aristocratic
+friends had temporarily deserted him, but the Hunts assisted him with
+the ready liberality of the impecunious. John lent him small sums of
+money, while Leigh offered him a plate at his table till Solomon was
+finished, and initiated him into the mysteries of drawing and
+discounting bills.</p>
+
+<p>Haydon already owed his landlord two hundred pounds, but that seemed
+to him no reason for moving into cheaper rooms. He called the man up,
+and represented to him that he was about to paint a great masterpiece,
+which would take him two years, during which period he would earn
+nothing, and be unable to pay any rent. The landlord, surely a unique
+specimen of his order, deliberated rather ruefully over the prospect set
+before him, rubbed his chin, and muttered: 'I should not like ye to
+go--it's hard for both of us; but what I say is, you always paid me when
+you could, and why should you not again when you are able?... Well, sir,
+here's my hand; I'll give you two years more, and if this does not
+sell--why then, sir, we'll consider what is to be done.'</p>
+
+<p>Thus a roof was provided, but there was still dinner to be thought
+of, since, if a man works, he must also eat. 'I went to the house [John
+o' Groat's] where I had always dined,' writes Haydon, 'intending to dine
+without paying for that day. I thought the servants did not offer me the
+same attention. I thought I perceived the company examine me--I thought
+the meat was worse. My heart sank, as I said falteringly, "I will pay
+you to-morrow." The girl smiled, and seemed interested. As I was
+escaping with a sort of lurking horror, she said, "Mr. Haydon, my master
+wishes to see you." "My God," thought I, "it is to tell me he can't
+trust!" In I walked like a culprit. "Sir, I beg your pardon, but I see
+by the papers you have been ill-used; I hope you won't be angry--I mean
+no offence; but I just wish to say, as you have dined here many years
+and always paid, if it would be a convenience during your present work
+to dine here till it is done--so that you may not be obliged to spend
+your money here when you may want it--I was going to say that you need
+be under no apprehension--hem! for a dinner."' This handsome offer was
+condescendingly accepted, and the good man seemed quite relieved.</p>
+
+<p>While Solomon was slowly progressing at the expense of the landlord
+and the eating-house keeper, Haydon spent his leisure in literary rather
+than artistic circles. At Leigh Hunt's he met, and became intimate with
+Charles Lamb, Keats, Hazlitt, and John Scott. In January 1813 he writes:
+'Spent the evening with Leigh Hunt at West End. His society is always
+delightful. I do not know a purer, more virtuous partner, or a more
+witty and enlivening man. We talked of his approaching imprisonment. He
+said it would be a great pleasure if he were certain to be sent to
+Newgate, because he should be in the midst of his friends.' Hazlitt won
+our hero's liking by praising his 'Macbeth.' 'Thence began a
+friendship,' Haydon tells us, 'for that interesting man, that singular
+mixture of friend and fiend, radical and critic, metaphysician, poet,
+and painter, on whose word no one could rely, on whose heart no one
+could calculate, and some of whose deductions he himself would try to
+explain in vain.... Mortified at his own failure [in painting] he
+resolved that as he had not succeeded, no one else should, and he spent
+the whole of his after-life in damping the ardour, chilling the hopes,
+and dimming the prospects of patrons and painters, so that after I once
+admitted him, I had nothing but forebodings of failure to bear up
+against, croakings about the climate, and sneers at the taste of the
+public.'</p>
+
+<p>By the beginning of 1814 Solomon was approaching completion, but the
+artist had been reduced to living for a fortnight on potatoes. He had
+now been nearly four years without a commission, and three without any
+help from home, so that it is not surprising to learn that he felt
+completely broken down in body and mind, or that his debts amounted to
+&pound;1100. A frame was procured on credit, and, failing any more
+suitable place of exhibition, the picture was sent to the Water-colour
+Society. At the private view, the Princess of Wales and other eminent
+critics pronounced against the Solomon, but as soon as the public were
+admitted, the tune changed, and John Bull vowed it was the finest work
+of art ever produced in England. If posterity has not indorsed this
+judgment, the Solomon is at least regarded, by competent critics, as
+Haydon's most successful work. 'Before the doors had been open half an
+hour,' writes Haydon, 'a gentleman opened his pocket-book, and showed me
+a &pound;500 note. "Will you take it?" My heart beat--my agonies of want
+pressed, but it was too little. I trembled out, "I cannot." The
+gentleman invited me to dine, and when we were sitting over our wine,
+agreed to give me my price. His lady said, "But, my dear, where am I to
+put my piano?" and the bargain was at an end!' On the third day Sir
+George Beaumont and Mr. Holwell Carr came to the Exhibition, having been
+deputed to buy the picture for the British Gallery. While they were
+discussing its merits, one of the officials went over, and put 'sold' on
+the frame, whereupon the artist says he thought he should have fainted.
+The work had been bought at the price asked, &pound;700, by two Plymouth
+bankers, Sir William Elford (the friend and correspondent of Miss
+Mitford) and Mr. Tingecombe.</p>
+
+<p>Poor Haydon now thought that his fortune was secure. He paid away
+&pound;500 to landlord and tradesmen in the first week, and though this
+did not settle half his debts, it restored his credit. The balance was
+spent in a trip to Paris with Wilkie, Paris being then (May 1814) the
+most interesting place on earth. All the nations of Europe were gathered
+together there, and the Louvre was in its glory. So absorbed and
+fascinated was Haydon by the actual life of the city, that he finds
+little to say about the works of art there collected. Yet his first
+visit was to the Louvre, and he describes with what impetuosity he
+bounded up the steps, three at a time, and how he scolded Wilkie for
+trotting up with his usual deliberation. 'I might just as well have
+scolded the column,' he observes. 'I soon left him at some Jan Steen,
+while I never stopped until I stood before the "Transfiguration." My
+first feeling was disappointment. It looked small, harsh and hard. This,
+of course, is always the way when you have fed your imagination for
+years on a work you know only by prints. Even the "Pietro Martyre" was
+smaller than I thought to find it; yet after the difference between
+reality and anticipation had worn away, these great works amply repaid
+the study of them, and grew up to the fancy, or rather the fancy grew up
+to them.... It will hardly be believed by artists that we often forgot
+the great works in the Louvre in the scenes around us, and found
+Russians and Bashkirs from Tartary more attractive than the
+"Transfiguration"; but so it was, and I do not think we were very wrong
+either. Why stay poring over pictures when we were on the most
+remarkable scene in the history of the earth.'</p>
+
+<p>On his return to London, Haydon was gratified by the news that his
+friend and fellow-townsman, George Eastlake, had proposed and carried a
+motion that he should be presented with the freedom of his native city,
+as a testimony of respect for his extraordinary merit as a historical
+painter. Furthermore, the Directors of the British Gallery sent him a
+hundred guineas as a token of their admiration for his latest work. But
+no commission followed, either from a private patron or public body.
+However, the artist, nothing daunted, ordered a larger canvas, and set
+vigorously to work on a representation of 'Christ's Entry into
+Jerusalem,' a picture which occupied him, with intervals of illness and
+idleness, for nearly six years.</p>
+
+<p>The year 1815 was too full of stir and excitement for a man like
+Haydon, who was always keenly interested in public affairs, to devote
+himself to steady work. The news of Waterloo almost turned his brain. On
+June 23 he notes: 'I read the <i>Gazette</i> [with the account of
+Waterloo] the last thing before going to bed. I dreamt of it, and was
+fighting all night; I got up in a steam of feeling, and read the <i>Gazette</i>
+again, ordered a <i>Courier</i> for a month, and read all the papers
+till I was faint.... 'Have not the efforts of the nation,' I asked
+myself, 'been gigantic?' To such glories she only wants to add the
+glories of my noble art to make her the grandest nation in the world,
+and these she shall have if God spare my life....</p>
+
+<p>'<i>June</i> 25.--Dined with Hunt. I give myself credit for not
+worrying him to death at this news. He was quiet for some time, but
+knowing it must come, and putting on an air of indifference, he said,
+"Terrible battle this, Haydon." "A glorious one, Hunt." "Oh yes,
+certainly," and to it we went. Yet Hunt took a just and liberal view of
+the situation. As for Hazlitt, it is not to be believed how the
+destruction of Napoleon affected him; he seemed prostrated in mind and
+body; he walked about unwashed, unshaved, hardly sober by day, and
+always intoxicated by night, literally, without exaggeration, for weeks,
+until at length, wakening as it were from his stupor, he at once left
+off all stimulating liquors, and never touched them after.'</p>
+
+<p>It is in this year that we find the first mention in the Journal of
+Wordsworth, who, throughout his life, was one of Haydon's most faithful
+friends and appreciative admirers. On April 13, the artist records: 'I
+had a cast made yesterday of Wordsworth's face. He bore it like a
+philosopher.... We afterwards called on Hunt, and as Hunt had previously
+attacked him, and now has reformed his opinions, the meeting was
+interesting. Hunt paid him the highest compliments, and told him that as
+he grew wiser and got older, he found his respect for his powers, and
+enthusiasm for his genius, increase.... I afterwards sauntered with him
+to Hampstead, with great delight. Never did any man so beguile the time
+as Wordsworth. His purity of heart, his kindness, his soundness of
+principle, his information, his knowledge, and the intense and eager
+feelings with which he pours forth all he knows, affect, interest, and
+enchant one. I do not know any one I would be so inclined to worship as
+a purified being.'</p>
+
+<p>The new picture was not far advanced before the painter was once
+again at the end of his resources, though not of his courage. Fifty
+guineas were advanced to him by Sir George Beaumont, who had now
+commissioned a picture at two hundred guineas, and Mr. (after Sir
+George) Phillips, of Manchester, gave him a commission of &pound;500 for
+a sacred work, paying one hundred guineas down. But these advances
+melted rapidly away in the expenses attendant on the painting of so
+ambitious a work as the 'Entry into Jerusalem.' Towards the close of the
+year Haydon's health began to suffer from his excessive application, his
+sight weakened, and he was often unable to paint for months at a time.
+Under these afflictions, he was consoled by receiving permission to take
+casts of the Elgin Marbles, the authenticity of which treasures had
+recently been attacked by the art-critic, Knight Payne, who declared
+that they were not Greek at all, but Roman, of the time of Hadrian. Such
+was the effect of Payne Knight's opinion that the Marbles went down in
+the public estimation, the Government hesitated to buy them for the
+nation, and they were left neglected in a damp shed. Haydon was furious
+at this insult to the objects of his idolatry, whose merits he had been
+preaching in season and out of season since the day that he first set
+eyes upon the Theseus and the Ilissus. At this critical moment he found
+himself supported by a new and powerful champion in the person of
+Canova, who had just arrived in England. Canova at once admitted that
+the style of the Marbles was superior to that of all other known
+marbles, and declared that they were well worth coming from Rome to see.
+'Canova's visit was a victory for me,' writes Haydon, who had received
+the sculptor at his studio, and introduced him to some of the artistic
+lions of London. 'What became now of all the sneers at my senseless
+insanity about the Marbles? I, unknown, with no station or rank, might
+have talked myself dumb; but for Canova, the great artist of Europe, to
+repeat word for word what I had been saying for seven years! His opinion
+could not be gainsaid.'</p>
+
+<p>If our troubles are apt to come not in single file, but in 'whole
+battalions,' our triumphs also occasionally arrive in squadrons, or such
+at least was Haydon's experience. Hard upon Canova's departure came a
+letter from Wordsworth, enclosing three sonnets, the last of which had,
+he avowed, been inspired by a letter of Haydon's on the struggles and
+hardships of the artist's life. This is now the familiar sonnet
+beginning, <br>
+</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp; 'High is our calling, Friend,' <br>
+</p>
+
+<p>and concluding:</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp; 'Great is the glory, for the strife is hard.'</p>
+
+<p>'Now, reader,' writes the delighted recipient, 'was not this
+glorious? And you, young student, when you are pressed down by want in
+the midst of a great work, remember what followed Haydon's perseverance.
+The freedom of his native town, the visit of Canova, and the sonnet of
+Wordsworth, and if that do not cheer you up, and make you go on, you are
+past all hope.... It had, indeed, been a wonderful year for me. The
+Academicians were silenced. All classes were so enthusiastic and so
+delighted that, though I had lost seven months with weak eyes, and had
+only accomplished The Penitent Girl, The Mother, The Centurion and the
+Samaritan Woman, yet they were considered so decidedly in advance of all
+I had yet done, that my painting-room was crowd by rank, beauty, and
+fashion, and the picture was literally taken up as an honour to the
+nation.'</p>
+
+<p>But, alas! neither the sonnets of poets nor the homage of the great
+would pay for models and colours, or put bread into the artist's mouth.
+Haydon could only live by renewed borrowing, for which method of support
+he endeavours, without much success, to excuse himself. Once in the
+clutches of professional money-lenders, he confesses that 'the fine edge
+of honour was dulled. Though my honourable discharge of what I borrowed
+justified my borrowing again, yet it is a fallacious relief, because you
+must stop sooner or later; if you are punctual, and if you can pay in
+the long-run, why incur the debt at all? Too proud to do small, modest
+things, that I might obtain fair means of subsistence as I proceeded
+with my great work, I thought it no degradation to borrow, to risk the
+insult of refusal, and be bated down like the meanest dealer. Then I was
+liberal in my art; I spared no expense for casts and prints, and did
+great things for the art by means of them.... Ought I, after such
+efforts as I had made, to have been left in this position by the
+Directors of the British Gallery or the Government?'</p>
+
+<p>The year 1816 was distinguished in Haydon's life as the epoch of his
+first, or, more accurately, his last serious love-affair. He was of a
+susceptible temperament, and seems to have been a favourite with women,
+whom he inspired with his own strong belief in himself; but he demanded
+much of the woman who was to be his wife, and hitherto he had not found
+one who seemed worthy of that exalted position. He had long been
+acquainted with Maria Foote, the actress, for whom he entertained a
+qualified admiration, and by her he was taken one day to a friend's
+house where, 'In one instant, the loveliest face that was ever created
+since God made Eve, smiled gently at my approach. The effect of her
+beauty was instantaneous. On the sofa lay a dying man and a boy about
+two years old. We shortly took leave. I never spoke a word, and after
+seeing M---- home, I returned to the house, and stood outside, in hopes
+that she would appear at the window. I went home, and for the first time
+in my life was really, heartily, thoroughly, passionately in love. I
+hated my pictures. I hated the Elgin Marbles. I hated books. I could not
+eat, or sleep, or think, or write, or talk. I got up early, examined the
+premises and street, and gave a man half-a-crown to let me sit
+concealed, and watch for her coming out. Day after day I grew more and
+more enraptured, till resistance was relinquished with a glorious
+defiance of restraint. Her conduct to her dying husband, her gentle
+reproof of my impassioned air, riveted my being. But I must not
+anticipate. Sufficient for the present, O reader, is it to tell thee
+that B. R. Haydon is, and for ever will be, in love with that woman, and
+that she is his wife.'</p>
+
+<p>The first note that Haydon has preserved from his friend Keats is
+dated November 1816, and runs:</p>
+
+<p> 'MY DEAR SIR,--Last evening wrought me up, and I cannot forbear
+sending you the following.--Yours imperfectly,</p>
+
+<p>JOHN KEATS.'</p>
+
+<p>The 'following' was nothing less than the noble sonnet,
+beginning--'Great spirits now on earth are sojourning,' with an allusion
+to Haydon in the lines: </p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;'And lo! whose steadfastness would never take<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;A meaner sound than Raphael's whispering.'</p>
+
+<p>Haydon wrote an enthusiastic letter of thanks, gave the young poet
+some good advice, and promised to send his sonnet to Wordsworth.
+'Keats,' he records, 'was the only man I ever met who seemed and looked
+conscious of a high calling, except Wordsworth. Byron and Shelley were
+always sophisticating about their verses; Keats sophisticated about
+nothing. He had made up his mind to do great things, and when he found
+that by his connection with the <i>Examiner</i> clique he had brought
+upon himself an overwhelming outcry of unjust aversion, he shrank up
+into himself, his diseased tendencies showed themselves, and he died a
+victim to mistakes, on the part of friends and enemies alike.'</p>
+
+<p>Haydon gives a curious account of his first meeting with Shelley,
+which took place in the course of this year. The occasion was a
+dinner-party at James Smith's house, when Keats and Horace Smith were
+also among the guests. 'I seated myself,' writes Haydon,' right opposite
+Shelley, as I was told afterwards, for I did not then know what hectic,
+spare, weakly, yet intellectual-looking creature it was, carving a bit
+of broccoli or cabbage in his plate, as if it had been the substantial
+wing of a chicken. In a few minutes Shelley opened the conversation by
+saying in the most feminine and gentle voice, "As to that detestable
+religion, the Christian--" I looked astounded, but casting a glance
+round the table, I easily saw that I was to be set at that evening <i>vi
+et armis</i>.... I felt like a stag at bay, and resolved to gore
+without mercy. Shelley said the Mosaic and Christian dispensation were
+inconsistent. I swore they were not, and that the Ten Commandments had
+been the foundation of all the codes of law on the earth. Shelley denied
+it. I affirmed they were, neither of us using an atom of logic.' This
+edifying controversy continued until all parties grew very warm, and
+said unpleasant things to one another. After this dinner, Haydon made up
+his mind to subject himself no more to the chance of these discussions,
+but gradually to withdraw from this freethinking circle.</p>
+
+<p>The chief artistic events of the year, from our hero's point of
+view, were, the final settlement of the Elgin Marbles question, and his
+own attempt to found a school. The Committee appointed by Government to
+examine and report upon the Marbles refused to call Haydon as a witness
+on Lord Elgin's side, but the artist embodied his views on the subject
+in a paper which appeared in both the <i>Examiner</i> and the <i>Champion</i>.
+This article, which was afterwards translated into French and Italian,
+contained a scathing attack on Payne Knight, and was said by Sir Thomas
+Lawrence to have saved the Elgin Marbles, and ruined Haydon. However
+this may be, the Government, it will be remembered, decided to buy the
+treasures for &pound;35,000, a sum considerably less than that which
+Lord Elgin had spent on bringing them to England.</p>
+
+<p>The School of Haydon was first instituted with three distinguished
+pupils in the persons of the three Landseer brothers, to whom were
+afterwards added William Bewick, Eastlake, Harvey, Lance, and Chatfield.
+Haydon set his disciples to draw from the Raphael Cartoons, two of which
+were brought up from Hampton Court to the British Gallery, and, as soon
+as they were sufficiently advanced, he sent them to the Museum to draw
+from the Elgin Marbles. 'Their cartoons,' he writes, 'drawn full size,
+of the Fates, of Theseus and the Ilissus, literally made a noise in
+Europe. An order came from the great Goethe at Weimar for a set for his
+own house, the furniture of which having been since bought by the
+Government, and the house kept up as it was in Goethe's time, the
+cartoons of my pupils are thus preserved, whilst in England the rest are
+lying about in cellars and corners/ The early days of the School thus
+held out a promise for the future, which unfortunately was not
+fulfilled. Haydon contrived to involve two or three of his pupils in his
+own financial embarrassments, by inducing them to sign accommodation
+bills, a proceeding which broke up the establishment, and brought a
+lasting stain upon his reputation.</p>
+
+<p>In 1817 Haydon was introduced to Miss Mitford, who greatly admired
+his work, and a warm friendship sprang up between the pair. In May, Miss
+Mitford wrote to Sir William Elford: 'The charm of the Exhibition is a
+chalk-drawing by Mr. Haydon taken, <i>as he tells me</i>, from a mother
+who had lost her child. It is the very triumph of expression. I have not
+yet lost the impression which it made upon my mind and senses, and which
+vented itself in a sonnet.' A visit to the studio followed, and Miss
+Mitford was charmed with the room, the books, the great unfinished
+picture, and the artist himself--with his <i>bonhomie</i>, <i>na&iuml;vet&eacute;</i>,
+and enthusiasm. With all her heart she admires the noble, independent
+spirit of Haydon, who, she declares, is quite one of the old heroes come
+to life again--one of Shakespeare's men, full of spirit, endurance, and
+moral courage. She concludes her account with an expression of regret
+that he should be 'such a fright.' Now Haydon is generally described by
+his contemporaries as a good-looking man, though short in stature, with
+an antique head, aquiline features, and fine dark eyes. His later
+portraits are chiefly remarkable for the immensely wide mouth with which
+he seems to be endowed, but in an early sketch by Wilkie he is
+represented as a picturesque youth with an admirably modelled profile.</p>
+
+<p>To Miss Mitford we owe a quaint anecdote of our hero, which, better
+than pages of analysis, depicts the man. It appears that Leigh Hunt, who
+was a great keeper of birthdays and other anniversaries, took it into
+his head to celebrate the birthday of Papa Haydn by giving a dinner,
+drinking toasts, and crowning the composer's bust with laurels. Some
+malicious person told Haydon that the Hunts were celebrating his
+birthday, a compliment that struck him as natural and well deserved.
+Hastening to Hampstead, he broke in upon the company, and addressed to
+them a formal speech, in which he thanked them for the honour they had
+done him, but explained that they had made a little mistake in the day!
+As a pendant to this anecdote, Miss Mitford relates that Haydon told her
+he had painted the head of his Christ seven times, and that the final
+head was a portrait of himself. It is only fair to remember that he
+always regarded it as the least successful part of the work.</p>
+
+<p>While the picture was in progress, Haydon decided to put in a side
+group with Voltaire as a sceptic, and Newton as a believer. This idea,
+founded on the intentional anachronisms of some of the old masters, was
+afterwards extended, Hazlitt being introduced as an investigator, and
+Wordsworth bowing in reverence, with Keats in the background. The two
+poets had never yet met in actual life, but in December 1817, Wordsworth
+being then on a visit to London, Haydon invited Keats to meet him. The
+other guests were Charles Lamb and Monkhouse. 'Wordsworth was in fine
+cue,' writes Haydon, 'and we had a glorious set-to-on Homer,
+Shakespeare, Milton, and Virgil. Lamb got exceedingly merry, and
+exquisitely witty, and his fun, in the midst of Wordsworth's solemn
+intonations of oratory, was like the sarcasm and wit of the fool in the
+intervals of Lear's passion.' Although the specimens of wit recorded no
+longer seem inspired, we can well believe Haydon's statement that it was
+an immortal evening, and that in all his life he never passed a more
+delightful time. We have abundant testimony to the fact that the
+artist-host was himself an exceptionally fine talker. Hazlitt said that
+'Haydon talked well on most subjects that interest one; indeed, better
+than any painter I ever met.' Wordsworth and Talfourd echoed this
+opinion, and Miss Mitford tells us that he was a most brilliant
+talker--racy, bold, original, and vigorous, 'a sort of Benvenuto
+Cellini, all air and fire.'</p>
+
+<p>It was not until January 1820 that the 'Entry into Jerusalem' was
+finished, when the artist, though absolutely penniless, engaged the
+great room at the Egyptian Hall for its exhibition, at a rent of
+&pound;300. His friends helped him over the incidental expenses, and in
+a state of feverish excitement he awaited the opening day. Public
+curiosity had been aroused about the work, and early in the afternoon
+there was a block of carriages in Piccadilly; the passage was thronged
+with servants, and soon the artist was holding what he described as a
+'regular rout at noonday.' While Keats and Hazlitt were rejoicing in a
+corner, Mrs. Siddons swept in, and in her loud, deep, tragic tones,
+declared that the head of Christ was completely successful. By her
+favourable verdict, Haydon, who had his doubts, was greatly consoled,
+not because Mrs. Siddons had any reputation as an art-critic, but
+because he recognised that she was an expert on the subject of dramatic
+expression. A thousand pounds was offered for the picture and refused,
+while the net profits from the exhibition, in London alone, amounted to
+&pound;1300. Haydon has been commonly represented as an unlucky man, who
+was always neglected by the public and the patrons, and never met with
+his professional deserts. But up to this time, as has been seen, he had
+found ready sympathy and admiration from the public, practical aid
+during the time of struggle from his friends, and a fair reward for his
+labours. With the exhibition of the 'Entry into Jerusalem,' his
+reputation was at its zenith; a little skilful engineering of the
+success thus gained might have extricated him from his difficulties, and
+enabled him to keep his head above water for the remainder of his days.
+But, owing chiefly to his own impracticability, his story from this
+point is one of decline, gradual at first, but increasing in velocity,
+until the end came in disaster and despair.<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 20%;">
+
+<p style="font-weight: bold; text-align: center;"> PART II</p>
+
+<p> Even while Haydon was in the first flush of his success, there were
+signs that he had achieved no lasting triumph. Sir George Beaumont
+proposed that the British Gallery should buy the great picture, but the
+Directors refused to give the price asked--&pound;2000. An effort to
+sell it by subscription fell through, only, &pound;200 being paid into
+Coutts'. When the exhibition closed in London, Haydon took his
+masterpiece to Scotland, and showed it both in Edinburgh and in Glasgow,
+netting another &pound;900, which, however, was quickly eaten up by
+hungry creditors. The picture was too big to tempt a private purchaser,
+and in spite of the admiration it had aroused, it remained like a white
+elephant upon its creator's hands.</p>
+
+<p>On his return to town, after being f&ecirc;ted by Sir Walter Scott,
+Lockhart, and 'Christopher North,' Haydon finished his commission for
+Sir George Phillips, 'Christ Sleeping in the Garden,' which, he frankly
+admitted, was one of the worst pictures he ever painted. Scarcely was
+this off his easel than he was inspired with a tremendous conception for
+the 'Raising of Lazarus.' He ordered a canvas such as his soul loved,
+nineteen feet long by fifteen high, and dashed in his first idea. He was
+still deeply in debt, still desperately in love (his lady was now a
+widow), and the new picture would take at least two years to paint.
+Nevertheless, he worked away with all his customary energy, and prayed
+fervently that he might paint a great masterpiece, never doubting but
+that his prayers would be heard.</p>
+
+<p>With the end of this year, 1820, Haydon's Autobiography breaks off,
+and the rest of his life is told in his Journals and Letters. At the
+beginning of 1821, when he was fairly at work on his Lazarus, he
+confides to his Journal his conviction that difficulties are to be his
+lot in pecuniary matters, and adds: 'My plan must be to make up my mind
+to meet them, and fag as I can--to lose no single moment, but seize on
+time that is free from disturbance, and make the most of it. If I can
+float, and keep alive attention to my situation through another picture,
+I will reach the shore. I am now clearly in sight of it, and I will yet
+land to the sound of trumpets, and the shouts of my friends.'</p>
+
+<p>In spite of his absorption in his work, Haydon found time for the
+society of his literary friends. On March 7, he records: 'Sir Walter
+Scott, Lamb, Wilkie, and Procter have been with me all the morning, and
+a delightful morning we have had. Scott operated on us like champagne
+and whisky mixed.... It is singular how success and the want of it
+operate on two extraordinary men, Walter Scott and Wordsworth. Scott
+enters a room and sits at table with the coolness and self-possession of
+conscious fame; Wordsworth with a mortified elevation of the head, as if
+fearful he was not estimated as he deserved. Scott can afford to talk of
+trifles, because he knows the world will think him a great man who
+condescends to trifle; Wordsworth must always be eloquent and profound,
+because he knows that he is considered childish and puerile.... I think
+that Scott's success would have made Wordsworth insufferable, while
+Wordsworth's failures would not have rendered Scott a whit less
+delightful. Scott is the companion of Nature in all her moods and
+freaks, while Wordsworth follows her like an apostle, sharing her solemn
+moods and impressions.'</p>
+
+<p>In these rough notes, unusual powers of observation and insight into
+character are displayed. That Haydon also had a keen sense of humour is
+proved by his account of an evening at Mrs. Siddons' where the hostess
+read aloud <i>Macbeth</i> to her guests. 'She acts Macbeth herself much
+better than either Kemble or Kean,' he writes. 'It is extraordinary the
+awe that this wonderful woman inspires. After her first reading the men
+retired to tea. While we were all eating toast and tinkling cups and
+saucers, she began again. It was like the effect of a mass-bell at
+Madrid. All noise ceased; we slunk to our seats like boors, two or three
+of the most distinguished men of the day, with the very toast in their
+mouths, afraid to bite. It was curious to see Lawrence in this
+predicament, to hear him bite by degrees, and then stop, for fear of
+making too much crackle, his eyes full of water from the constraint; and
+at the same time to hear Mrs. Siddons' 'eye of newt and toe of frog,'
+and to see Lawrence give a sly bite, and then look awed, and pretend to
+be listening.'</p>
+
+<p>In the spring of 1821 Haydon lost two intimate friends, John Scott,
+who was killed by Christie in the Blackwood duel, and Keats, who died at
+Rome on February 23. He briefly sums up his impressions of the dead poet
+in his Journal. 'In fireside conversation he was weak and inconsistent,
+but he was in his glory in the fields.... He was the most unselfish of
+human creatures: unadapted to this world, he cared not for himself, and
+put himself to inconvenience for the sake of his friends. He had an
+exquisite sense of humour, and too refined a notion of female purity to
+bear the little arts of love with patience.... He began life full of
+hopes, fiery, impetuous, ungovernable, expecting the world to fall at
+once beneath his powers. Unable to bear the sneers of ignorance or the
+attacks of envy, he began to despond, and flew to dissipation as a
+relief. For six weeks he was scarcely sober, and to show what a man does
+to gratify his appetites when once they get the better of him, he once
+covered his tongue and throat, as far as he could reach, with Cayenne
+pepper, in order to appreciate the "delicious coldness of claret in all
+its glory"--his own expression.'</p>
+
+<p>June 22, 1821, is entered in the Journal as 'A remarkable day in my
+life. I am arrested!' This incident, unfortunately, became far too
+common in after-days to be at all remarkable, but the first touch of the
+bailiff's hand was naturally something of a shock, and Haydon filled
+three folio pages with angry comments on the iniquity of the laws
+against debtors. He was able, however, to arrange the affair before
+night, and the sheriff's officer, whose duty it was to keep him in safe
+custody during the day, was so profoundly impressed by the sight of the
+Lazarus, that he allowed his prisoner to go free on parole. This
+incident has been likened to that of the bravoes arrested in their
+murderous intent by the organ-playing of Stradella; and also to the case
+of the soldiers of the Constable who, when sacking Rome, broke into
+Parmigiano's studio, but were so struck by the beauty of his pictures
+that they protected him and his property.</p>
+
+<p>In despite of debts, difficulties, and the lack of commissions,
+Haydon, who had now been in love for five years, was married on October
+10, 1821, to the young widow, Mary Hyman, who was blessed with two
+children, and a jointure of fifty pounds a year. His Journal for this
+period is full of raptures over his blissful state, as also are his
+letters to his friends. To Miss Mitford he writes from Windsor, where
+the honeymoon was spent: 'Here I am, sitting by my dearest Mary with all
+the complacency of a well-behaved husband, writing to you while she is
+working quietly on some unintelligible part of a lady's costume. You do
+not know how proud I am of saying <i>my wife</i>. I never felt half so
+proud of Solomon or Macbeth, as I am of being the husband of this tender
+little bit of lovely humanity.... There never was such a creature; and
+although her face is perfect, and has more feeling in it than Lady
+Hamilton's, her manner to me is perfectly enchanting, and more
+bewitching than her beauty. I think I shall put over my painting-room
+door, "Love, solitude, and painting."' On the last day of the year,
+according to his wont, Haydon sums up his feelings and impressions of
+the past twelve months. 'I don't know how it is, but I get less
+reflective as I get older. I seem to take things as they come without
+thought. Perhaps being married to my dearest Mary, and having no longer
+anything to hope in love, I get more content with my lot, which, God
+knows, is rapturous beyond imagination. Here I sit sketching, with the
+loveliest face before me, smiling and laughing, and "solitude is not."
+Marriage has increased my happiness beyond expression. In the intervals
+of study, a few minutes' conversation with a creature one loves is the
+greatest of all reliefs. God bless us both! My pecuniary difficulties
+are great, but my love is intense, my ambition is intense, and my hope
+in God's protection cheering. Bewick, my pupil, has realised my hopes in
+his picture of "Jacob and Rachel." But it is cold work talking of pupils
+when one's soul is full of a beloved woman! I am really and truly in
+love, and without affectation, I can talk, write, or think of nothing
+else.'</p>
+
+<p>But if a love-match brings increased happiness, it also brings
+weightier cares and responsibilities. Haydon's credit had been in a
+measure restored by the success of his last picture, but his creditors
+seemed to resent his marriage, and during the months that followed, gave
+him little peace. He was obliged, in the intervals of painting, to rush
+hither and thither to pacify this creditor, quiet the fears of that,
+remove the ill-will of a third, and borrow money at usurious interest
+from a fourth in order to keep his engagements with a fifth. In spite of
+all his compromises and arrangements, he was arrested more than once
+during this year, but so far he had been able to keep out of prison. His
+favourite pupil Bewick, who sat to him for the head of Lazarus (being
+appropriately pale and thin from want of food) has left an account of
+the difficulties under which the picture was painted. 'I think I see the
+painter before me,' he writes, 'his palette and brushes in the left
+hand, returning from the sheriff's officer in the adjoining room, pale,
+calm, and serious--no agitation--mounting his high steps and continuing
+his arduous task, and as he looks round to his pallid model, whispering,
+"Egad, Bewick, I have just been arrested; that is the third time. If
+they come again, I shall not be able to go on."'</p>
+
+<p>On December 7, the Lazarus was finished, and five days later
+Haydon's eldest son Frank was born. The happy father was profoundly
+moved by his new responsibilities, as well as by his wife's suffering
+and danger. On the last day of 1822 he thanks his Maker for the happiest
+year of his life, and also 'for being permitted to finish another great
+picture, which must add to my reputation, and go to strengthen the
+art.... Grant it triumphant success. Grant that I may soon begin the
+"Crucifixion," and persevere with that, until I bring it to a conclusion
+equally positive and glorious.' Haydon's prayers, which have been not
+inaptly described as 'begging letters to the Almighty,' are invariably
+couched in terms that would be appropriate in an appeal to the President
+of a Celestial Academy. As his biographer points out, he prayed as
+though he would take heaven by storm, and although he often asked for
+humility, the demands for this gift bore very little proportion to those
+for glories and triumphs.</p>
+
+<p>The Lazarus, though it showed signs of haste and exaggeration,
+natural enough considering the conditions under which it was painted,
+was acclaimed as a great work, and the receipts from its exhibition were
+of a most satisfactory nature, mounting up to nearly two hundred pounds
+a week. Instead of calling his creditors together, and coming to some
+arrangement with them, Haydon, rendered over-confident by success, spent
+his time in preparing a new and vaster canvas for his conception of the
+Crucifixion. The sight of crowds of people paying their shillings to
+view the Lazarus roused the cupidity of one of the creditors, who,
+against his own interests, killed the goose that was laying golden eggs.
+On April 13, an execution was put in, and the picture was seized. A few
+days later Haydon was arrested, and carried to the King's Bench, his
+house was taken possession of, and all his property was advertised for
+sale.</p>
+
+<p>On April 22, he dates the entry in his Journal, 'King's Bench,' and
+consoles himself with the reflection that Bacon, Raleigh, and Cervantes
+had also suffered imprisonment. His friends rallied round him at this
+melancholy period. Lord Mulgrave, Sir George Beaumont, Scott and Wilkie,
+giving not only sympathy but practical help. At his forced sale a
+portion of his casts and painting materials was bought in by his friends
+in order that he might be enabled to set to work again as soon as he was
+released from prison. A meeting of creditors was called, and Haydon
+addressed to them a characteristic letter, begging to be spared the
+disgrace of 'taking the Act,' and complaining of the hardship of his
+treatment in being torn from his family and his art, after devoting the
+best years of his life to the honour of his country. But as the
+creditors cared nothing for the honour of the country, he was compelled
+to pass through the Bankruptcy Court, and on July 25 he regained his
+freedom. It was now his desire to return to his dismantled house, and,
+without a bed to lie upon, or a shilling in his pocket, to finish his
+gigantic 'Crucifixion.' But his wife, the long-suffering Mary, persuaded
+him to abandon this idea, to retire to modest lodgings for a time, and
+to paint portraits and cabinet-pictures until better fortune dawned.</p>
+
+<p>Haydon yielded to her desire, but he never ceased to regret what he
+considered his degradation. He would have preferred to allow his friends
+and creditors to support himself and his family, while he worked at a
+canvas of unsaleable size, a proceeding that most men would regard as
+involving a deeper degradation than painting pot-boilers.</p>
+
+<p>Haydon began his new career by painting the 'portrait of a
+gentleman.' 'Ah, my poor lay-figure,' he groans, 'he, who bore the
+drapery of Christ and the grave-clothes of Lazarus, the cloak of the
+centurion and the gown of Newton, was to-day disgraced by a black coat
+and waistcoat. I apostrophised him, and he seemed to sympathise, and
+bowed his head as if ashamed to look me in the face.' Haydon's
+detestation of portrait-painting probably arose from the secret
+consciousness that he was not successful in this branch of his art. His
+taste for the grandiose led him to depict his sitters larger than life,
+if not 'twice as natural.' His objection to painting small pictures was
+partly justified by his weakness of sight. It was easy for him to dash
+in heads on a large scale in a frenzy of inspiration, but he seemed to
+lack the faculty for 'finish.' The faults of disproportion and apparent
+carelessness that disfigure many of his works, are easily accounted for
+by his method of painting, which is thus described by his son Frederick,
+who often acted as artist's model:--</p>
+
+<p>'His natural sight was of little or no use to him at any distance,
+and he would wear, one over the other, two or three pairs of large round
+concave spectacles, so powerful as greatly to diminish objects. He would
+mount his steps, look at you through one pair of glasses, then push them
+all back on his head, and paint by the naked eye close to the canvas.
+After some minutes he would pull down one pair of his glasses, look at
+you, then step down, walk slowly backwards to the wall, and study the
+effect through one, two, or three pairs of spectacles; then with one
+pair only look long and steadily in the looking-glass at the side to
+examine the reflection of his work; then mount his steps and paint
+again. How he ever contrived to paint a head or limb in proportion is a
+mystery to me, for it is clear that he had lost his natural sight in
+boyhood. He is, as he said, the first blind man who ever successfully
+painted pictures.'</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately, Haydon's self-denial in painting portraits was not
+well rewarded, for commissions were few, and the clouds began to gather
+again. One of his sitters had to be appealed to for money for coals, and
+if such appeals were frequent, the scarcity of sitters was hardly
+surprising. On one occasion he pawned all his books, except a few old
+favourites, for three pounds, and entries like the following are of
+almost daily occurrence in the Journal:--'Obliged to go out in the rain,
+I left my room with no coals in it, and no money to buy any.... Not a
+shilling in the world. Sold nothing, and not likely to. Baker called,
+and was insolent. If he were to stop the supplies, God knows what would
+become of my children! Landlord called--kind and sorry. Butcher called,
+respectful, but disappointed. Tailor good--humoured, and willing to
+wait.... Walked about the town. I was so full of grief, I could not have
+concealed it at home.'</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of all his harassing anxieties, Haydon was untiring in
+his efforts to obtain employment of the heroic kind that his soul
+craved. He had begun to realise that he had small chance of disposing of
+huge historical pictures to private patrons, and that his only hope
+rested with the Government. Even while confined in prison he had
+persuaded Brougham to present a petition to the House of Commons setting
+forth the desirability of appointing a Committee to inquire into the
+state of national art, and by a regular distribution of a small portion
+of the public funds, to give public encouragement to the professors of
+historical painting. No sooner did he regain his freedom than Haydon
+attacked Sir Charles Long with a plan for the decoration of the great
+room of the Admiralty, to be followed by the decoration of the House of
+Lords and St. Paul's Cathedral. This was but the beginning of a long
+series of impassioned pleadings with public men in favour of national
+employment for historical painters. Silence, snubs, formal
+acknowledgments, curt refusals, all were lost upon Haydon, who kept
+pouring in page after page of agonised petition on Sir Charles Long, the
+Duke of Wellington, Lord Grey, Lord Melbourne, and Sir Robert Peel, and
+seemed to be making no way with any of them.</p>
+
+<p>Haydon thought himself ill-used, throughout his life, by statesmen
+and patrons, and many of his friends were of the same opinion. But both
+he and they ignored the fact that it is impossible to create an
+artificial market for works of art for which there is no spontaneous
+popular demand. A despotic prince may, if he chooses, give his court
+painter <i>carte blanche</i> for the decorations of national buildings,
+and gain nothing but glory for his liberality, even when it is exercised
+at the expense of his people. But in a country that possesses a
+constitutional government, more especially when that country has been
+impoverished by long and costly wars, the minister who devotes large
+sums to the encouragement of national art has the indignation of an
+over-taxed populace to reckon with. It is little short of an insult to
+offer men historic frescoes when they are clamouring for bread. Haydon
+was unfortunate in his period, which was not favourable for a crusade on
+behalf of high art. The recent pacification of the Continent, and the
+opening up of its treasures, tempted English noblemen and plutocrats to
+invest their money in old masters to the neglect of native artists, who
+were only thought worthy to paint portraits of their patrons' wives and
+children. We who have inherited the Peel, the Angerstein, and the
+Hertford collections, can scarcely bring ourselves to regret the sums
+that were lavished on Flemish and Italian masterpieces, sums that might
+have kept our Barrys and Haydons from bankruptcy.</p>
+
+<p>In January 1824 Haydon left his lodgings, and took the lease of a
+house in Connaught Terrace, for which he paid, or promised to pay, a
+hundred and twenty pounds a year, a heavy rent for a recently insolvent
+artist. Fortunately, he acquired with the house a landlord of amazing
+benevolence, who took pot-boilers in lieu of rent, and meekly submitted
+to abuse when nothing else was forthcoming. As soon as he was fairly
+settled, Haydon arranged the composition of a large picture of 'Pharaoh
+dismissing Moses,' upon which he worked in the intervals of
+portrait-painting. A curious and obviously impartial sketch of him, as
+he appeared at this time, is drawn by Borrow in his <i>Lavengro</i>.
+The hero's elder brother comes up to town, it may be remembered, to
+commission a certain heroic artist to paint an heroic picture of a very
+unheroic mayor of Norwich. The two brothers go together to the painter
+of Lazarus, and have some difficulty in obtaining admission to his
+studio, being mistaken by the servant for duns. They found a man of
+about thirty-five, with a clever, intelligent countenance, sharp grey
+eyes, and hair cut <i>&agrave; la</i> Raphael. He possessed, moreover, a
+broad chest, and would have been a very fine figure if his legs had not
+been too short. He was then engaged upon his Moses, whose legs, in
+Lavengro's opinion, were also too short. His eyes glistened at the
+mention of a hundred pounds for the mayor's portrait, and he admitted
+that he was confoundedly short of money. The painter was anxious that
+Lavengro should sit to him for his Plutarch, which honour that gentleman
+firmly declined. Years afterwards he saw the portrait of the mayor, a
+'mighty portly man, with a bull's head, black hair, a body like a dray
+horse, and legs and thighs corresponding; a man six foot high at the
+least. To his bull's head, black hair and body, the painter had done
+justice; there was one point, however, in which the portrait did not
+correspond with the original--the legs were disproportionately short,
+the painter having substituted his own legs for those of the mayor,
+which, when I perceived, I rejoiced that I had not consented to be
+painted as Pharaoh, for if I had, the chances are that he would have
+served me in exactly the same way as he had served Moses and the mayor.'</p>
+
+<p>The painting of provincial mayors was so little to Haydon's taste
+that by the close of this year we find him in deep depression of
+spirits, unrelieved by even a spark of his old sanguine buoyancy. 'I
+candidly confess,' he writes, 'I find my glorious art a bore. I cannot
+with pleasure paint any individual head for the mere purpose of domestic
+gratification. I must have a great subject to excite public feeling....
+Alas! I have no object in life now but my wife and children, and almost
+wish I had not them, that I might sit still and meditate on human
+grandeur and human ambition till I died.... I am not yet forty, and can
+tell of a destiny melancholy and rapturous, bitter beyond all
+bitterness, cursed, heart-breaking, maddening. But I dare not write now.
+The melancholy demon has grappled my heart, and crushed its turbulent
+beatings in his black, bony, clammy, clenching fingers.'</p>
+
+<p>It was just when things seemed at their darkest, when the waters
+threatened to overwhelm the unfortunate artist, that a rope was thrown
+to him. His legal adviser, Mr. Kearsley, a practical and prosperous man,
+came forward with an offer of help. He agreed to provide &pound;300 for
+one year on certain conditions, in order that Haydon might be freed from
+pressure for that period, and be in a position to ask a fair price for
+his work. When not engaged on portraits, he was to paint historical
+pictures of a saleable size. The advance was to be secured on a life
+insurance, and to be repaid out of the sale of the pictures, with
+interest at four per cent. This offer was accepted with some reluctance,
+and the following year was one of comparative peace and quiet. The
+Journal gives evidence of greater ease of mind, and renewed pleasure in
+work. Haydon's love for his wife waxed rather than waned with the
+passing of the years, and his children, of whom he too soon had the poor
+man's quiverful, were an ever-present delight. 'My domestic happiness is
+doubled,' he writes about this time. 'Daily and hourly my sweet Mary
+proves the justice of my choice. My boy Frank gives tokens of being
+gifted at two years old, God bless him! My ambition would be to make him
+a public man.... I have got into my old delightful habits of study
+again. The mixture of literature and painting I really think the
+perfection of human happiness. I paint a head, revel in colour, hit an
+expression, sit down fatigued, take up a poet or historian, write my own
+thoughts, muse on the thoughts of others, and hours, troubles, and the
+tortures of disappointed ambition pass and are forgotten.'</p>
+
+<p>Portraits, and one or two commissions for small pictures, kept
+Haydon afloat throughout this year, but a widespread commercial distress
+in the early part of 1826 affected his gains, and in February he records
+that for the last five weeks he has been suffering the tortures of the
+Inferno. He was persuaded, much against his will, to send his pictures
+to the Academy, and he was proportionately annoyed at the adverse
+criticism that greeted his attempts at portraiture. This attack he
+regarded as the result of a deep-laid plot to injure him in a lucrative
+branch of his art. He consoled himself by beginning a large picture of
+'Alexander taming Bucephalus,' the 'finest subject on earth.' Through
+his friend and opposite neighbour, Carew the sculptor, Haydon made an
+appeal to Lord Egremont, that generous patron of the arts, for help or
+employment, in response to which Lord Egremont promised to call and see
+the Alexander. There is a pathetic touch in the account of this visit,
+on which so much depended. Lord Egremont called at Carew's house on his
+way, and Haydon, who saw him go in, relates that 'Dear Mary and I were
+walking on the leads, and agreed that it would not be quite right to
+look too happy, being without a sixpence; so we came in, I to the
+parlour to look through the blinds, and she to the nursery.' Happily,
+the patron was favourably impressed by the picture, and promised to give
+&pound;600 for it when it was finished. In order to pay his models
+Haydon was obliged to pawn one of his two lay-figures, since he could
+not bring himself to part with any more books. 'I may do without a
+lay-figure for a time,' he writes, 'but not without old Homer. The truth
+is I am fonder of books than of anything on earth. I consider myself a
+man of great powers, excited to an art which limits their exercise. In
+politics, law, or literature they would have had a full and glorious
+swing, and I should have secured a competence.'</p>
+
+<p>The fact that Haydon was more at home among the literary men of his
+acquaintance than among his fellow-artists was a natural result of his
+intense love of books, and his keen interest in contemporary history.
+And it is evident that his own character and work impressed his poetical
+friends, for we find that not only Wordsworth and Keats, but Leigh Hunt,
+Charles Lamb, Miss Mitford, and Miss Barrett addressed to him admiring
+verses. For Byron, whom he never knew, Haydon cherished an ardent
+admiration, and the following interesting passage, comparing that poet
+with Wordsworth, occurs in one of his letters to Miss Mitford, who had
+criticised Byron's taste:--</p>
+
+<p>'You are unjust, depend upon it,' he writes, 'in your estimate of
+Byron's poetry, and wrong in ranking Wordsworth beyond him. There are
+things in Byron's poetry so exquisite that fifty or five hundred years
+hence they will be read, felt, and adored throughout the world. I grant
+that Wordsworth is very pure, very holy, very orthodox, and occasionally
+very elevated, highly poetical, and oftener insufferably obscure,
+starched, dowdy, anti-human, and anti-sympathetic, but he never will be
+ranked above Byron, nor classed with Milton.... I dislike his selfish
+Quakerism, his affectation of superior virtue, his utter insensibility
+to the frailties, the beautiful frailties of passion. I was walking with
+him once in Pall Mall; we darted into Christie's. In the corner of the
+room was a beautiful copy of the "Cupid and Psyche" (statues) kissing.
+Cupid is taking her lovely chin, and turning her pouting mouth to meet
+his, while he archly bends down, as if saying, "Pretty dear!"...
+Catching sight of the Cupid as he and I were coming out, Wordsworth's
+face reddened, he showed his teeth, and then said in a loud voice, "<i>The
+Dev-v-vils!</i>" There's a mind! Ought not this exquisite group to have
+softened his heart as much as his old, grey-mossed rocks, his withered
+thorn, and his dribbling mountain streams? I am altered very much about
+Wordsworth from finding him too hard, too elevated, to attend to the
+voice of humanity. No, give me Byron with all his spite, hatred,
+depravity, dandyism, vanity, frankness, passion, and idleness, rather
+than Wordsworth with all his heartless communion with woods and grass.'</p>
+
+<p>An attempt on Haydon's part to reconcile himself with his old
+enemies, the Academicians, ended in failure. He heads his account of the
+transaction, 'The disgrace of my life.' He was received with cold
+civility by the majority of the artists to whom he paid conciliatory
+visits, and when he put his name down for election, he received not a
+single vote. A more agreeable memory of this year was a visit to
+Petworth, where, as he records, with Pepysian <i>naivet&eacute;</i>,
+'Lord Egremont has placed me in one of the most magnificent bedrooms I
+ever saw. It speaks more of what he thinks of my talents than anything
+that ever happened to me.... What a destiny is mine! One year in the
+King's Bench, the companion of gamblers and scoundrels--sleeping in
+wretchedness and dirt on a flock-bed--another reposing in down and
+velvet in a splendid apartment in a splendid house, the guest of rank,
+fashion, and beauty.' Haydon's painting-room was now, as he loved to see
+it, crowded with distinguished visitors, who were anxious to inspect the
+picture of Alexander before it was sent to the Exhibition. Among them
+came Charles Lamb, who afterwards set down some impressions and
+suggestions in the following characteristic fashion:--</p>
+
+<p> 'DEAR RAFFAELE HAYDON,</p>
+
+<p>'Did the maid tell you I came to see your picture? I think the face
+and bearing of the Bucephalus-tamer very noble, his flesh too effeminate
+or painty.... I had small time to pick out praise or blame, for two
+lord-like Bucks came in, upon whose strictures my presence seemed to
+impose restraint; I plebeian'd off therefore.</p>
+
+<p>'I think I have hit on a subject for you, but can't swear it was
+never executed--I never heard of its being--"Chaucer beating a
+Franciscan Friar in Fleet Street." Think of the old dresses, houses,
+etc. "It seemeth that both these learned men (Gower and Chaucer) were of
+the Inner Temple; for not many years since Master Buckley did see a
+record in the same house where Geoffrey Chaucer was fined two shillings
+for beating a Franciscan Friar in Fleet Street."--<i>Chaucer's Life, by
+T. Speght</i>.--Yours in haste (salt fish waiting).</p>
+
+<p>'C. LAMB.'</p>
+
+<p>In June Haydon was again arrested, and imprisoned in the King's
+Bench. Once more he appealed to Parliament by a petition presented by
+Brougham, and to the public through letters to the newspapers.
+Parliament and the larger public turned a deaf ear, but private friends
+rallied to his support. Scott, himself a ruined man, sent a cheque and a
+charming letter of sympathy, while Lockhart suggested that a
+subscription should be raised to buy one or more pictures. A public
+meeting of sympathisers was convened, at which it was stated that
+Haydon's debts amounted to &pound;1767, while his only available asset
+was an unfinished picture of the 'Death of Eucles.' Over a hundred
+pounds was subscribed in the room, and it was decided that the Eucles
+should be raffled in ten-pound shares. The result of these efforts was
+the release of the prisoner at the end of July.</p>
+
+<p>During this last term of imprisonment Haydon witnessed the
+masquerade, or mock election by his fellow-prisoners, and instantly
+decided that he would paint the scene, which offered unique
+opportunities for both humour and pathos. This picture, Hogarthian in
+type, was finished and exhibited before the close of the year. The
+exhibition was moderately successful, but the picture did not sell, and
+Haydon was once more sinking into despair, when the king expressed a
+desire to have the work sent down to Windsor for his inspection. Hopes
+were raised high once more, and this time were not disappointed. George
+IV. bought the 'Mock Election,' and promptly paid the price of five
+hundred guineas. Thus encouraged, Haydon set to work with renewed spirit
+on a companion picture, 'Chairing the Member,' which was finished and
+exhibited, with some earlier works, in the course of the summer. The
+king refused to buy the new work, but it found a purchaser at
+&pound;300, and the net receipts from the two pictures and their
+exhibition amounted to close upon &pound;1400, a sum which, observes
+Haydon, in better circumstances and with less expense, would have
+afforded a comfortable independence for the year!</p>
+
+<p>The Eucles occupied the artist during the remainder of 1828, and
+early in 1829 he began a new Hogarthian subject, a Punch and Judy show.
+He was still painting portraits when he could get sitters, and on April
+15, he notes: 'Finished one cursed portrait--have only one more to
+touch, and then I shall be free. I have an exquisite gratification in
+painting portraits wretchedly. I love to see the sitters look as if they
+thought, "Can this be Haydon's--the great Haydon's painting?" I chuckle.
+I am rascal enough to take their money, and chuckle more.' It must be
+owned that Haydon thoroughly deserved his ill-success in this branch of
+his art. When 'Punch' was finished the king sent for it to Windsor, but
+though he admired, he did not buy, and the picture eventually passed
+into the possession of Haydon's old friend, Dr. Darling, who had helped
+him out of more than one difficulty. A large representation of 'Xenophon
+and the Retreat of the Ten Thousand' was now begun, but before it was
+finished the painter was once more in desperate straits. In vain he sent
+up urgent petitions to his Maker that he might be enabled to go through
+with this great work, explaining in a parenthesis, 'It will be my
+greatest,' and concluding, 'Bless its commencement, its progress, its
+conclusion, and its effect, for the sake of the intellectual elevation
+of my great and glorious country.'</p>
+
+<p>In May 1830, Haydon was back again in the King's Bench, where he had
+begun to feel quite at home. He presented yet another of his innumerable
+petitions to Parliament in favour of Government encouragement of
+historical painting, through Mr. Agar Ellis, but as the ministry showed
+no desire to encourage this particular historical painter, he passed
+through the Bankruptcy Court, and returned to his family on the 20th of
+July. During his period of detention, George IV. had died, and Haydon
+has the following comment on the event:--'Thus died as thoroughbred an
+Englishman as ever existed in this country. He admired her sports,
+gloried in her prejudices, had confidence in her bottom and spirit, and
+to him alone is the destruction of Napoleon owing. I have lost in him my
+sincere admirer; and had not his wishes been continually thwarted, he
+would have given me ample and adequate employment.'</p>
+
+<p>Although Haydon had regained his freedom, his chance of maintaining
+himself and his rapidly increasing family by his art seemed as far away
+as ever. By October 15th he is at his wits' end again, and writes in his
+Journal: 'The harassings of a family are really dreadful. Two of my
+children are ill, and Mary is nursing. All night she was attending to
+the sick and hushing the suckling, with a consciousness that our last
+shilling was going. I got up in the morning bewildered--Xenophon hardly
+touched--no money--butcher impudent--all tradesmen insulting. I took up
+my private sketch-book and two prints of Napoleon (from a small picture
+of 'Napoleon musing at St. Helena') and walked into the city. Hughes
+advanced me five guineas on the sketch-book; I sold my prints, and
+returned home happy with &pound;8, 4s. in my pocket.... (25th) Out
+selling my prints. Sold enough for maintenance for the week. Several
+people looked hard at me with my roll of prints, but I feel more ashamed
+in borrowing money than in honestly selling my labours. It is a pity the
+nobility drive me to this by their neglect.'</p>
+
+<p>In December came another stroke of good-luck. Sir Robert Peel called
+at the studio, and gave the artist a commission to paint, on a larger
+scale, a replica of his small sketch of 'Napoleon at St. Helena.'
+Unluckily, there was a misunderstanding about the price. Peel asked how
+much Haydon charged for a whole length figure, and was told a hundred
+pounds, which was the price of an ordinary portrait. Taking this to be
+the charge for the Napoleon, he paid no more. Haydon, who considered the
+picture well worth &pound;500, was bitterly disappointed, and took no
+pains to conceal his feelings. Peel afterwards sent him an extra thirty
+pounds, but the subject remained a grievance to Haydon for the rest of
+his life, and Peel, who had intended to do the artist a good turn, was
+so annoyed by his complaints, that he never gave him another commission.
+The Napoleon, though its exhibition was not a success, was one of
+Haydon's most popular pictures, and the engraving is well known.
+Wordsworth admired it exceedingly, and on June 12, sent the artist the
+'Sonnet to B. R. Haydon, composed on seeing his picture of Napoleon in
+the island of St. Helena,' beginning: </p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;'Haydon! let worthier judges praise the skill.'</p>
+
+<p>The close of this year was a melancholy period to poor Haydon. He
+lost his little daughter, Fanny, and his third son, Alfred, was
+gradually fading away. Out of eight children born to this most
+affectionate of fathers, no fewer than five died in infancy from
+suffusion of the brain, due, it was supposed, to the terrible mental
+distresses of their mother. 'I can remember,' writes Frederick Haydon,
+one of the three survivors, 'the roses of her sunken cheeks fading away
+daily with anxiety and grief. My father, who was passionately attached
+to both wife and children, suffered the tortures of the damned at the
+sight before him. His sorrow over the deaths of his children was
+something more than human. I remember watching him as he hung over his
+daughter Georgiana, and over his dying boy Harry, the pride and delight
+of his life. Poor fellow, how he cried! and he went into the next room,
+and beating his head passionately on the bed, called upon God to take
+him and all of us from this dreadful world. The earliest and most
+painful death was to be preferred to our life at that time.'</p>
+
+<p>By dint of borrowing in every possible quarter, generally at forty
+per cent. interest, and inducing his patrons to take shares in his
+Xenophon, Haydon managed to get through the winter, though his children
+were often without stockings. William IV. consented to place his name at
+the head of the subscribers' list, and Goethe wrote a flattering letter,
+expressing his desire to take a ticket for the 'very valuable painting,'
+and assuring the artist that 'my soul has been elevated for many years
+by the contemplation of the important pictures (the cartoons from the
+Elgin Marbles) formerly sent to me, which occupy an honourable station
+in my house.' Xenophon was exhibited in the spring of 1832 without
+attracting much attention, the whole nation being engrossed with the
+subject of Reform. Haydon, though a high Tory by birth and inclination,
+was an ardent champion of the Bill, as he had been for that of Catholic
+Emancipation. His brush was once more exchanged for the pen, and he not
+only poured out his thoughts upon Reform in his Journal, but wrote
+several letters on the subject to the <i>Times</i>, which he considered
+the most wonderful compositions of the kind that had ever been penned.
+After the passing of the Bill he congratulates himself upon having
+contributed to the grand result, and adds: 'When my colours have faded,
+my canvas decayed, and my body has mingled with the earth, these
+glorious letters, the best things I ever wrote, will awaken the
+enthusiasm of my countrymen. I thanked God I lived in such a time, and
+that he gifted me with talent to serve the great cause.'</p>
+
+<p>On reading the account of the monster meeting of the Trades Unions
+at Newhall Hill, Birmingham, it occurred to Haydon that the moment when
+the vast concourse joined in the sudden prayer offered up by Hugh
+Hutton, would make a fine subject for a picture. Accordingly, he wrote
+to Hutton, and laid the suggestion before him. The Birmingham leaders
+were attracted by the idea, and the picture was begun, but support of a
+material kind was not forthcoming, and the scheme had to be abandoned.
+Lord Grey then suggested that Haydon should paint a picture of the great
+Reform Banquet, which was to be held in the Guildhall on July 11. The
+proposal was exactly to the taste of the public-spirited artist, who saw
+fame and fortune beckoning to him once more, and fancied that his future
+was assured. He was allowed every facility on the great day, breakfasted
+and dined with the Committee at the Guildhall, was treated with
+distinction by the noble guests, many of whom sent to take wine with him
+as he sat at work, and in short, to quote his own words, 'I was an
+object of great distinction without five shillings in my pocket--and
+this is life!'</p>
+
+<p>Lord Grey, on seeing Haydon's sketches of the Banquet, gave him a
+commission for the picture at a price of &pound;500, half of which he
+paid down at once, and thus saved the painter from the ruin that was
+again impending. Then followed a period of triumphant happiness. The
+leading men of the Liberal party sat for their heads, and Haydon had the
+longed-for opportunity of pressing upon them his views about the public
+encouragement of art by means of grants for the decoration of national
+buildings. Although it does not appear that he made a single convert, he
+was quite contented for the time being with the ready access to
+ministers and noblemen that the occasion afforded him, and his Journal
+is filled with expressions of his satisfaction. We hear of Lord
+Palmerston's good-humoured elegance, Lord Lansdowne's amiability, Lord
+Jeffrey's brilliant conversation, and, most delightful of all, Lord
+Melbourne's frank, unaffected cordiality. Melbourne, it appears, enjoyed
+his sittings, for he asked many questions about Hazlitt, Leigh Hunt,
+Keats, and Shelley, and highly appreciated Haydon's anecdotes. Needless
+to add, he did not allow himself to be bored by the artist's theories.</p>
+
+<p>The sittings for the Reform picture continued through 1833, and the
+early part of 1834. Haydon was kept in full employment, but domestic
+sorrows marred his satisfaction in his interesting work. In less than
+twelve months, he lost two sons, Alfred and Harry, the latter a child of
+extraordinary promise. 'The death of this beautiful boy,' he writes,
+'has given my mind a blow I shall never effectually recover. I saw him
+buried to-day, after passing four days sketching his dear head in his
+coffin--his beautiful head. What a creature! With a brow like an ancient
+god!' In August Haydon was arrested again, and hurried away for a day
+and night of torture, during which, he confesses, he was very near
+putting an end to himself; but advances from the Duke of Cleveland and
+Mr. Ellice brought him release, and in a few hours he was at home again,
+'as happy and as hard at work as ever.'</p>
+
+<p>In April 1834, the Reform picture was exhibited, but the public was
+not interested, and Haydon lost a considerable sum over the exhibition.
+The price of the commission had long since gone to quiet the clamours of
+his creditors. On May 12 he writes: 'It is really lamentable to see the
+effect of success and failure on people of fashion. Last year, all was
+hope, exultation, and promise with me. My door was beset, my house
+besieged, my room inundated. It was an absolute fight to get in to see
+me paint. Well, out came the work--the public felt no curiosity--it
+failed, and my door is deserted, no horses, no carriages. Now for
+executions, insults, misery, and wretchedness.' Then follows the old
+story. 'June 7.--Mary and I in agony of mind. All my Italian books, and
+some of my best historical designs, are gone to a pawnbroker's. She
+packed up her best gowns and the children's, and I drove away with what
+cost me &pound;40, and got &pound;4. The state of degradation,
+humiliation, and pain of mind in which I sat in that dingy back-room is
+not to be described.'</p>
+
+<p>Haydon now began a picture of 'Cassandra and Agamemnon,' and in July
+he received a commission to finish it for the Duke of Sutherland, who
+had more than once saved him from ruin. On this occasion the Duke's
+advances barely sufficed to stave off disaster. Studies, prints,
+clothes, and lay-figures were pawned to pay for the expenses of the
+work, and on October comes the entry: 'Directly after the Duke's letter
+came with its enclosed cheque, an execution was put in for the taxes. I
+made the man sit for Cassandra's hand, and put on a Persian bracelet.
+When the broker came for his money, he burst out laughing. There was the
+fellow, an old soldier, pointing in the attitude of Cassandra--up right
+and steady as if on guard. Lazarus' head was painted just after an
+arrest; Eucles was finished from a man in possession; the beautiful face
+in Xenophon, after a morning spent in begging mercy of lawyers; and now
+Cassandra's head was finished in an agony not to be described, and her
+hand completed from a broker's man.'<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 20%;">
+
+<p style="font-weight: bold; text-align: center;"> PART III</p>
+
+<p> On October 16, 1884, the Houses of Parliament were burned down.
+'Good God!' writes Haydon, 'I am just returned from the terrific burning
+of the Houses of Parliament. Mary and I went in a cab, and drove over
+the bridge. From the bridge it was sublime. We alighted, and went into a
+public-house, which was full. The feeling among the people was
+extraordinary--jokes and radicalism universal.... The comfort is that
+there is now a better prospect of painting the House of Lords. Lord Grey
+said there was no intention of taking the tapestry down; little did he
+think how soon it would go.' Haydon's hopes now rose high. For many
+years, as we have seen, he had been advocating, in season and out of
+season, the desirability of decorating national buildings with heroic
+paintings by native artists, and, with the need for new Houses of
+Parliament, it seemed as if at last his cause might triumph. Once more
+he attacked the good-humoured but unimpressionable Lord Melbourne, and
+presented another petition to Parliament through Lord Morpeth. But in
+any case it would be years before the new buildings were ready for
+decoration, and in the meantime he would have been entirely out of
+employment if his long-suffering landlord had not allowed him to paint
+off a debt with a picture of 'Achilles at the Court of Lycomedes.'</p>
+
+<p>In the summer of this year Mr. Ewart obtained his Select Committee
+to inquire into the best means of extending a knowledge of the arts and
+the principles of design among the people; and further, to inquire into
+the constitution of the Royal Academy, and the effects produced thereby.
+Haydon, overjoyed at such a sign of progress, determined to aid the
+inquiry by giving a lecture on the subject at the London Mechanics'
+Institute, under the auspices of Dr. Birkbeck. The lecture was a
+success, for Haydon's natural earnestness and enthusiasm enabled him to
+interest and impress an audience, and Dr. Birkbeck assured him that he
+had made a 'hit.' This was the beginning of his career as a lecturer, by
+which for several years he earned a small but regular income. But
+meanwhile ruin was again staring him in the face. On September 26 he
+writes: 'The agony of my necessities is really dreadful. For this year I
+have principally supported myself by the help of my landlord, and by
+pawning everything of value I have left.... Lay awake in misery.
+Threatened on all sides. Doubtful whether to apply to the Insolvent
+Court to protect me, or let ruin come. Improved the picture, and not
+having a shilling, sent out a pair of my spectacles, and got five
+shillings for the day. (29th) Sent the tea-urn off the table, and got
+ten shillings for the day. Shall call my creditors together. In God I
+trust.'</p>
+
+<p>The meeting of the creditors took place, and Haydon persuaded them
+to grant him an extension of time until June, 1836. Thus relieved from
+immediate anxiety he set to work on his picture with renewed zest. The
+most remarkable trait about him, observes his son Frederick, was his
+sanguine buoyancy of spirits. 'Nothing ever depressed him long. He was
+the most persevering, indomitable man I ever met. With us at home he was
+always confident of doing better next year. But that next year never
+came.... Blest as he was with that peculiar faculty of genius for
+overcoming difficulties, he might have found life tame without them. I
+remember his saying once, he was not sure he did not relish ruin as a
+source of increased activity of mind.' But the struggle had begun to
+tell upon his powers, if not upon his spirits, and he was now painting
+pictures for bread; repeating himself; despatching a work in a few days
+that in better times he would have spent months over; ready to paint
+small things, since great ones would not sell; fighting misery at the
+point of his brush, and obliged to eke out a livelihood by begging and
+borrowing, in default of worse expedients such as bills and cognovits. A
+less elastic temperament and a less vigorous constitution would have
+broken down in one year of such a fight. Haydon kept it up for ten.'</p>
+
+<p>The first half of 1836 went by in the usual struggle, and in
+September Haydon was thrown into prison for the fourth time. On November
+17 he passed through the Insolvency Court, and on the following Sunday
+he records: 'Went to church, and returned thanks with all my heart and
+soul for the great mercies of God to me and my family during my
+imprisonment.... (29th) Set my palette to-day, the first time these
+eleven weeks and three days. I relished the oil; could have tasted the
+colour; rubbed my cheeks with the brushes, and kissed the palette. Ah,
+could I be let loose in the House of Lords!' In the absence of
+commissions, he now turned to lecturing as a means of support. He
+lectured in Leeds, Manchester, Liverpool, and Birmingham, as well as in
+London, and did good service by agitating for the establishment of local
+schools of design, and by arousing in the minds of the wealthy middle
+classes some faint appreciation of the claims of art.</p>
+
+<p>A valuable result of these lectures was the extension of Haydon's
+acquaintance among the shrewd merchant princes of the north, who
+recognised his artistic sincerity, and were inclined to hold out to him
+a helping hand. Through the influence of Mr. Lowndes, a Liverpool
+art-patron, Haydon received a commission to paint a picture of 'Christ
+blessing Little Children,' for the Blind Asylum at Liverpool, at a price
+of &pound;400. So elated was he at this unexpected piece of good fortune
+that, with characteristic sanguineness, he seems to have thought that
+all his troubles were at an end for ever. Even his pious dependence on
+heavenly support diminished with his freedom from care, and he notes in
+a Sunday entry: 'Went to church, but prosperity, though it makes me
+grateful, does not cause me such perpetual religious musings as
+adversity. When on a precipice, where nothing but God's protection can
+save me, I delight in religious hope, but I am sorry to say my religion
+ever dwindles unless kept alive by risk of ruin. My piety is never so
+intense as when in a prison, and my gratitude never so much alive as
+when I have just escaped from one.'</p>
+
+<p>The year 1838 passed in comparative peace and comfort. The picture
+for the asylum was finished about the end of August, when Haydon
+congratulated his Maker on the fact that he (Haydon) had paid his rent
+and taxes, laid in his coals for the winter, and enjoyed health,
+happiness, and freedom from debt--fresh debt, be it understood--ever
+since this commission. Going down to Liverpool to hang his work, it was
+proposed to him by Mr. Lowndes that he should paint a picture of the
+Duke of Wellington on the field of Waterloo, twenty years after the
+battle. This was a subject after Haydon's own heart, for the Duke had
+always been his ideal hero, his king among men. Overflowing with pride
+and delight, he prays that Providence will so bless this new commission
+that 'the glorious city of Liverpool may possess the best historical
+picture, and the grandest effort of my pencil in portraiture. Inspired
+by history, I fear not making it the grandest thing.'</p>
+
+<p>The Liverpool committee wrote to the Duke, to ask if he would
+consent to give sittings to Haydon, and received a promise that he would
+sit for his head as soon as time could be found. Meanwhile, Haydon set
+to work upon the horse, which was copied from portraits of Copenhagen.
+While he was thus engaged, D'Orsay called at the studio, and bestowed
+advice and criticism upon the artist, which, for once, was thankfully
+received. Haydon relates how D'Orsay 'took my brush in his dandy glove,
+which made my heart ache, and lowered the hind-quarters by bringing over
+a bit of the sky. Such a dress! white greatcoat, blue satin cravat, hair
+oiled and curling, hat of the primest curve, gloves scented with
+eau-de-Cologne, primrose in tint, skin in tightness. In this prime of
+dandyism, he took up a nasty, oily, dirty hog-tool, and immortalised
+Copenhagen by touching the sky. I thought after he was gone, "This won't
+do--a Frenchman touch Copenhagen!" So out I rubbed all he had touched,
+and modified his hints myself.'</p>
+
+<p>As there was no chance of the Duke's being able to sit at this time,
+owing to the pressure of public business, Haydon made a flying visit to
+Brussels, in order to get local colour for the field of Waterloo. A few
+weeks later he was overjoyed at receiving an invitation to spend a few
+days at Walmer, when the Duke promised to give the desired sittings. On
+October 11, 1839, he went down 'by steam' to Walmer, where he was
+heartily welcomed by his host. His Journal contains a long and minute
+account of his visit, from which one or two anecdotes may be quoted.
+Haydon's fellow-guests were Sir Astley Cooper, Mr. Arbuthnot, and Mr.
+Booth. The first evening the conversation turned, among other topics,
+upon the Peninsular War. 'The Duke talked of the want of fuel in
+Spain-of what the troops suffered, and how whole houses, so many to a
+division, were pulled down, and paid for, to serve as fuel. He said
+every Englishman who has a house goes to bed at night. He found
+bivouacking was not suitable to the character of the English soldier. He
+got drunk, and lay down under any hedge, and discipline was destroyed.
+But when he introduced tents, every soldier belonged to his tent, and,
+drunk or sober, he got to it before he went to sleep. I said, "Your
+grace, the French always bivouac." "Yes," he replied, "because French,
+Spanish, and all other nations lie anywhere. It is their habit. They
+have no homes."'</p>
+
+<p>The next morning, after his return from hunting, the Duke gave a
+first sitting of an hour and a half. 'I hit his grand, manly, upright
+expression,' writes Haydon. 'He looked like an eagle of the gods who had
+put on human shape, and got silvery with age and service.... I found
+that to imagine he could not go through any duty raised the lion. "Does
+the light hurt your grace's eyes?" "Not at all," and he stared at the
+light as much as to say, "I'll see if you shall make me give in, Signor
+Light." 'Twas a noble head. I saw nothing of that peculiar expression of
+mouth the sculptors give him, bordering on simpering. His colour was
+beautiful and fleshy, his lips compressed and energetic.' The next day,
+being Sunday, there was no sitting, but Haydon was charmed at sharing a
+pew with his hero, and deeply moved by the simplicity and humility with
+which he followed the service. 'Arthur Wellesley in the village church
+of Walmer,' he writes, 'was more interesting to me than at the last
+charge of the Guards at Waterloo, or in all the glory and paraphernalia
+of his entry into Paris.'</p>
+
+<p>It is probable that the Duke was afraid of being attacked by Haydon
+on the burning question of a State grant for the encouragement of
+historical painting, a subject about which he had received and answered
+many lengthy letters, for on each evening, when there was no party, he
+steadily read a newspaper, the <i>Standard</i> on Saturday, and the <i>Spectator</i>
+on Sunday, while his guest watched him in silent admiration. On the
+Monday morning, the hero came in for another sitting, looking extremely
+worn, his skin drawn tight over his face, his eyes watery and aged, his
+head slightly nodding. 'How altered from the fresh old man after
+Saturday's hunting,' says Haydon. 'It affected me. He looked like an
+aged eagle beginning to totter from its perch.' A second sitting in the
+afternoon concluded the business, and early next morning Haydon left for
+town. 'It is curious,' he comments, 'to have known thus the two great
+heads of the two great parties, the Duke and Lord Grey. I prefer the
+Duke infinitely. He is more manly, has no vanity, is not deluded by any
+flattery or humbug, and is in every way a grander character, though Lord
+Grey is a fine, amiable, venerable, vain man.'</p>
+
+<p>During the remainder of the year, Haydon worked steadily, and
+finished his picture. On December 2 he notes: 'It is now twenty-seven
+years since I ordered my Solomon canvas. I was young--twenty-six. The
+whole world was against me. I had not a farthing. Yet I remember the
+delight with which I mounted my deal table and dashed it in, singing and
+trusting in God, as I always do. When one is once imbued with that clear
+heavenly confidence, there is nothing like it. It has carried me through
+everything. I think my dearest Mary has not got it; I do not think women
+have in general. Two years ago I had not a farthing, having spent it all
+to recover her health. She said to me, "What are we to do, my dear?" I
+replied, "Trust in God." There was something like a smile on her face.
+The very next day came the order for &pound;400 from Liverpool, and ever
+since I have been employed.' Alas, poor Mary! who had been chiefly
+occupied in bearing children and burying them, that must have been
+rather a melancholy smile upon her faded face.</p>
+
+<p>During the first part of 1840, Haydon seems to have been chiefly
+engaged in lecturing, the only picture on the stocks being a small
+replica of his Napoleon Musing for the poet Rogers. In February he was
+enabled to carry out one of the dreams of his life, namely, the delivery
+of a series of lectures upon art in the Ashmolean Museum at Oxford,
+under the patronage of the Vice-Chancellor. The experiment was a
+triumphant success, and he exclaims, with his usual pious fervour, 'O
+God, how grateful ought I to be at being permitted the distinction of
+thus being the first to break down the barrier which has kept art
+begging to be heard at the Universities.' He describes the occasion as
+one of the four chief honours of his life, the other three being
+Wordsworth's sonnet, 'High is our calling,' the freedom of his native
+town, and a public dinner that was given in his honour at Edinburgh. On
+March 14 he arrived home, 'full of enthusiasm and expecting (like the
+Vicar of Wakefield) every blessing--expecting my dear Mary to hang about
+my neck, and welcome me after my victory; when I found her out, not
+calculating I should be home till dinner. I then walked into town, and
+when I returned she was at home, and hurt that I did not wait, so this
+begat mutual allusions which were anything but loving or happy. So much
+for anticipations of human happiness!'</p>
+
+<p>On June 12,1840, Haydon notes: 'Excessively excited and exhausted. I
+attended the great Convention of the Anti-Slavery Society at Freemasons'
+Hall. Last Wednesday a deputation called on me from the Committee,
+saying they wished for a sketch of the scene. The meeting was very
+affecting. Poor old Clarkson was present, with delegates from America,
+and other parts of the world.' A few days later, Haydon breakfasted with
+Clarkson, and sketched him with 'an expression of indignant humanity.'
+In less than a week fifty heads were dashed in, the picture, when
+finished, containing no fewer than a hundred and thirty-eight; in fact,
+as the artist remarked, with a curious disregard of natural history, it
+was all heads, like a peacock's tail. Haydon took a malicious pleasure
+in suggesting to his sitters that he should place them beside the negro
+delegate; this being his test of their sincerity. Thus he notes on June
+30: 'Scobell called. I said, "I shall place you, Thompson, and the negro
+together." Now an abolitionist, on thorough principle, would have
+gloried in being so placed. He sophisticated immediately on the
+propriety of placing the negro in the distance, as it would have much
+greater effect. Lloyd Garrison comes to-day. I'll try him, and this
+shall be my method of ascertaining the real heart.... Garrison met me
+directly. George Thompson said he saw no objection. But that was not
+enough. A man who wishes to place a negro on a level with himself must
+no longer regard him as having been a slave, and feel annoyed at sitting
+by his side.' A visit to Clarkson at Playford Hall, Ipswich, was an
+interesting experience. Clarkson told the story of his vision, and the
+midnight voice that said 'You have not done your work. There is
+America.' Haydon had been a believer all his life in such spiritual
+communications, and declares, 'I have been so acted on from seventeen to
+fifty-five, for the purpose of reforming and refining my great country
+in art.'</p>
+
+<p>In 1841 the Fine Arts Committee appointed to consider the question
+of the decoration of the new Houses of Parliament, sat to examine
+witnesses, but Haydon was not summoned before them, a slight which he
+deeply felt. With an anxious heart he set about making experiments in
+fresco, and was astonished at what he regarded as his success in this
+new line of endeavour. During the past year, the Anti-Slavery Convention
+picture, and one or two small commissions, had kept his head above
+water, but now the clouds were beginning to gather again, his
+difficulties being greatly increased by the fact that he had two sons to
+start in the world. The eldest, Frank, had been apprenticed, at his own
+wish, to an engineering firm, but tiring of his chosen profession, he
+desired to take orders, and, as a university career was considered a
+necessary preliminary to this course, he was entered at Caius College,
+Cambridge. The second son, Frederick, Haydon fitted out for the navy,
+and in order to meet these heavy extra expenses, he was compelled to
+part with his copyright of the 'Duke at Waterloo' for a wholly
+inadequate sum.</p>
+
+<p>In the spring of 1842 the Fine Arts Commission issued a notice of
+the conditions for the cartoon competition, intended to test the
+capacity of native artists for the decoration of the House of Lords. The
+joy with which Haydon welcomed this first step towards the object which
+he had been advocating throughout the whole of his working life, was
+marred by the painful misgiving that he would not be allowed to share
+the fruits of victory. When he had first begun his crusade, he had felt
+himself without a rival in his own branch of art, not one of his
+contemporaries being able to compete with him in a knowledge of anatomy,
+in strength of imagination, or in the power of working on a grand scale.
+But now he was fifty-six years old, there were younger men coming on who
+had been trained in the principles of his own school, and he was
+painfully aware that he had made many enemies in high places. Still, in
+spite of all forebodings, he continued his researches in
+fresco-painting, and wrote vehement letters to the papers, protesting
+against the threatened employment of Cornelius and other German artists.</p>
+
+<p>During this year Haydon was working intermittently at two or three
+large pictures, 'Alexander conquering the Lion,' 'Curtius leaping into
+the Gulf,' and the 'Siege of Saragossa,' for the days were long past
+when one grand composition occupied him for six years. That the wolf was
+once again howling at the door is evidenced by the entry for February 6.
+'I got up yesterday, after lying awake for several hours with all the
+old feelings of torture at want of money. A bill coming due of &pound;44
+for my boy Frank at Caius. Three commissions for &pound;700 put off till
+next year. My dear Mary's health broken up.... I knew if my debt to the
+tutor of Caius was not paid, the mind of my son Frank would be
+destroyed, from his sensitiveness to honour and right. As he is now
+beating third-year men, I dreaded any check.' In these straits he
+hastily painted one or two small pot-boilers, borrowed, deferred, pawned
+his wife's watch, and had the satisfaction of bringing his son home
+'crowned as first-prize man in mathematics.' For one who was in the
+toils of the money-lenders, who was only living from hand to mouth, and
+who had never made an investment in his life, to give his son a
+university career, must be regarded, according to individual feeling,
+either as a proof of presumptuous folly or of childlike trust in
+Providence.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as his pictures were off his hands, Haydon began his
+competition cartoons of 'The Curse of Adam and Eve,' and 'The Entry of
+Edward the Black Prince and King John into London.' He felt that it was
+beneath his dignity as a painter of recognised standing to compete with
+young unknown men who had nothing to lose, but in his present
+necessities the chance of winning one of the money prizes was not to be
+neglected. In the absence of any lucrative employment he was only able
+to carry on his work by pawning his lay-figure, and borrowing off his
+butterman. Small wonder that he exclaims: 'The greatest curse that can
+befall a father in England is to have a son gifted with a passion and a
+genius for high art. Thank God with all my soul and all my nature, my
+children have witnessed the harrowing agonies under which I have ever
+painted, and the very name of painting, the very thought of a picture,
+gives them a hideous taste in their mouths. Thank God, not one of my
+boys, nor my girl, can draw a straight line, even with a ruler, much
+less without one.'</p>
+
+<p>In the course of this year Haydon began a correspondence with Miss
+Barrett, afterwards Mrs. Browning, with whom he was never personally
+acquainted, though he knew her through her poems, and through the
+allusions to her in the letters of their common friend, Miss Mitford.
+The paper friendship flourished for a time, and Haydon, who was a keen
+judge of character, recognised that here was a little Donna Quixote
+whose chivalry could be depended on in time of trouble. More than once,
+when threatened with arrest, he sent her paintings and manuscripts, of
+which she took charge with sublime indifference to the fact that by so
+doing she might be placing herself within reach of the arm of the law.
+One of the pictures that were placed in her guardianship was an
+unfinished portrait of 'Wordsworth musing upon Helvellyn.' Miss Barrett
+was inspired by this work with the sonnet beginning: </p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp; 'Wordsworth upon Helvellyn! Let the cloud<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Ebb audibly along the mountain wind';</p>
+
+<p>and concluding with the fine tribute: </p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+'A vision free<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And noble, Haydon, hath thine art released.<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; No portrait this with academic air,<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; This is the poet and his poetry.'</p>
+
+<p>The year 1843 brought, as Haydon's biographer points out, 'the
+consummation of what he had so earnestly fought for, a competition of
+native artists to prove their capability for executing great monumental
+and decorative works; but with this came his own bitter disappointment
+at not being among the successful competitors. In all his struggles up
+to this point, Haydon had the consolation of hope that better times were
+coming. But now the good time for art was at hand, and he was passed
+over. The blow fell heavily--indeed, I may say, was mortal. He tried to
+cheat himself into the belief that the old hostile influences to which
+he attributed all his misfortunes, had been working here also, and that
+he should yet rise superior to their malice. He would not admit to
+himself that his powers were impaired--that he was less fit for great
+achievements in his art than he had been when he painted Solomon and
+Lazarus. But if he held this opinion, he held it alone. It was apparent
+to all, even to his warmest friends, that years of harass, humiliation,
+distraction, and conflict had enfeebled his energies, and led him to
+seek in exaggeration the effect he could no longer attain by
+well-measured force. His restless desire to have a hand in all that was
+projected for art, had wearied those in authority. He had shown himself
+too intractable to follow, and he had not inspired that confidence which
+might have given him a right to lead.'</p>
+
+<p>Although Haydon loudly proclaimed his conviction that, in face of
+the hostility against him, his cartoons would not be successful, even
+though they were as perfect as Raphael's, yet it is obvious that he had
+not altogether relinquished hope. In a letter to his old pupil,
+Eastlake, who was secretary to the Fine Arts Commission, he says: 'I
+appeal to the Royal Commission, to the First Lord, to you the secretary,
+to Barry the architect, if I ought not to be indulged in my hereditary
+right to do this, viz., that when the houses are ready, cartoons done,
+colours mixed, and all at their posts, I shall be allowed, <i>employed</i>
+or <i>not employed</i>, to take the brush, and dip into the <i>first</i>
+colour, and put the <i>first</i> touch on the <i>first</i> intonaco. If
+that is not granted, I'll haunt every noble Lord and you, till you join
+my disturbed spirit on the banks of the Styx.'</p>
+
+<p>On June 1, Haydon placed his two cartoons in Westminster Hall, and
+thanked his God that he had lived to see that day, adding with
+unconscious blasphemy, 'Spare my life, O Lord, until I have shown thy
+strength unto this generation, thy power unto that which is to come.'
+The miracle for which he had secretly hoped, while declaring his
+certainty of failure, did not happen. On June 27 he heard from Eastlake
+that his cartoons were not among those chosen for reward. Half stunned
+by the blow, anticipated though it had been, he makes but few comments
+on the news in his Journal, and those are written in a composed and
+reasonable tone. 'I went to bed last night in a decent state of
+anxiety,' he observes. 'It has given a great shock to my family,
+especially to my dear boy, Frank, and revived all the old horrors of
+arrest, execution, and debt. It is exactly what I expected, and is, I
+think, intentional.... I am wounded, and being ill from confinement, it
+shook me. (<i>July 1st</i>) A day of great misery. I said to my dear
+love, "I am not included." Her expression was a study. She said, "We
+shall be ruined." I looked up my letters, papers, and Journals, and sent
+them to my dear AEschylus Barrett. I burnt loads of private letters, and
+prepared for executions. Seven pounds was raised on my daughter's and
+Mary's dresses.'</p>
+
+<p>The three money prizes were awarded to Armitage, Cope, and Watts,
+but it was announced that another competition, in fresco, would be held
+the following year, when the successful competitors would be intrusted
+with the decoration of the House of Lords. Haydon did not enter for this
+competition, but, as will presently appear, he refused to allow that he
+was beaten. On September 4 he removed his cartoons from Westminster
+Hall, with the comment: 'Thus ends the cartoon contest; and as the very
+first inventor and beginner of this mode of rousing the people when they
+were pronounced incapable of relishing refined works of art without
+colour, I am deeply wounded at the insult inflicted. These Journals
+witness under what trials I began them--how I called on my Creator for
+His blessing--how I trusted in Him, and how I have been degraded,
+insulted, and harassed. O Lord! Thou knowest best. I submit.'</p>
+
+<p>During the year Haydon had finished his picture of 'Alexander and
+the Lion,' which he considered one of his finest works, though the
+British Gallery declined to hang it, and no patron offered to buy it. He
+had also painted for bread and cheese innumerable small replicas of
+'Napoleon at St. Helena' and the 'Duke at Waterloo' for five guineas
+apiece. By the beginning of 1844 his spirits had outwardly revived,
+thanks to the anodyne of incessant labour, and he writes almost in the
+old buoyant vein: 'Another day of work, God be thanked! Put in the sea
+[in "Napoleon at St. Helena"]; a delicious tint. How exquisite is a bare
+canvas, sized alone, to work on; how the slightest colour, thin as
+water, tells; how it glitters in body; how the brush flies--now
+here--now there; it seems as if face, hands, sky, thought, poetry, and
+expression were hid in the handle, and streamed out as it touched the
+canvas. What magic! what fire! what unerring hand and eye! what power!
+what a gift of God! I bow, and am grateful.' On March 24 he came to the
+fatal decision to paint his own original designs for the House of Lords
+in a series of six large pictures, and exhibit them separately, a
+decision founded, as he believed, on supernatural inspiration. 'Awoke
+this morning,' he writes, 'with that sort of audible whisper Socrates,
+Columbus, and Tasso heard! "Why do you not paint your own designs for
+the House on your own foundation, and exhibit them?" I felt as if there
+was no chance of my ever being permitted to do them else, without
+control also. I knelt up in my bed, and prayed heartily to accomplish
+them, whatever might be the obstruction. I will begin them as my next
+great works; I feel as if they will be my last, and I think I shall then
+have done my duty. O God! bless the beginning, progression, and
+conclusion of these six great designs to illustrate the best government
+to regulate without cramping the energies of mankind.'</p>
+
+<p>In July the frescoes sent in for competition were exhibited in
+Westminster Hall, and in the result six artists were commissioned to
+decorate the House of Lords, Maclise, Redgrave, Dyce, Cope, Horsley, and
+Thomas. 'I see,' writes Haydon, 'they are resolved that I, the
+originator of the whole scheme, shall have nothing to do with it; so I
+will (trusting in the great God who has brought me thus far) begin on my
+own inventions without employment.' The first of the series was
+'Aristides hooted by the Populace,' and the conditions under which it
+was painted are described in his annual review of the year's work: 'I
+have painted a large Napoleon in four days and a half, six smaller
+different subjects, three Curtiuses, five Napoleons Musing, three Dukes
+and Copenhagens, George IV., and the Duke at Waterloo--half done
+Uriel--published my lectures--and settled composition of Aristides. I
+gave lectures at Liverpool, sometimes twice a day, and lectured at the
+Royal Institution. I have not been idle, but how much more I might have
+done!'</p>
+
+<p>In 1845 Haydon exhibited his picture of 'Uriel and Satan' at the
+Academy, and 'after twenty-two years of abuse,' actually received a
+favourable notice in the <i>Times</i>, For the Uriel he was paid
+&pound;200, but five other pictures remained upon his hands, their
+estimated value amounting to nearly a thousand pounds, and he was left
+to work at his <i>Aristides</i> with barely ten shillings for current
+expenses, and not a single commission in prospect. 'What a pity it is,'
+he observes, 'that a man of my order--sincerity, perhaps genius [in the
+Journal a private note is here inserted, "not <i>perhaps</i>"], is not
+employed. What honour, what distinction would I not confer on my great
+country! However, it is my destiny to perform great things, not in
+consequence of encouragement, but in spite of opposition, and so let it
+be.' In the latter part of the year came one or two minor pieces of good
+fortune for which Haydon professed the profoundest gratitude, declaring
+that he was not good enough to deserve such blessings. The King of
+Hanover bought a Napoleon for &pound;200, and a pupil came, who paid a
+like sum as premium. His son, Frank, who had taken his degree, changed
+his mind again about his profession, and now 'shrank from the publicity
+of the pulpit.' Haydon applied to Sir Robert Peel for an appointment for
+the youth, and Peel, who seems to have shown the utmost patience and
+kindness in his relations with the unfortunate artist, at once offered a
+post in the Record Office at &pound;80 a year, an offer which was gladly
+accepted.</p>
+
+<p>Thus relieved of immediate care, Haydon set to work on the second
+picture of his series, 'Nero playing the Lyre while Rome was burning.'
+The effect of his conception, as he foresaw it in his mind's eye, was so
+terrific that he 'fluttered, trembled, and perspired like a woman, and
+was obliged to sit down.' Under all the anxiety, the pressure, and the
+disappointment of Haydon's life, it must be remembered that there were
+enormous compensations in the shape of days and hours of absorbed and
+satisfied employment, days and hours such as seldom fall to the lot of
+the average good citizen and solvent householder. The following entry
+alone is sufficient proof that Haydon, even in his worst straits, was
+almost as much an object of envy as of compassion: 'Worked with such
+intense abstraction and delight for eight hours, with five minutes only
+for lunch, that though living in the noisiest quarter of all London, I
+never remember hearing all day a single cart, carriage, knock, cry, bark
+of man, woman, dog, or child. When I came out into the sunshine I said
+to myself, "Why, what is all this driving about?" though it has always
+been so for the last twenty-two years, so perfectly, delightfully, and
+intensely had I been abstracted. If that be not happiness, what is?'</p>
+
+<p>Haydon had now staked all his hopes upon the exhibition in the
+spring of 1846 of the first two pictures in his series, 'Aristides' and
+'Nero.' If the public flocked to see them, if it accorded him, as he
+expected, its enthusiastic support, he hoped that the Commission would
+be shamed into offering him public employment. If, on the other hand,
+the exhibition failed, he must have realised that he would be
+irretrievably ruined, with all his hopes for the future slain.
+Everything was to be sacrificed to this last grand effort. 'If I lose
+this moment for showing all my works,' he writes, 'it can never occur
+again. My fate hangs on doing as I ought, and seizing moments with
+energy. I shall never again have the opportunity of connecting myself
+with a great public commission by opposition, and interesting the public
+by the contrast. If I miss it, it will be a tide not taken at the flood.'</p>
+
+<p>By dint of begging and borrowing, the money was scraped together for
+the opening expenses of the exhibition, and Haydon composed a
+sensational descriptive advertisement in the hope of attracting the
+public. The private view was on April 4, when it rained all day, and
+only four old friends attended. On April 6, Easter Monday, the public
+was admitted, but only twenty-one availed themselves of the privilege.
+For a few days Haydon went on hoping against hope that matters would
+improve, and that John Bull, in whose support he had trusted, would
+rally round him at last. But Tom Thumb was exhibiting next door, and the
+historical painter had no chance against the pigmy. The people rushed by
+in their thousands to visit Tom Thumb, but few stopped to inspect
+'Aristides' or 'Nero.' 'They push, they fight, they scream, they faint,'
+writes Haydon, 'they see my bills, my boards, my caravans, and don't
+read them. Their eyes are open, but their sense is shut. It is an
+insanity, a rabies, a madness, a furor, a dream. Tom Thumb had 12,000
+people last week, B. R. Haydon 133 1/2 (the half a little girl).
+Exquisite taste of the English people!... (<i>May,</i> 18<i>th</i>) I
+closed my exhibition this day, and lost &pound;111, 8s. 10d. No man can
+accuse me of showing less energy, less spirit, less genius than I did
+twenty-six years ago. I have not decayed, but the people have been
+corrupted. I am the same, they are not; and I have suffered in
+consequence.'</p>
+
+<p>In defiance of this shipwreck of all his hopes, and the heavy
+liabilities that hung about his neck, this indomitable spirit began the
+third picture of his unappreciated series, 'Alfred and the First British
+Jury.' He had large sums to pay in the coming month, and only a few
+shillings in the house, with no commissions in prospect. He sends up
+passionate and despairing petitions that God will help him in his
+dreadful necessities, will raise him friends from sources invisible, and
+enable him to finish his last and greatest works. Appeals for help to
+Lord Brougham, the Duke of Beaufort, and Sir Robert Peel brought only
+one response, a cheque for &pound;50 from Peel, which was merely a drop
+in the ocean. Day by day went by, and still no commissions came in, no
+offers for any of the large pictures he had on hand. Haydon began to
+lose confidence in his ability to finish his series, and with him loss
+of self-confidence was a fatal sign. The June weather was hot, he was
+out of health, and unable to sleep at night, but he declined to send for
+a doctor. His brain grew confused, and at last even the power to work,
+that power which for him had spelt pride and happiness throughout his
+whole life, seemed to be leaving him.</p>
+
+<p>On June 16 he writes: 'I sat from two till five staring at my
+picture like an idiot, my brain pressed down by anxiety, and the anxious
+looks of my dear Mary and the children.... Dearest Mary, with a woman's
+passion, wishes me at once to stop payment, and close the whole thing. I
+will not. I will finish my six under the blessing of God, reduce my
+expenses, and hope His mercy will not desert me, but bring me through in
+health and vigour, gratitude and grandeur of soul, to the end.' The end
+was nearer than he thought, for even Haydon's brave spirit could not
+battle for ever with adverse fate, and the collapse, when it came, was
+sudden. The last two or three entries in the Journal are melancholy
+reading.</p>
+
+<p>'<i>June</i> 18.--O God, bless me through the evils of this day. My
+landlord, Newton, called. I said, "I see a quarter's rent in thy face,
+but none from me." I appointed to-morrow night to see him, and lay
+before him every iota of my position. Good-hearted Newton! I said,
+"Don't put in an execution." "Nothing of the sort," he replied, half
+hurt. I sent the Duke, Wordsworth, dear Fred and Mary's heads to Miss
+Barrett to protect. I have the Duke's boots and hat, Lord Grey's coat,
+and some more heads.</p>
+
+<p>'20<i>th</i>.--O God, bless us through all the evils of this day.
+Amen.</p>
+
+<p>'21<i>st,</i>.--Slept horribly. Prayed in sorrow, and got up in
+agitation.</p>
+
+<p>'22<i>nd</i>.--God forgive me. Amen.</p>
+
+<p> FINIS OF B. R. HAYDON.</p>
+
+<p> '"Stretch me no longer on this rough world"--<i>Lear</i>.'</p>
+
+<p>This last entry was made between ten and eleven o'clock on the
+morning of June 22. Haydon had risen early, and gone out to a gunmaker's
+in Oxford Street, where he bought a pair of pistols. After breakfast, he
+asked his wife to go and spend the day with an old friend, and having
+affectionately embraced her, shut himself in his painting-room. Mrs.
+Haydon left the house, and an hour later Miss Haydon went down to the
+studio, intending to try and console her father in his anxieties. She
+found him stretched on the floor in front of his unfinished picture of
+'Alfred and the First Jury,' a bullet-wound in his head, and a frightful
+gash across his throat. A razor and a small pistol lay by his side. On
+the table were his Journal, open at the last page, letters to his wife
+and children, his will, made that morning, and a paper headed: 'Last
+thoughts of B. R. Haydon; half-past ten.' These few lines, with their
+allusions to Wellington and Napoleon, are characteristic of the man who
+had painted the two great soldiers a score of times, and looked up to
+them as his heroes and exemplars.</p>
+
+<p>'No man should use certain evil for probable good, however great the
+object,' so they run. 'Evil is the prerogative of the Deity. Wellington
+never used evil if the good was not certain. Napoleon had no such
+scruples, and I fear the glitter of his genius rather dazzled me. But
+had I been encouraged, nothing but good would have come from me, because
+when encouraged I paid everybody. God forgive me the evil for the sake
+of the good. Amen.'</p>
+
+<p>This tragic conclusion to a still more tragic career created a
+profound sensation in society, and immense crowds followed the
+historical painter to his grave. Among all his friends, perhaps few were
+more affected by his death than one who had never looked upon his
+face--his 'dear &AElig;schylus Barrett, 'as he called her. Certain it is
+that, with the intuition of genius, Elizabeth Barrett understood,
+appreciated, and made allowances for the unhappy man more completely
+than was possible to any other of his contemporaries. Clear-sighted to
+his faults and weaknesses, her chivalrous spirit took up arms in defence
+of his conduct, even against the strictures of her poet-lover. 'The
+dreadful death of poor Mr. Haydon the artist,' she wrote to her friend
+Mrs. Martin, a few days after the event, 'has quite upset me. I thank
+God that I never saw him--poor gifted Haydon.... No artist is left
+behind with equal largeness of poetical conception. If the hand had
+always obeyed the soul, he would have been a genius of the first order.
+As it is, he lived on the slope of genius, and could not be steadfast
+and calm. His life was one long agony of self-assertion. Poor, poor
+Haydon! See how the world treats those who try too openly for its
+gratitude. "Tom Thumb for ever" over the heads of its giants.'</p>
+
+<p>'Could any one--<i>could my own hand even have averted what has
+happened</i>?' she wrote to Robert Browning on June 24, 1846. 'My head
+and heart have ached to-day over the inactive hand. But for the moment
+it was out of my power, and then I never fancied this case to be more
+than a piece of a continuous case, of a habit fixed. Two years ago he
+sent me boxes and pictures precisely so, and took them back again--poor,
+poor Haydon!--as he will not this time.... Also, I have been told again
+and again (oh, never by <i>you</i>, my beloved) that to give money <i>there</i>,
+was to drop it into a hole in the ground. But if to have dropped it so,
+dust to dust, would have saved a living man--what then?... Some day,
+when I have the heart to look for it, you shall see his last note. I
+understand now that there are touches of desperate pathos--but never
+could he have meditated self-destruction while writing that note. He
+said he should write six more lectures--six more volumes. He said he was
+painting a new background to a picture which made him feel as if his
+soul had wings... and he repeated an old phrase of his, which I had
+heard from him often before, and which now rings hollowly to the ears of
+my memory--that he <i>couldn't and wouldn't die</i>. Strange and
+dreadful!'</p>
+
+<p>Directly after Haydon's death a public meeting of his friends and
+patrons was held, at which a considerable sum was subscribed for the
+benefit of his widow and daughter. Sir Robert Peel, besides sending
+immediate help, recommended the Queen to bestow a small pension on Mrs.
+Haydon. The dead man's debts amounted to &pound;3000, and his assets
+consisted chiefly of unsaleable pictures, on most of which his creditors
+had liens. In his will was a clause to the effect that 'I have
+manuscripts and memoirs in the possession of Miss Barrett, of 50 Wimpole
+Street, in a chest, which I wish Longman to be consulted about. My
+memoirs are to 1820; my journals will supply the rest. The style, the
+individuality of Richardson, which I wish not curtailed by an editor.'
+Miss Mitford was asked to edit the Life, but felt herself unequal to the
+task, which was finally intrusted to Mr. Tom Taylor.</p>
+
+<p>Haydon's <i>Memoirs</i>, compiled from his autobiography, journals,
+and correspondence, appeared in 1853, the same year that saw the
+publication of Lord John Russell's <i>Life of Thomas Moore</i>. To the
+great astonishment of both critics and public, Haydon's story proved the
+more interesting of the two. 'Haydon's book is the work of the year,'
+writes Miss Mitford. 'It has entirely stopped the sale of Moore's, which
+really might have been written by a Court newspaper or a Court
+milliner.' Again, the <i>Athen&aelig;um</i>, a more impartial witness,
+asks, 'Who would have thought that the Life of Haydon would turn out a
+more sterling and interesting addition to English biography than the
+Life of Moore?' But the highest testimony to the merits of the book as a
+human document comes from Mrs. Browning, who wrote to Miss Mitford on
+March 19, 1854, 'Oh, I have just been reading poor Haydon's biography.
+There is tragedy! The pain of it one can hardly shake off. Surely,
+surely, wrong was done somewhere, when the worst is admitted of Haydon.
+For himself, looking forward beyond the grave, I seem to understand that
+all things, when most bitter, worked ultimate good to him, for that
+sublime arrogance of his would have been fatal perhaps to the moral
+nature, if further developed by success. But for the nation we had our
+duties, and we should not suffer our teachers and originators to sink
+thus. It is a book written in blood of the heart. Poor Haydon!' Mr.
+Taylor's Life was supplemented in 1874 by Haydon's <i>Correspondence
+and Table-talk</i>, together with a <i>Memoir</i> written in a tone of
+querulous complaint, by his second son, Frederick, who, it may be noted,
+had been dismissed from the public service for publishing a letter to
+Mr. Gladstone, entitled <i>Our Officials at the Home Office</i>, and
+who died in the Bethlehem Hospital in 1886. His elder brother, Frank,
+committed suicide in 1887.</p>
+
+<p>On the subject of Haydon's merits as a painter the opinion of his
+contemporaries swung from one extreme to another, while that of
+posterity perhaps has scarcely allowed him such credit as was his due.
+It is certain that he was considered a youth of extraordinary promise by
+his colleagues, Wilkie, Jackson, and Sir George Beaumont, yet there were
+not wanting critics who declared that his early picture, 'Dentatus,' was
+an absurd mass of vulgarity and distortion. Foreign artists who visited
+his studio urged him to go to Rome, where he was assured that patrons
+and pupils would flock round him; while, on the other hand, he was
+described by a native critic (in the <i>Quarterly Review</i>) as one of
+the most defective painters of the day, who had received more pecuniary
+assistance, more indulgence, more liberality, and more charity than any
+other artist ever heard of. But the best criticism of his powers, though
+it scarcely takes into account the gift of imagination which received so
+many tributes from the poets, is that contributed to Mr. Taylor's
+biography by Mr. Watts, R.A.</p>
+
+<p>'The characteristics of Haydon's art,' he writes, 'appear to me to
+be great determination and power, knowledge, and effrontery... Haydon
+appears to have succeeded as often as he displays any real anxiety to do
+so; but one is struck with the extraordinary discrepancy of different
+parts of the work, as though, bored by a fixed attention that had taken
+him out of himself, yet highly applauding the result, he had scrawled
+and daubed his brush about in a sort of intoxication of self-glory... In
+Haydon's work there is not sufficient forgetfulness of self to disarm
+criticism of personality. His pictures are themselves autobiographical
+notes of the most interesting kind; but their want of beauty repels, and
+their want of modesty exasperates. Perhaps their principal
+characteristic is lack of delicacy and refinement of execution.' While
+describing Haydon's touch as woolly, his surfaces as disagreeable, and
+his draperies as deficient in dignity, Mr. Watts admits that his
+expression of anatomy and general perception of form are the best by far
+that can be found in the English school. Haydon had looked forward in
+full confidence to the favourable verdict of posterity, and to an
+honourable position in the National Gallery for the big canvases that
+had been neglected by his contemporaries. It is not the least of life's
+little ironies that while not a single work of his now hangs in the
+National Gallery, his large picture of Curtius leaping into the Gulf
+occupies a prominent position in one of Gatti's restaurants. [Footnote:
+Three of Haydon's pictures, however, are the property of the nation.
+Two, the 'Lazarus' and 'May-day,' belong to the National Gallery, but
+have been lent to provincial galleries. One, the 'Christ in the Garden,'
+belongs to the South Kensington Museum, but has been stored away.]</p>
+
+<p>As a lecturer, a theoriser, and a populariser of his art, Haydon has
+just claims to grateful remembrance. Though driven to paint pot-boilers
+for the support of his family, he never ceased to preach the gospel of
+high art; he was among the first to recognise and acclaim the
+transcendent merits of the Elgin Marbles; he rejoiced with a personal
+joy in the purchase of the Angerstein collection as the nucleus of a
+National Gallery; he scorned the ignoble fears of some of his colleagues
+lest the newly-started winter exhibitions of old masters should injure
+their professional prospects; he used his interest at Court to have
+Raphael's cartoons brought up to London for the benefit of students and
+public; he advocated the establishment of local schools of design, and,
+through his lectures and writings, helped to raise and educate the taste
+of his country.</p>
+
+<p>Haydon has painted his own character and temperament in such vivid
+colours, that scarcely a touch need be added to the portrait. He was an
+original thinker, a vigorous writer, a keen observer, but from his youth
+up a disproportion was evident in the structure of his mind, that
+pointed only too clearly to insanity. His judgment, as Mr. Taylor
+observes, was essentially unsound in all matters where he himself was
+personally interested. His vanity blinded him throughout to the quality
+of his own work, the amount of influence he could wield, and the extent
+of the public sympathy that he excited. He was essentially religious in
+temperament, though his religion was so assertive and egotistical in
+type that those who hold with Rosalba that where there is no modesty
+there can be no religion, [Footnote: Rosalba said of Sir Godfrey
+Kneller, 'This man can have no religion, for he has no modesty.'] might
+be inclined to deny its existence. From the very outset of his career
+Haydon took up the attitude of a missionary of high art in England--and
+therewith the expectation of being crowned and enriched as its Priest
+and King. He clung to the belief that a man who devoted himself to the
+practice of a high and ennobling art ought to be supported by a grateful
+country, or at least by generous patrons, and he could never be made to
+realise that Art is a stern and jealous mistress, who demands material
+sacrifices from her votaries in exchange for spiritual compensations. If
+a man desires to create a new era in the art of his country, he must be
+prepared to lead a monastic life in a garret; but if, like Haydon, he
+allows himself a wife and eight children, and professes to be unable to
+live on five hundred a year, he must condescend to the painting of
+portraits and pot-boilers. The public cannot be forced to support what
+it neither understands nor admires, and, in a democratic state, the
+Government is bound to consult the taste of its masters.</p>
+
+<p>Haydon's financial embarrassments were perhaps the least of his
+trials. As has been seen, he had fallen into the hands of the
+money-lenders in early youth, and he had never been able to extricate
+himself from their clutches. But so many of his friends and
+colleagues--Godwin, Leigh Hunt, and Sir Thomas Lawrence among
+others--were in the same position, that Haydon must have felt he was
+insolvent in excellent company. As long as he was able to keep himself
+out of prison and the bailiffs out of his house, he seems to have
+considered that his affairs were positively nourishing, and at their
+worst his financial difficulties alone would never have driven him to
+self-destruction. Mrs. Browning was surely right when she wrote:--'The
+more I think the more I am inclined to conclude that the money
+irritation was merely an additional irritation, and that the despair,
+leading to revolt against life, had its root in disappointed ambition.
+The world did not recognise his genius, and he punished the world by
+withdrawing the light... All the audacity and bravery and
+self-calculation, which drew on him so much ridicule, were an agony in
+disguise--he could not live without reputation, and he wrestled for it,
+struggled for it, <i>kicked</i> for it, forgetting grace of attitude in
+the pang. When all was vain he went mad and died... Poor Haydon! Think
+what an agony life was to him, so constituted!--his own genius a
+clinging curse! the fire and the clay in him seething and quenching one
+another!--the man seeing maniacally in all men the assassins of his
+fame! and with the whole world against him, struggling for the thing
+that was his life, through day and night, in thoughts and in dreams ...
+struggling, stifling, breaking the hearts of the creatures dearest to
+him, in the conflict for which there was no victory, though he could not
+choose but fight it. Tell me if Laoco&ouml;n's anguish was not as an
+infant's sleep compared to this.'</p>
+
+<p>Haydon wrote his own epitaph, and this, which he, at least, believed
+to be an accurate summary of his misfortunes and their cause, may fitly
+close this brief outline of his troubled life:--</p>
+
+<p>'HERE LIETH THE BODY</p>
+
+<p>OF</p>
+
+<p>BENJAMIN ROBERT HAYDON,</p>
+
+<p>An English Historical Painter, who, in a struggle to make the
+People, the Legislature, the Nobility, and the Sovereign of England give
+due dignity and rank to the highest Art, which has ever languished, and,
+until the Government interferes, ever will languish in England, fell a
+Victim to his ardour and his love of country, an evidence that to seek
+the benefit of your country by telling the Truth to Power, is a crime
+that can only be expiated by the ruin and destruction of the Man who is
+so patriotic and so imprudent.</p>
+
+<p>'He was born at Plymouth, 26th of January 1786, and died on the
+[22nd of June] 18[46], believing in Christ as the Mediator and Advocate
+of Mankind:--</p>
+
+<p>'"What various ills the Painter's life assail, Pride, Envy, Want,
+the Patron and the Jail."'<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
+
+<p style="font-weight: bold; text-align: center;"><big><a name="MORGAN"></a><big>LADY
+MORGAN</big> <br>
+(SYDNEY OWENSON)<br>
+</big><br>
+</p>
+<div style="text-align: center;"> </div>
+<div style="text-align: center;"><img src="images/Morgan.jpg"
+ title="Sydney Owenson, afterwards Lady Morgan, From a drawing by Sir Thomas Lawrence."
+ alt="Sydney Owenson, afterwards Lady Morgan, From a drawing by Sir Thomas Lawrence."
+ style="width: 388px; height: 548px;"><br>
+<br>
+</div>
+<div style="text-align: center;"> </div>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 20%;">
+
+<p style="font-weight: bold; text-align: center;">PART I</p>
+
+<p>'What,' asks Lady Morgan in her fragment of autobiography, 'what has
+a woman to do with dates? Cold, false, erroneous dates! Her poetical
+idiosyncrasy, calculated by epochs, would make the most natural points
+of reference in a woman's autobiography.' The matter-of-fact Saxon would
+hardly know how to set about calculating a poetical idiosyncrasy by
+epochs, but our Celtic heroine was equal to the task; at any rate, she
+abstained so carefully throughout her career from all unnecessary
+allusion to what she called 'vulgar eras,' that the date of her birth
+remained a secret, even from her bitterest enemies. Her untiring
+persecutor, John Wilson Croker, declared that Sydney Owenson was born in
+1775, while the <i>Dictionary of National Biography</i> more gallantly
+gives the date as 1783, with a query. But as Sir Charles Morgan was born
+in the latter year, and as his wife owned to a few years' seniority, we
+shall probably be doing her no injustice if we place the important event
+between 1778 and 1780.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Morgan's detestation for dates was accompanied by a vivid
+imagination, an inaccurate memory, and a constitutional inability to
+deal with hard facts. Hence, her biographers have found it no easy task
+to grapple with the details of her career, her own picturesque,
+high-coloured narrative being not invariably in accord with the prosaic
+records gathered from contemporary sources. For example, according to
+the plain, unvarnished statement of a Saxon chronicler, Lady Morgan's
+father was one Robert MacOwen, who was born in 1744, the son of poor
+parents in Connaught. He was educated at a hedge-school, and on coming
+to man's estate, obtained a situation as steward to a neighbouring
+landowner. But, having been inspired with an unquenchable passion for
+the theatre, he presently threw up his post, and through the influence
+of Goldsmith, a 'Connaught cousin,' he obtained a footing on the English
+stage.</p>
+
+<p>The Celtic version of this story, as dictated by Lady Morgan in her
+old age, is immeasurably superior, and at any rate deserves to be true.
+Early in the eighteenth century, so runs the tale, a hurling-match was
+held in Connaught, which was attended by all the gentry of the
+neighbourhood. The Queen of Beauty, who gave away the prizes, was Sydney
+Crofton Bell, granddaughter of Sir Malby Crofton of Longford House. The
+victor of the hurling-match was Walter MacOwen, a gentleman according to
+the genealogy of Connaught, but a farmer by position. Young, strong, and
+handsome, MacOwen, like Orlando, overthrew more than his enemies, with
+the result that presently there was an elopement in the neighbourhood,
+and an unpardonable <i>m&eacute;salliance</i> in the Crofton family. The
+marriage does not appear to have been a very happy one, since MacOwen
+continued to frequent all the fairs and hurling-matches of the
+country-side, but his wife consoled herself for his neglect by
+cultivating her musical and poetical gifts. She composed Irish songs and
+melodies, and gained the title of Clasagh-na-Vallagh, or Harp of the
+Valley. Her only son Robert inherited his father's good looks and his
+mother's artistic talents, and was educated by the joint efforts of the
+Protestant clergyman and the Roman Catholic priest.</p>
+
+<p>When the boy was about seventeen, a rich, eccentric stranger named
+Blake arrived to take possession of the Castle of Ardfry. The new-comer,
+who was a musical amateur, presently discovered that there was a young
+genius in the neighbourhood. Struck by the beauty of Robert MacOwen's
+voice, Mr. Blake offered to take the youth into his own household, and
+educate him for a liberal profession, an offer that was joyfully
+accepted by Clasagh-na-Vallagh. The patron soon tired of Connaught, and
+carried off his <i>prot&eacute;g&eacute;</i> to London, where he placed
+him under Dr. Worgan, the famous blind organist of Westminster Abbey. At
+home, young MacOwen's duties were to keep his employer's accounts, to
+carve at table, and to sing Irish melodies to his guests. He was taken
+up by his distant kinsman, Goldsmith, who introduced him to the world
+behind the scenes, and encouraged him in his aspirations after a
+theatrical career.</p>
+
+<p>Among the young Irishman's new acquaintances was Madame Weichsel, <i>prima
+donna</i> of His Majesty's Theatre, and mother of the more celebrated
+Mrs. Billington. The lady occasionally studied her roles under Dr.
+Worgan, when MacOwen played the part of stage-lover, and, being of an
+inflammable disposition, speedily developed into a real one. This
+love-affair was the cause of a sudden reverse of fortune. During Mr.
+Blake's absence from town, Robert accompanied Madame Weichsel to
+Vauxhall, where she was engaged to sing a duet. Her professional
+colleague failing to appear, young MacOwen was persuaded to undertake
+the tenor part, which he did with pronounced success. But unfortunately
+Mr. Blake, who had returned unexpectedly from Ireland, was among the
+audience, and was angered beyond all forgiveness by this premature <i>d&eacute;but</i>.
+When Robert went home, he found his trunks ready packed, and a letter
+of dismissal from his patron awaiting him. A note for &pound;300, which
+accompanied the letter, was returned, and the prodigal drove off to his
+cousin Goldsmith, who, with characteristic good-nature, took him in, and
+promised him his interest with the theatrical managers.</p>
+
+<p>According to Lady Morgan's account, Robert Owenson, as he now called
+himself in deference to the prevailing prejudice against both the Irish
+and the Scotch, was at once introduced to Garrick, and allowed to make
+his <i>d&eacute;but</i> in the part of Tamerlane. But, from contemporary
+evidence, it is clear that he had gained some experience in the
+provinces before he made his first appearance on the London boards, when
+his Tamerlane was a decided failure. Garrick refused to allow him a
+second chance, but after further provincial touring, he obtained another
+London engagement, and appeared with success in such parts as Captain
+Macheath, Sir Lucius O'Trigger, and Major O'Flaherty.</p>
+
+<p>Owenson had been on the stage some years when he fell in love with
+Miss Jane Hill, the daughter of a respectable burgess of Shrewsbury. The
+worthy Mr. Hill refused his consent to his daughter's marriage with an
+actor, but the dashing <i>jeune premier</i>, like his father before
+him, carried off his bride by night, and married her at Lichfield before
+her irate parent could overtake them. Miss Hill was a Methodist by
+persuasion, and hated the theatre, though she loved her player. She
+induced her husband to renounce his profession for a time, and to appear
+only at concerts and oratorios. But the stage-fever was in his blood,
+and after a short retirement, we find him, in 1771, investing a part of
+his wife's fortune in a share in the Crow Street Theatre, Dublin, where
+he made his first appearance with great success in his favourite part of
+Major O'Flaherty, one of the characters in Cumberland's comedy, <i>The
+West Indian</i>. He remained one of the pillars of this theatre until
+1782, when Ryder, the patentee, became a bankrupt. Owenson was then
+engaged by Richard Daly to perform at the Smock Alley Theatre, and also
+to fill the post of assistant-manager.</p>
+
+<p>By this time Sydney had made her appearance in the world, arriving
+on Christmas Day in some unspecified year. According to one authority
+she was born on ship-board during the passage from Holyhead to Dublin,
+but she tells us herself that she was born at her father's house in
+Dublin during a Christmas banquet, at which most of the leading wits and
+literary celebrities of the capital were present. The whole party was
+bidden to her christening a month later, and Edward Lysaght, equally
+famous as a lawyer and an improvisatore, undertook to make the necessary
+vows in her name. In spite of this brilliant send-off, Sydney was not
+destined to bring good fortune to her father's house. A few years after
+her birth Owenson, having quarrelled with Daly, invested his savings in
+a tumble-down building known as the Old Music Hall, which he restored,
+and re-named the National Theatre. The season opened with a grand
+national performance, and everything promised well, when, like a
+bomb-shell, came the announcement that the Government had granted to
+Richard Daly an exclusive patent for the performance of legitimate drama
+in Dublin. Mr. Owenson was thus obliged to close his theatre at the end
+of his first season, but he received some compensation for his losses,
+and was offered a re-engagement under Daly on favourable terms, an offer
+which he had the sense to accept.</p>
+
+<p>A short period of comparative calm and freedom from embarrassment
+now set in for the Owenson family. Mrs. Owenson was a careful mother,
+and extremely anxious about the education of her two little girls,
+Sydney and Olivia. There is a touch of pathos in the picture of the
+prim, methodistical English lady, who hated the dirt and slovenliness of
+her husband's people, was shocked at their jovial ways and free talk,
+looked upon all Papists as connections of Antichrist, and hoped for the
+salvation of mankind through the form of religion patronised by Lady
+Huntington. She was accustomed to hold up as an example to her little
+girls the career of a certain model child, the daughter of a distant
+kinsman, Sir Rowland Hill of Shropshire. This appalling infant had read
+the Bible twice through before she was five, and knitted all the
+stockings worn by her father's coachman. The lively Sydney detested the
+memory of her virtuous young kinswoman, for she had great difficulty in
+mastering the art of reading, though she learned easily by heart, and
+could imitate almost anything she saw. At a very early age she could go
+through the whole elaborate process of hair-dressing, from the first
+papillote to the last puff of the powder-machine, and amused herself by
+arranging her father's old wigs in one of the windows, under the
+inscription, 'Sydney Owenson, System, T&ecirc;te, and Peruke Maker.'</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Owenson found his friends among all the wildest wits of Dublin,
+but his wife's society was strictly limited, both at the Old Music Hall,
+part of which had been utilised as a dwelling, and at the country villa
+that her husband had taken for her at Drumcondra. Yet she does not
+appear to have permitted her religious prejudices to interfere with her
+social relaxations, since her three chief intimates at this time were
+the Rev. Charles Macklin (nephew of the actor), a great performer on the
+Irish pipes, who had been dismissed from his curacy for playing out the
+congregation on his favourite instrument; a Methodist preacher who had
+come over on one of Lady Huntingdon's missions; and a Jesuit priest,
+who, his order being proscribed in Ireland, was living in concealment,
+and in want, it was believed, of the necessaries of life. These three
+regularly frequented the Old Music Hall, where points of faith were
+freely discussed, Mrs. Owenson holding the position of Protestant Pope
+in the little circle. In order that the discussions might not be
+unprofitable, the Catholic servants were sometimes permitted to stand at
+the door, and gather up the crumbs of theological wisdom.</p>
+
+<p>Female visitors were few, one of the most regular being a younger
+sister of Oliver Goldsmith, who lived with a grocer brother in a little
+shop which was afterwards occupied by the father of Thomas Moore. Miss
+Goldsmith was a plain, little old lady, who always carried a long tin
+case, containing a rouleaux of Dr. Goldsmith's portraits, which she
+offered for sale. Sydney much preferred her father's friends, more
+especially his musical associates, such as Giordani the composer, and
+Fisher the violinist, who spent most of their time at his house during
+their visits to Dublin. The children used to hide under the table to
+hear them make music, and picked up many melodies by ear. When Mr.
+Owenson was asked why he did not cultivate his daughter's talent, he
+replied, 'If I were to cultivate their talent for music, it might induce
+them some day to go upon the stage, and I would rather buy them a sieve
+of black cockles to cry about the streets of Dublin than see them the
+first <i>prima donnas</i> of Europe.'</p>
+
+<p>The little Owensons possessed one remarkable playfellow in the shape
+of Thomas Dermody, the 'wonderful boy,' who was regarded in Dublin as a
+second Chatterton. A poor scholar, the son of a drunken country
+schoolmaster, who turned him adrift at fourteen, Dermody had wandered up
+to Dublin, paying his way by reciting poetry and telling stories to his
+humble entertainers, with a few tattered books, one shirt, and two
+shillings for all his worldly goods. He first found employment as
+'librarian' at a cobbler's stall, on which a few cheap books were
+exposed for sale. Later, he got employment as assistant to the
+scene-painter at the Theatre Royal, and here he wrote a clever poem on
+the leading performers, which found its way into the green-room. Anxious
+to see the author, the company, Owenson amongst them, invaded the
+painting-room, where they found the boy-poet, clad in rags, his hair
+clotted with glue, his face smeared with paint, a pot of size in one
+hand and a brush in the other. The sympathy of the kind-hearted players
+was aroused, and it was decided that something must be done for youthful
+genius in distress. Owenson invited the boy to his house, and, by way of
+testing his powers, set him to write a poetical theme on the subject of
+Dublin University. In less than three-quarters of an hour the prodigy
+returned with a poem of fifty lines, which showed an intimate
+acquaintance with the history of the university from its foundation. A
+second test having been followed by equally satisfactory results, it was
+decided that a sum of money should be raised by subscriptions, and that
+Dermody should be assisted to enter the university. Owenson, with his
+wife's cordial consent, took the young poet into his house, and treated
+him like his own son. Unfortunately, Dermody's genius was weighted by
+the artistic temperament; he was lazy, irregular in his attendance at
+college, and not particularly grateful to his benefactors. By his own
+acts he fell out of favour, the subscriptions that had been collected
+were returned to the donors, and his career would have come to an abrupt
+conclusion, if it had not been that Owenson made interest for him with
+Lady Moira, a distinguished patron of literature, who placed him in the
+charge of Dr. Boyd, the translator of Dante. Dermody must have had his
+good points, for he was a favourite with Mrs. Owenson, and the dear
+friend of Sydney and Olivia, whom he succeeded in teaching to read and
+write, a task in which all other preceptors had failed.</p>
+
+<p>In 1788 Mrs. Owenson died rather suddenly, and the home was broken
+up. Sydney and Olivia were at once placed at a famous Huguenot school,
+which had originally been established at Portarlington, but was now
+removed to Clontarf, near Dublin. For the next three years the children
+had the benefit of the best teaching that could then be obtained, and
+were subjected to a discipline which Lady Morgan always declared was the
+most admirable ever introduced into a 'female seminary' in any country.
+Sydney soon became popular among her fellows, thanks to her knowledge of
+Irish songs and dances, and it is evident that her schooldays were among
+the happiest and most healthful of her early life. The school was an
+expensive one, and poor Owenson, who, with all his faults, seems to have
+been a careful and affectionate father, found it no easy matter to pay
+for the many 'extras.'</p>
+
+<p>'I remember once,' writes Lady Morgan,' our music-teacher complained
+to my father of our idleness as he sat beside us at the piano, and we
+stumbled through the overture to <i>Artaxerxes</i>. His answer to her
+complaint was simple and graphic--for, drawing up the sleeve of a
+handsome surtout, he showed the threadbare sleeve of the black coat
+beneath, and said, touching the whitened seams, "I should not be driven
+to the subterfuge of wearing a greatcoat this hot weather to conceal the
+poverty of my dress beneath, if it were not that I wish to give you the
+advantage of such instruction as you are now neglecting."' The shaft
+went home, and the music-mistress had no occasion to complain again.
+After three years the headmistress retired on her fortune, the school
+was given up, and the two girls were placed at what they considered a
+very inferior establishment in Dublin. Here, however, they had the
+delight of seeing their father every Sunday, when the widower, leaving
+the attractions of the city behind, took his little daughters out
+walking with him. To this time belong memories of early visits to the
+theatre, where Sydney saw Mrs. Siddons for the first and last time, and
+Miss Farren as Susan in the <i>Marriage of Figaro</i>, just before her
+own marriage to Lord Derby. During the summer seasons Mr. Owenson toured
+round the provinces, and generally took his daughters with him, who seem
+to have been made much of by the neighbouring county families.</p>
+
+<p>In 1794 the too optimistic Owenson unfortunately took it into his
+head that it would be an excellent speculation to build a summer theatre
+at Kilkenny. Lord Ormond, who took an interest in the project, gave a
+piece of land opposite the castle gates, money was borrowed, the theatre
+quickly built, and performers brought at great expense from Dublin.
+During the summer the house was filled nightly by overflowing audiences,
+and everything promised well, when the attorney who held a mortgage on
+the building, foreclosed, and bills to an enormous amount were
+presented. Mr. Owenson suddenly departed for the south of Ireland,
+having been advised to keep out of the way until after the final meeting
+of his creditors. His two daughters were placed in Dublin lodgings under
+the care of their faithful old servant, Molly Atkins, until their school
+should reopen.</p>
+
+<p>Sydney had been requested to write to her father every day, and as
+she was passionately fond, to quote her own words, of writing about
+anything to any one, she willingly obeyed, trusting to chance for
+franks. Some of these youthful epistles were preserved by old Molly, the
+packet being indorsed on the cover, 'Letters from Miss Sydney Owenson to
+her father, God pity her!' But the young lady evidently did not consider
+herself an object of pity, for she writes in the best of spirits about
+the books she is reading, the people she is meeting, and all the little
+gaieties and excitements of her life. Somebody lends her an <i>Essay on
+the Human Understanding</i>, by Mr. Locke, Gent., whose theories she has
+no difficulty in understanding; and somebody else talks to her about
+chemistry (a word she has never heard at school), and declares that her
+questions are so <i>suggestive</i> (another new word) that she might
+become a second Pauline Lavosier. She puts her new knowledge to
+practical effect by writing with a piece of phosphorus on her bedroom
+wall, 'Molly, beware!' with the result that Molly is frightened out of
+her wits, the young experimenter burns her hand, and the house is nearly
+set on fire. The eccentric Dermody turns up again, now a smart young
+ensign, having temporarily forsaken letters, and obtained a commission
+through the interest of Lord Moira. He addresses a flattering poem to
+Sydney, and passes on to rejoin his regiment at Cork, whence he is to
+sail for Flanders.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Owenson's affairs did not improve. He tried his fortune in
+various provincial theatres, but the political ferment of the years
+immediately preceding the Union, the disturbed state of the country, and
+the persecution of the Catholics, all spelt ruin for theatrical
+enterprises. As soon as Sydney realised her true position she rose to
+the occasion, and the letter that she wrote to her father, proposing to
+relieve him of the burden of her maintenance, is full of affection and
+spirit. It will be observed that as yet she is contented to express
+herself simply and naturally, without the fine language, the incessant
+quotations, and the mangled French that disfigured so much of her
+published work. The girl, who must now have been seventeen or eighteen,
+had seen her father's name on the list of bankrupts, but it had been
+explained to her that, with time and economy, he would come out of his
+difficulties as much respected as ever. Having informed him of her
+determination not to return to school, but to support herself in future,
+she continues:--</p>
+
+<p>'Now, dear papa, I have two novels nearly finished. The first is <i>St.
+Clair</i>; I think I wrote it in imitation of <i>Werther</i>, which I
+read last Christmas. The second is a French novel, suggested by my
+reading the <i>Memoirs of the Duc de Sully</i>, and falling in love
+with Henri IV. Now, if I had time and quiet to finish them, I am sure I
+could sell them; and observe, sir, Miss Burney got &pound;3000 for <i>Camilla</i>,
+and brought out <i>Evelina</i> unknown to her father; but all this
+takes time.' Sydney goes on to suggest that Olivia shall be placed at a
+school, where Molly could be taken as children's maid, and that she
+herself should seek a situation as governess or companion to young
+ladies.</p>
+
+<p>Through the good offices of her old dancing-master, M. Fontaine, who
+had been appointed master of ceremonies at the castle, Sydney was
+introduced to Mrs. Featherstone, or Featherstonehaugh, of Bracklin
+Castle, who required a governess-companion to her young daughters, and
+apparently did not object to youth and inexperience. The girl's <i>d&eacute;but</i>
+in her employer's family would scarcely have made a favourable
+impression in any country less genial and tolerant than the Ireland of
+that period. On the night of her departure M. Fontaine gave a little <i>bal
+d'adieu</i> in her honour, and as the mail passed the end of his street
+at midnight, it was arranged that Sydney should take her
+travelling-dress with her to the ball, and change before starting on her
+journey. Of course she took no count of the time, and was gaily dancing
+to the tune of 'Money in Both Pockets,' with an agreeable partner, when
+the horn sounded at the end of the street. Like an Irish Cinderella,
+away flew Sydney in her muslin gown and pink shoes and stockings,
+followed by her admirers, laden with her portmanteau and bundle of
+clothes. There was just time for Molly to throw an old cloak over her
+charge, and then the coach door was banged-to, and the little governess
+travelled away through the winter's night. In the excitement of an
+adventure with an officer <i>en route</i>, she allowed her luggage to
+be carried on in the coach, and arrived at Bracklin, a shivering little
+object, in her muslin frock and pink satin shoes. Her stammered
+explanations were received with amusement and sympathy by her
+kind-hearted hosts, and she was carried off to her own rooms, 'the
+prettiest suite you ever saw,' she tells her father, 'a study, bedroom,
+and bath-room, a roaring turf fire in the rooms, an open piano, and lots
+of books scattered about. Betty, the old nurse, brought me a bowl of
+laughing potatoes, and gave me a hearty "Much good may it do you, miss";
+and didn't I tip her a word of Irish, which delighted her.... Our
+dinner-party were mamma and the two young ladies, two itinerant
+preceptors, a writing and elocution master, and a dancing-master, and
+Father Murphy, the P.P.--such fun!--and the Rev. Mr. Beaufort, the
+curate of Castletown.'</p>
+
+<p>Miss Sydney was quite at her ease with all these new acquaintances,
+and so brilliant were her sallies at dinner that, according to her own
+account, the men-servants were obliged to stuff their napkins down their
+throats till they were nearly suffocated. The priest proposed her health
+in a comic speech, and a piper having come up on purpose to 'play in
+Miss Owenson,' the evening wound up with the dancing of Irish jigs, and
+the singing of Irish songs. One is inclined to doubt whether Sydney's
+instructions were of much scientific value, but it is evident that she
+enjoyed her occupation, was the very good friend of both employers and
+pupils, and knew nothing of the snubs and neglect experienced by so many
+of our modern Jane Eyres.</p>
+
+<p>The death of Mrs. Featherstone's mother, Lady Steele, who had been
+one of the belles of Lord Chesterfield's court, placed a fine old house
+in Dominic Street, Dublin, at the disposal of the family. At the head of
+the musical society of Dublin at that date was Sir John Stevenson, who
+is now chiefly remembered for his arrangement of the airs to Moore's
+Melodies. One day, while giving a lesson to the Miss Featherstones, Sir
+John sung a song by Moore, of whom Sydney had then never heard. Pleased
+at her evident appreciation, Stevenson asked if she would like to meet
+the poet, and promised to take her and Olivia to a little musical party
+at his mother's house. Moore had already made a success in London
+society, which he followed up in the less exclusive circles of Dublin,
+and it was only between a party at the Provost's and another at Lady
+Antrim's that he could dash into the paternal shop for a few minutes to
+sing a couple of songs for his mother's guests. But the effect of his
+performance upon the Owenson sisters was electrical. They went home in
+such a state of spiritual exaltation, that they forgot to undress before
+getting into bed, and awoke to plan, the one a new romance, the other a
+portrait of the poet.</p>
+
+<p>Sydney had already finished her first novel, <i>St. Clair</i>,
+which she determined to take secretly to a publisher. We are given to
+understand that this was her first independent literary attempt, though
+she tells us that her father had printed a little volume of her poems,
+written between the ages of twelve and fourteen. This book seems to have
+been published, however, in 1801, when the author must have been at
+least one-and-twenty. It was dedicated to Lady Moira, through whose
+influence it found its way into the most fashionable boudoirs of Dublin.
+Be this as it may, Sydney gives a picturesque description of her early
+morning's ramble in search of a publisher. She eventually left her
+manuscript in the reluctant hands of a Mr. Brown, who promised to submit
+it to his reader, and returned to her employer's house before her
+absence had been remarked. The next day the family left Dublin for
+Bracklin, and as Sydney had forgotten to give her address to the
+publisher, it is not surprising that, for the time being, she heard no
+more of her bantling. Some months later, when she was in Dublin again,
+she picked up a novel in a friend's house, and found that it was her own <i>St.
+Clair</i>. On recalling herself to the publisher's memory, she received
+the handsome remuneration of--four copies of her own work! The book, a
+foolish, high-flown story, a long way after <i>Werther</i>, had some
+success in Dublin, and brought its author--literary ladies being
+comparatively few at that period--a certain meed of social fame.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Owenson, who had left the stage in 1798, was settled at
+Coleraine at this time, and desired to have both his daughters with him.
+Accordingly, Sydney gave up her employment, and tried to make herself
+contented at home. But the dulness and discomfort of the life were too
+much for her, and after a few months she took another situation as
+governess, this time with a Mrs. Crawford at Fort William, where she
+seems to have been as much petted and admired as at Bracklin. There is
+no doubt that Sydney Owenson was a flirt, a sentimental flirt, who loved
+playing with fire, but it has been hinted that she was inclined to
+represent the polite attentions of her gallant countrymen as serious
+affairs of the heart. She left behind her a packet of love-letters
+(presented to her husband after her marriage), and some of these are
+quoted in her <i>Memoirs</i>. The majority, however, point to no very
+definite 'intentions' on the part of the writers, but are composed in
+the artificially romantic vein which Rousseau had brought into fashion.
+Among the letters are one or two from the unfortunate Dermody, who had
+retired on half-pay, and was now living in London, engaged in writing
+his Memoirs (he was in the early twenties) and preparing his poems for
+the press.</p>
+
+<p>'Were you a Venus I should forget you,' he writes to Sydney, 'but
+you are a Laura, a Leonora, and an Eloisa, all in one delightful
+assemblage.' He is evidently a little piqued by Sydney's admiration of
+Moore, for in a letter to Mr. Owenson he asks, 'Who is the Mr. Moore
+Sydney mentions? He is nobody here, I assure you, of eminence.' A little
+later, however, he writes to Sydney: 'You are mistaken if you imagine I
+have not the highest respect for your friend Moore. I have written the
+review of his poems in a strain of panegyric to which I am not
+frequently accustomed. I am told he is a most worthy young man, and I am
+certain myself of his genius and erudition.' Dermody's own career was
+nearly at an end. He died of consumption in 1802, aged only twenty-five.</p>
+
+<p>If Sydney scandalised even the easy-going society of the period by
+her audacious flirtations, she seems to have had the peculiarly Irish
+faculty of keeping her head in affairs of the heart, and dancing in
+perfect security on the edge of a gulf of sentiment. Her work helped to
+steady her, and the love-scenes in her novels served as a safety-valve
+for her ardent imagination. Her father, notoriously happy-go-lucky about
+his own affairs, was a careful guardian of his daughters' reputation,
+while old Molly was a dragon of propriety. Sydney, moreover, had
+acquired one or two women friends, much older than herself, such as the
+literary Lady Charleville, and Mrs. Lefanu, sister of Sheridan, who were
+always ready with advice and sympathy. With Mrs. Lefanu Sydney
+corresponded regularly for many years, and in her letters discusses the
+debatable points in her books, and enlarges upon her own character and
+temperament. Chief among her ambitions at this time was that of being
+'every inch a woman,' and she was a firm believer in the fashionable
+theory that true womanliness was incompatible with learning. 'I dropped
+the study of chemistry,' she tells her friend, 'though urged to it by, a
+favourite preceptor, lest I should be less the <i>woman</i>. Seduced by
+taste and a thousand arguments to Greek and Latin, I resisted, lest I
+should not be a <i>very woman</i>. And I have studied music as a
+sentiment rather than as a science, and drawing as an amusement rather
+than as an art, lest I should become a musical pedant, or a masculine
+artist.'</p>
+
+<p>In 1803, the Crawfords having decided to leave Fort William and live
+entirely in the country, Sydney, who had a mortal dread of boredom, gave
+up her situation, and returned to her father, who was now settled near
+Strabane. Here she occupied her leisure in writing a second novel, <i>The
+Novice of St. Dominic</i>, in six volumes. When this was completed,
+Mrs. Lefanu advised her to take it to London herself, and arrange for
+its publication. Quite alone, and with very little money in her pocket,
+the girl travelled to London, and presented herself before Sir Richard
+Phillips, a well-known publisher, with whom she had already had some
+correspondence. If we may believe her own testimony, Sir Richard fell an
+easy victim to her fascinations, and there is no doubt that he was very
+kind to her, introduced her to his wife, and found her a lodging. Better
+still, he bought her book (we are not told the price), and paid her for
+it at once. The first purchases that she made with her own earnings were
+a small Irish harp, which accompanied her thereafter wherever she went,
+and a black 'mode cloak.' After her return to Ireland, Phillips
+corresponded with her, and gave her literary advice, which is
+interesting in so far as it shows what the reading public of that day
+wanted, or was supposed to want.</p>
+
+<p>'The world is not informed about Ireland,' wrote the publisher, 'and
+I am in a condition to command the light to shine. I am sorry you have
+assumed the novel form. A series of letters addressed to a friend in
+London, taking for your model the letters of Lady Mary Wortley Montagu,
+would have secured you the most extensive reading. A matter-of-fact and
+didactic novel is neither one thing nor the other, and suits no class of
+readers. Certainly, however, <i>Paul and Virginia</i> would suggest a
+local plan; and it will be possible by writing three or four times over
+in six or eight months to produce what would <i>command</i> attention.'
+Sir Richard concluded his advice with the assurance that his
+correspondent had it in her to write an immortal work, if she would only
+labour it sufficiently, and that her <i>third</i> copy was certain to be
+a monument of Irish genius. Miss Owenson was the last person to act upon
+the above directions; her books read as if they were dashed off in a
+fine frenzy of composition. Perhaps she feared that her cherished
+womanliness would be endangered by too close an attention to accuracy
+and style.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Novice</i>, which appeared in 1804, was better than <i>St.
+Clair</i>, but such success as it enjoyed must have been due to the
+prevailing scarcity of first-rate, or even second-rate novelists, rather
+than to its own intrinsic merits. The public taste in fiction was not
+fastidious, and could swallow long-winded discussions and sentimental
+rhodomontade with an appetite that now seems almost incredible. The <i>Novice</i>
+is said to have been a favourite with Pitt in his last illness, but if
+this be true, the fact points rather to the decay of the statesman's
+intellect than to the literary value of the book. Still the author was
+tasting all the sweets of fame. She was much in request as a literary
+celebrity, and somebody had actually written for permission to select
+the best passages from her two books for publication in a work called <i>The
+Morality of English Novels</i>.</p>
+
+<p>In the same year, 1804, an anonymous attack upon the Irish stage in
+six <i>Familiar Epistles</i> was published in Dublin. So cruel and
+venomous were these epistles that one actor, Edwin, is believed to have
+died of chagrin at the attack upon his reputation. An answer to the
+libel presently appeared, which was signed S. O., and has been generally
+attributed to Sydney Owenson. The <i>Familiar Epistles</i> were believed
+to be the work of John Wilson Croker, then young and unknown, and it may
+be that the lifelong malignity with which that critic pursued Lady
+Morgan was due to this early crossing of swords. Sydney herself was fond
+of hinting that Croker, in his obscure days, had paid her attentions
+which she, as a successful author, had not cared to encourage, and that
+wounded vanity was at the bottom of his hatred.</p>
+
+<p>The next book on which Miss Owenson engaged was, if not her best,
+the one by which she is best known, namely, <i>The Wild Irish Girl</i>.
+The greater part of this was written while she was staying with Sir
+Malby Crofton at Longford House, from whose family, as has been seen,
+she claimed to be descended. Miss Crofton sat for the portrait of the
+heroine, and much of the scenery was sketched in the wild romantic
+neighbourhood. About the same time she collected and translated a number
+of Irish songs which were published under the title of <i>The Lay of
+the Irish Harp</i>. She thus anticipated Moore, and other explorers in
+this field, for which fact Moore at least gives her credit in the
+preface to his own collection. She was not a poet, but she wrote one
+ballad, 'Kate Kearney,' which became a popular song, and is not yet
+forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>The story of <i>The Wild Irish Girl</i> is said to have been founded
+upon an incident in the author's own life. A young man named Everard had
+fallen in love with her, but as he was wild, idle, and penniless, his
+father called upon her to beg her not to encourage him, but to use her
+influence to make him stick to his work. Sydney behaved so well in the
+matter that the elder Mr. Everard desired to marry her himself, and
+though his offer was not accepted, he remained her staunch friend and
+admirer. The 'local colour' in the book is carefully worked up; indeed,
+in the present day it would probably be thought that the story was
+overweighted by the account of local manners and customs. Phillips,
+alarmed at the liberal principles displayed in the work, which he
+thought would be distasteful to English patriots, refused at first to
+give the author her price. To his horror and indignation Miss Owenson,
+whom he regarded as his own particular property, instantly sent the
+manuscript to a rival bookseller, Johnson, who published for Miss
+Edgeworth. Johnson offered &pound;300 for the book, while Phillips had
+only offered &pound;200 down, and &pound;50 on the publication of the
+second and third editions respectively. The latter, however, was unable
+to make up his mind to lose the treasure, and after much hesitation and
+many heart-burnings, he finally wrote to Miss Owenson:--</p>
+
+<p> 'DEAR BEWITCHING AND DELUDING SYKEN,--Not being able to part from
+you, I have promised your noble and magnanimous friend, Atkinson [who
+was conducting the negotiations], the &pound;300.... It will be long
+before I forgive you! At least not till I have got back the &pound;300
+and another &pound;100 along with it.' Then follows a passage which
+proves that the literary market, in those days at any rate, was not
+overstocked: 'If you know any poor bard--a real one, no pretender--I
+will give him a guinea a page for his rhymes in the <i>Monthly Magazine</i>.
+I will also give for prose communications at the rate of six guineas a
+sheet.'</p>
+
+<p><i>The Wild Irish Girl</i>, whose title was suggested by Peter
+Pindar, made a hit, more especially in Ireland, and the author woke to
+find herself famous. She became known to all her friends as 'Glorvina,'
+the name of the heroine, while the Glorvina ornament, a golden bodkin,
+and the Glorvina mantle became fashionable in Dublin. The book was
+bitterly attacked, probably by Croker, in the <i>Freeman's Journal</i>,
+but the best bit of criticism upon it is contained in a letter from Mr.
+Edgeworth to Miss Owenson. 'Maria,' he says, 'who reads as well as she
+writes, has entertained us with several passages from <i>The Wild Irish
+Girl</i>, which I thought superior to any parts of the book I had read.
+Upon looking over her shoulder, I found she had omitted some superfluous
+epithets. Dared she have done this if you had been by? I think she
+would; because your good sense and good taste would have been instantly
+her defenders.' It must be admitted that all Lady Morgan's works would
+have gained by the like treatment.</p>
+
+<p>In an article called 'My First Rout,' which appeared in <i>The Book
+of the Boudoir</i> (published in 1829), Lady Morgan describes a party at
+Lady Cork's, where she was lionised by her hostess, the other guests
+having been invited to meet the Wild Irish Girl. The celebrities present
+were brought up and introduced to Miss Owenson with a running comment
+from Lady Cork, which, though it must be taken with a grain of salt, is
+worth transcribing:--</p>
+
+<p>'Lord Erskine, this is the Wild Irish Girl you were so anxious to
+meet. I assure you she talks quite as well as she writes. Now, my dear,
+do tell Lord Erskine some of those Irish stories you told us at Lord
+Charleville's. Mrs. Abington says you would make a famous actress, she
+does indeed. This is the Duchess of St. Albans--she has your <i>Wild
+Irish Girl</i> by heart. Where is Sheridan? Oh, here he is; what, you
+know each other already? <i>Tant mieux.</i> Mr. Lewis, do come forward;
+this is Monk Lewis, of whom you have heard so much--but you must not
+read his works, they are very naughty.... You know Mr. Gell; he calls
+you the Irish Corinne. Your friend, Mr. Moore, will be here by-and-by.
+Do see, somebody, if Mrs. Siddons and Mr. Kemble are come yet. Now pray
+tell us the scene at the Irish baronet's in the Rebellion that you told
+to the ladies of Llangollen; and then give us your blue-stocking dinner
+at Sir Richard Phillips'; and describe the Irish priests.'</p>
+
+<p>At supper Sydney was placed between Lord Erskine and Lord Carysfort,
+and was just beginning to feel at her ease when Mr. Kemble was
+announced. Mr. Kemble, it soon became apparent, had been dining, and had
+paid too much attention to the claret. Sitting down opposite Miss
+Owenson, he fixed her with an intense and glassy stare. Unfortunately,
+her hair, which she wore in the fashionable curly 'crop,' aroused his
+curiosity. Stretching unsteadily across the table, he suddenly, to quote
+her own words, 'struck his claws into my locks, and addressing me in his
+deepest tones, asked, "Little girl, where did you buy your wig?"' Lord
+Erskine hastily came to the rescue, but Kemble, rendered peevish by his
+interference, took a volume of <i>The Wild Irish Girl</i> out of his
+pocket, and after reading aloud one of the most high-flown passages,
+asked, 'Little girl, why did you write such nonsense, and where did you
+get all those hard words?' Sydney delighted the company by blurting out
+the truth: 'Sir, I wrote as well as I could, and I got the hard words
+out of Johnson's Dictionary.' That Kemble spoke the truth in his cups
+may be proved by the following sentence, which is a fair sample of the
+general style of the book: 'With a character tinctured with the
+brightest colouring of romantic eccentricity [a father is describing his
+son, the hero], but marked by indelible traces of innate rectitude, and
+ennobled by the purest principles of native generosity, the proudest
+sense of inviolable honour, I beheld him rush eagerly on life, enamoured
+of its seeming good, incredulous of its latent evils, till, fatally
+entangled in the spells of the latter, he fell an early victim to their
+successful allurements.'</p>
+
+<p><i>The Wild Irish Girl</i> was followed by <i>Patriotic Sketches</i>
+and a volume of poems, for which Sir Richard Phillips offered &pound;100
+before he read them. A little later, in 1807, an operetta called <i>The
+First Attempt</i>, or the <i>Whim of the Moment</i>, the libretto by
+Miss Owenson and the music by T. Cooke, was performed at the Dublin
+Theatre. The Duke of Bedford, then Lord-Lieutenant, attended in state,
+the Duchess wore a Glorvina bodkin, and the entertainment was also
+patronised by the officers of the garrison and all the liberal members
+of the Irish bar. The little piece, in which Mr. Owenson acted an Irish
+character, was played for several nights, and brought its author the
+handsome sum of &pound;400. This, however, seems to have been Sydney's
+first and last attempt at dramatic composition.</p>
+
+<p>The family fortunes had improved somewhat at this time, for Olivia,
+who had gone out as a governess, became engaged to Dr., afterwards Sir
+Arthur Clarke, a plain, elderly little gentleman, who, however, made her
+an excellent husband. Having a good house and a comfortable income, he
+was able to offer a home to Mr. Owenson and to the faithful Molly. For
+the present, Sydney, though always on excellent terms with her
+brother-in-law, preferred her independence. She established herself in
+lodgings in Dublin, and made the most of the position that her works had
+won for her. Her flirtations and indiscretions provided the town with
+plenty of occasion for scandal, and there is a tradition that one
+strictly proper old lady, on being asked to chaperon Miss Owenson to the
+Castle, replied that when Miss Owenson wore more petticoats and less
+paint she would be happy to do so. Yet another tradition has been handed
+down to the effect that Miss Owenson appeared at one of the Viceregal
+balls in a dress, the bodice of which was trimmed with the portraits of
+her rejected lovers!</p>
+
+<p>Foremost among our heroine's admirers at this time was Sir Charles
+Ormsby, K.C., then member for Munster, He was a widower, deeply in debt,
+and a good deal older than Sydney, but if there was no actual
+engagement, there was certainly an 'understanding' between the pair. In
+May, 1808, Miss Owenson was on a visit to the Dowager Lady Stanley of
+Alderley at Penrh&ocirc;s (one of the new friends her celebrity had
+gained for her), whence she wrote a sentimental epistle to Sir Charles
+Ormsby. The Sir John Stanley mentioned in the letter was the husband of
+Maria Josepha Holroyd, to whom he had been married in 1796.</p>
+
+<p>'The figure and person of Lady Stanley are inimitable,' writes
+Sydney. 'Vandyck would have estimated her at millions. Though old, her
+manners, her mind, and her conversation are all of the best school....
+Sir John Stanley is a man <i>comme il y en a peu</i>. Something at
+first of English reserve; but when worn off, I never met a mind more
+daring, more independent in its reflections, more profound or more
+refined in its ideas. He said a thousand things like you; I am convinced
+he has loved as you love. We sat up till two this morning talking of
+Corinne.... I have been obliged to sing "Deep in Love" so often for my
+handsome host, and every time it is <i>as for you</i> I sing it.' The
+letter concludes with the words, '<i>Aimons toujours comme &agrave;
+l'ordinaire</i>.' The pair may have loved, but they were continually
+quarrelling, and their intimacy was finally broken a year or two later.
+Lady Morgan preserved to the end of her days a packet of love-letters
+indorsed, 'Sir Charles Montague Ormsby, Bart., one of the most brilliant
+wits, determined <i>rou&eacute;s</i>, agreeable persons, and ugliest
+men of his day.'</p>
+
+<p>The summer of this year, 1808, Miss Owenson spent in a round of
+visits to country-houses, and in working, amid many distractions, at her
+Grecian novel, <i>Ida of Athens</i>. After the first volume had gone to
+press, Phillips took fright at some of the opinions therein expressed,
+and refused to proceed further with the work. It was then accepted by
+Longmans, who, however, were somewhat alarmed at what they considered
+the Deistical principles and the taint of French philosophy that ran
+through the book. Ida is a houri and a woman of genius, who dresses in a
+tissue of woven air, has a taste for philosophical discussions, and a
+talent for getting into perilous situations, from which her strong sense
+of propriety invariably delivers her. This book was the subject of
+adverse criticism in the first number of the <i>Quarterly Review</i>,
+the critic being, it is believed, Miss Owenson's old enemy, Croker. As a
+work of art, the novel was certainly a just object of ridicule, but the
+personalities by which the review is disfigured were unworthy of a
+responsible critic.</p>
+
+<p>'The language,' observes the reviewer, 'is an inflated jargon,
+composed of terms picked up in all countries, and wholly irreducible to
+any ordinary rules of grammar and sense. The sentiments are mischievous
+in tendency, profligate in principle, licentious and irreverent in the
+highest degree.' The first part of this accusation was only too well
+founded, but the licentiousness of which Lady Morgan's works were
+invariably accused in the <i>Quarterly Review</i>, can only have
+existed in the mind of the reviewer. One cannot but smile to think how
+many persons with a taste for highly-spiced fiction must have been set
+searching through Lady Morgan's novels by these notices, and how
+bitterly they must have been disappointed. The review in question
+concludes with the remark that if the author would buy a spelling-book,
+a pocket-dictionary, exchange her raptures for common sense, and gather
+a few precepts of humility from the Bible, 'she might hope to prove, not
+indeed a good writer of novels, but a useful friend, a faithful wife, a
+tender mother, and a respectable and happy mistress of a family.' This
+impertinence is thoroughly characteristic of the days when the <i>Quarterly</i>
+was regarded as an amusing but frivolous, not to say flippant,
+publication.</p>
+
+<p><i>Ida of Athens</i> received the honour of mention in a note to <i>Childe
+Harold</i>. 'I will request Miss Owenson,' writes Byron, 'when she next
+chooses an Athenian heroine for her four volumes, to have the goodness
+to marry her to somebody more of a gentleman than a "Disdar Aga" (who,
+by the way, is not an Aga), the most impolite of petty officers, the
+greatest patron of larceny Athens ever saw (except Lord E[lgin]), and
+the unworthy occupant of the Acropolis, on a handsome stipend of 150
+piastres (&pound;8 sterling), out of which he has to pay his garrison,
+the most ill-regulated corps in the ill-regulated Ottoman Empire. I
+speak it tenderly, seeing I was once the cause of the husband of Ida
+nearly suffering the bastinado; and because the said Disdar is a
+turbulent fellow who beats his wife, so that I exhort and beseech Miss
+Owenson to sue for a separate maintenance on behalf of Ida.'</p>
+
+<p>In 1809 Lady Abercorn, the third wife of the first Marquis, having
+taken a sudden fancy to Miss Owenson, proposed that she should come to
+Stanmore Priory, and afterwards to Baron's Court, as a kind of permanent
+visitor. A fine lady of the old-fashioned, languid, idle, easily bored
+type, Lady Abercorn desired a lively, amusing companion, who would
+deliver her from the terrors of a solitude <i>&agrave; deux,</i> make
+music in the evenings, and help to entertain her guests. It was
+represented to Sydney that such an invitation was not lightly to be
+refused, but as acceptance involved an almost total separation from her
+friends, she hesitated to enter into any actual engagement, and went to
+the Abercorns for two or three months as an ordinary visitor. Lord
+Abercorn, who was then between fifty and sixty, had been married three
+times, and divorced once. So fastidious a fine gentleman was he that the
+maids were not allowed to make his bed except in white kid gloves, and
+his groom of his chambers had orders to fumigate his rooms after
+liveried servants had been in them. He is described as handsome, witty,
+and blas&eacute;, a <i>rou&eacute;</i> in principles and a Tory in
+politics. Nothing pleased Lady Morgan better in her old age, we are
+told, than to have it insinuated that there had been 'something wrong'
+between herself and Lord Abercorn.</p>
+
+<p>In January, 1810, Sydney writes to Mrs. Lefanu from Stanmore Priory
+to the effect that she is the best-lodged, best-fed, dullest author in
+his Majesty's dominions, and that the sound of a commoner's name is
+refreshment to her ears. She is surrounded by ex-lord-lieutenants,
+unpopular princesses (including her of Wales) deposed potentates
+(including him of Sweden), half the nobility of England, and many of the
+best wits and writers. She had sat to Sir Thomas Lawrence for her
+portrait, and sold her Indian novel, <i>The Missionary,</i> for a famous
+price. Lord Castlereagh, while staying at Stanmore, heard portions of
+the work read aloud, and admired it so much that he offered to take the
+author to London, and give her a rendezvous with her publisher in his
+own study. Stockdale, the publisher, was so much impressed by his
+surroundings that he bid &pound;400 for the book, and the agreement was
+signed and sealed under Lord Castlereagh's eye. <i>The Missionary</i>
+was not so successful as <i>The Wild Irish Girl,</i> and added nothing
+to the author's reputation.</p>
+
+<p>It was not until the end of 1810 that Miss Owenson decided to become
+a permanent member of the Abercorn household. About this time, or a
+little later, she wrote a short description of her temperament and
+feelings, from which a sentence or two may be quoted. 'Inconsiderate and
+indiscreet, never saved by prudence, but often rescued by pride; often
+on the verge of error, but never passing the line. Committing myself in
+every way <i>except in my own esteem</i>--without any command over my
+feelings, my words, or writings--yet full of self-possession as to
+action and conduct.' After describing her sufferings from nervous
+susceptibility and mental depression, she continues: 'But the hand that
+writes this has lost nothing of the contour of health or the symmetry of
+youth. I am in possession of all the fame I ever hoped or ambitioned. I
+wear not the appearance of twenty years; I am now, as I generally am,
+sad and miserable.'</p>
+
+<p>In 1811 Dr. Morgan, a good-looking widower of about
+eight-and-twenty, accepted the post of private physician to Lord
+Abercorn. He was a Cambridge man, an intimate friend of Dr. Jenner's,
+and possessed a small fortune of his own. When he first arrived at
+Baron's Court, Miss Owenson was absent, and he heard so much of her
+praises that he conceived a violent prejudice against her. On her return
+she set to work systematically to fascinate him, and succeeded even
+better than she had hoped or desired. In Lady Abercorn he had a warm
+partisan, but it may be suspected that the ambitious Miss Owenson found
+it hard to renounce all hopes of a more brilliant match. The Abercorns
+having vowed that Dr. Morgan should be made Sir Charles, and that they
+would push his fortunes, Sydney yielded to their importunities so far as
+to write to her father, and ask his consent to her engagement.</p>
+
+<p>'I dare say you will be amazingly astonished,' she observes, 'but
+not half so much as I am, for Lord and Lady Abercorn have hurried on the
+business in such a manner that I really don't know what I am about. They
+called me in last night, and, more like parents than friends, begged me
+to be guided by them--that it was their wish not to lose sight of me ...
+and that if I accepted Morgan, the man upon earth they most esteemed and
+approved, they would be friends to both for life--that we should reside
+with them one year after our marriage, so that we might lay up our
+income to begin the world. He is also to continue their physician. He
+has now &pound;500 a year, independent of his practice. I don't myself
+see the thing quite in the light they do; but they think him a man of
+such great abilities, such great worth and honour, that I am the most
+fortunate person in the world.'</p>
+
+<p>To her old friend, Mrs. Lefanu, she writes in much the same strain.
+'The licence and ring have been in the house these ten days, and all the
+settlements made; yet I have been battling off from day to day, and have
+only ten minutes back procured a little breathing time. The struggle is
+almost too great for me. On one side engaged, beyond retrieval, to a man
+who has frequently declared to my friends that if I break off he will
+not survive it! On the other, the dreadful certainty of being parted for
+ever from a country and friends I love, and a family I adore.'</p>
+
+<p>The 'breathing time' was to consist of a fortnight's visit to her
+sister, Lady Clarke, in Dublin, in order to be near her father, who was
+in failing health. The fortnight, however, proved an exceedingly elastic
+period. Mr. Owenson was not dangerously ill, the winter season was just
+beginning, and Miss Owenson was more popular than ever. Her unfortunate
+lover, as jealous as he was enamoured, being detained by his duties at
+Baron's Court, could only write long letters of complaint, reproach, and
+appeal to his hard-hearted lady. Sydney was thoroughly enjoying herself,
+and was determined to make the most of her last days of liberty. She
+admitted afterwards that she had behaved very badly at this time, and
+deserved to have lost the best husband woman ever had.</p>
+
+<p>'I picture to myself,' writes poor Dr. Morgan, 'the thoughtless and
+heartless Glorvina trifling with her friend, jesting at his sufferings,
+and flirting with every man she meets.' He sends her some commissions,
+but declares that there is only one about which he is really anxious,
+'and that is to love me <i>exclusively</i>; to prefer me to every other
+good; to think of me, speak of me, write to me, and look forward to our
+union as to the completion of every wish, as I do by you. Do this, and
+though you grow as ugly as Sycorax, you will never lose in me the
+fondest, most doating, affectionate of husbands. Glorvina, I was born
+for tenderness; my business in life is <i>to love</i>.... I read part
+of <i>The Way to Keep Him</i> this morning, and I see now you take the
+widow for your model; but it won't do, for though I love you in <i>every</i>
+mood, it is only when you are true to nature, passionate and tender,
+that I adore you. You are never less interesting to me than when you <i>brillez</i>
+in a large party.'</p>
+
+<p>The fortnight's leave of absence had been granted in September, and
+by the end of November Dr. Morgan is thoroughly displeased with his
+truant <i>fianc&eacute;e</i>, and asks why she could not have told him
+when she went away, that she intended to stay till Christmas. 'I know,
+he writes, 'this is but a specimen of the roundabout policy of all your
+countrywomen. How strange it is that you, who are in general <i>great</i>
+beyond every woman I know, philosophical and magnanimous, should <i>in
+detail</i> be so often ill-judging, wrong, and (shall I say) little?' In
+December Sydney writes to say that she will return directly after
+Christmas, and declares that the terrible struggle of feeling, which she
+had tried to forget in every species of mental dissipation, is now over;
+friends, relatives, country, all are resigned, and she is his for ever!
+A little later she shows signs of wavering again; she cannot make up her
+mind to part from her invalid father just yet; but this time Dr. Morgan
+puts his foot down, and issues his ultimatum in a stern and manly
+letter. He will be trifled with no longer. Sydney must either keep her
+promise and return at Christmas, or they had better part, never to meet
+again. 'The love I require,' he writes, 'is no ordinary affection. The
+woman who marries me must be <i>identified</i> with me. I must have a
+large bank of tenderness to draw upon. I must have frequent profession
+and frequent demonstration of it. Woman's love is all in all to me; it
+stands in place of honours and riches, and what is yet more, in place of
+tranquillity of mind.'</p>
+
+<p>This letter, backed by one from Lady Abercorn, brought Sydney to her
+senses. In the first days of the new year (1812) she arrived at Baron's
+Court, a little shamefaced, and more than a little doubtful of her
+reception. The marquis was stiff, and the marchioness stately, but Sir
+Charles, who had just been knighted by the Lord Lieutenant, was too
+pleased to get his lady-love back, to harbour any resentment against
+her. A few days after her return, as she was sitting over the fire in a
+morning wrapper, Lady Abercorn came in and said:</p>
+
+<p>'Glorvina, come upstairs directly and be married; there must be no
+more trifling.'</p>
+
+<p>The bride was led into her ladyship's dressing-room, where the
+bridegroom was awaiting her in company with the chaplain, and the
+ceremony took place. The marriage was kept a secret from the other
+guests at the time, but a few nights later Lord Abercorn filled his
+glass after dinner, and drank to the health of 'Sir Charles and Lady
+Morgan.'<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 20%;">
+
+<p style="font-weight: bold; text-align: center;"> PART II</p>
+
+<p> The marriage, unpromising as it appeared at the outset, proved an
+exceptionally happy one. Sir Charles was a straightforward, worthy, if
+somewhat dull gentleman, with no ambition, a nervous distaste for
+society, and a natural indolence of temperament. To his wife he gave the
+unstinted sympathy and admiration that her restless vanity craved, while
+she invariably maintained that he was the wisest, brightest, and
+handsomest of his sex. She seems to have given him no occasion for
+jealousy after marriage, though to the last she preserved her passion
+for society, and her ambition for social recognition and success. The
+first year of married life, which she described as a period of storm,
+interspersed with brilliant sunshine, was spent with the Abercorns at
+Baron's Court.</p>
+
+<p>'Though living in a palace,' wrote Sydney to Mrs. Lefanu, early in
+1812, 'we have all the comfort and independence of a home.... As to me,
+I am <i>every inch a wife</i>, and so ends that brilliant thing that
+was Glorvina. <i>N.B.</i>--I intend to write a book to explode the
+vulgar idea of matrimony being the tomb of love. Matrimony is the real
+thing, and all before but leather and prunella.' In a letter to Lady
+Stanley she paints Sir Charles in the romantic colours appropriate to a
+novelist's husband. 'In <i>love</i> he is Sheridan's Falkland, and in
+his view of things there is a <i>m&eacute;lange</i> of cynicism and
+sentiment that will never suffer him to be as happy as the inferior
+million that move about him. Marriage has taken nothing from the <i>romance</i>
+of his passion for me; and by bringing a sense of <i>property</i> with
+it, has rendered him more exigent and nervous about me than before.'</p>
+
+<p>The luxury of Baron's Court was probably more than counterbalanced
+by the inevitable drawbacks of married life in a patron's household,
+where the husband, at least, was at that patron's beck and call. Before
+the end of the year, the Morgans were contemplating a modest
+establishment of their own, and Sydney had set to work upon a novel, the
+price of which was to furnish the new house. Mr. Owenson had died
+shortly after his daughter's marriage, and Lady Morgan persuaded her
+husband to settle in Dublin, in order that she might be near her sister
+and her many friends. A house was presently taken in Kildare Street, and
+Sir Charles, who had obtained the post of physician to the Marshalsea,
+set himself to establish a practice. Lady Morgan prided herself upon her
+housewifely talents, and in a letter dated May, 1813, she describes how
+she has made their old house clean and comfortable, all that their means
+would permit, 'except for one little bit of a room, four inches by
+three, which is fitted up in the <i>Gothic</i>, and I have collected
+into it the best part of a very good cabinet of natural history of Sir
+Charles's, eight or nine hundred volumes of choice books in French,
+English, Italian, and German, some little curiosities, and a few scraps
+of old china, so that, with muslin draperies, etc., I have made no
+contemptible set-out.... With respect to authorship, I fear it is over;
+I have been making chair-covers instead of systems, and cheapening pots
+and pans instead of selling sentiment and philosophy.'</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of all her domestic labours, however, Lady Morgan
+contrived to finish a novel, <i>O'Donnel</i>, which Colburn published
+in 1814, and for which she received &pound;550. The book was
+ill-reviewed, but it was an even greater popular success than <i>The
+Wild Irish Girl</i>. The heroine, like most of Lady Morgan's heroines,
+is evidently meant for an idealised portrait of herself, and the great
+ladies by whom she is surrounded are sketched from Lady Abercorn and
+certain of the guests at Baron's Court. The Liberal, or as they would
+now be called, Radical principles inculcated in the book gave bitter
+offence to the author's old-fashioned friends, and increased the rancour
+of her Tory reviewers. But <i>O'Donnel</i> found numerous admirers,
+among them no less a person than Sir Walter Scott, who notes in his
+diary for March 14, 1826: 'I have amused myself occasionally very
+pleasantly during the last few days by reading over Lady Morgan's novel
+of <i>O'Donnel</i>, which has some striking and beautiful passages of
+situation and description, and in the comic part is very rich and
+entertaining. I do not remember being so pleased with it at first. There
+is a want of story, always fatal to a book on the first reading--and it
+is well if it gets the chance of a second.'</p>
+
+<p>The following year, 1815, France being once again open to English
+travellers, the Morgans paid a visit to Paris, Lady Morgan having
+undertaken to write a book about what was then a strange people and a
+strange country. The pair went a good deal into society, and made many
+friends, among them Lafayette, Cuvier, the Comte de S&eacute;gur, Madame
+de Genlis, and Madame Jerome Bonaparte. Sydney, whose Celtic manners
+were probably more congenial to the French than Anglo-Saxon reserve,
+seems to have received a great deal of attention, and her not
+over-strong head was slightly turned in consequence.</p>
+
+<p>'The French admire you more than any Englishwoman who has appeared
+here since the Battle of Waterloo,' wrote Madame Jerome Bonaparte to
+Lady Morgan, after the latter had returned to Ireland. 'France is the
+country you should reside in, because you are so much admired, and here
+no Englishwoman has received the same attentions since you. I am dying
+to see your last publication. Public expectation is as high as possible.
+How happy you must be at filling the world with your name as you do!
+Madame de Sta&euml;l and Madame de Genlis are forgotten; and if the love
+of fame be of any weight with you, your excursion to Paris was attended
+with brilliant success.'</p>
+
+<p>Madame de Genlis, in her <i>Memoirs</i>, gives a more
+soberly-worded account of the impression produced by Lady Morgan on
+Parisian society. The author of <i>France</i> is described as 'not
+beautiful, but with something lively and agreeable in her whole person.
+She is very clever, and seems to have a good heart; it is a pity that
+for the sake of popularity she should have the mania of meddling in
+politics.... Her vivacity and rather springing carriage seemed very
+strange in Parisian circles. She soon learned that good taste of itself
+condemned that kind of demeanour; in fact, gesticulation and noisy
+manners have never been popular in France.' The spoilt little lady was
+by no means satisfied with this portrait, and Sir Charles, who was away
+from home at the time the <i>Memoirs</i> appeared, writes to console
+her. 'You must not mind that lying old witch Madame de Genlis' attack
+upon you,' says the admiring husband. 'I thought she would not let you
+off easily; you were not only a better and younger (and <i>I</i> may say <i>prettier</i>)
+author than herself, but also a more popular one.'</p>
+
+<p>Over the price to be paid for <i>France</i>, to which Sir Charles
+contributed some rather heavy chapters on medical science, political
+economy, and jurisprudence, there was the usual battle between the keen
+little woman and her publisher. Colburn, having done well with <i>O'Donnel</i>,
+felt justified in offering &pound;750 for the new work, but Lady Morgan
+demanded &pound;1000, and got it. The sum must have been a substantial
+compensation for the wounds that her vanity received at the hands of the
+reviewers. <i>France</i>, which made its appearance in 1817, in two
+volumes quarto, was eagerly read and loudly abused. Croker, in the <i>Quarterly
+Review</i>, attacked the book, or rather the author, in an article
+which has become almost historic for its virulence. Poor Lady Morgan was
+accused of bad taste, bombast and nonsense, blunders, ignorance of the
+French language and manners, general ignorance, Jacobinism, falsehood,
+licentiousness, and impiety! The first four or five charges might have
+been proved with little difficulty, if it were worth while to break a
+butterfly on a wheel, but it was necessary to distort the meaning and
+even the text of the original in order to give any colour to the graver
+accusations.</p>
+
+<p>Croker had discovered, much to his delight, that the translator of
+the work (which was also published in Paris) had subjoined a note to
+some of Lady Morgan's scraps of French, in which he confessed that
+though the words were printed to look like French, he could not
+understand them. The critic observes, <i>&agrave; propos</i> of this
+fact, 'It is, we believe, peculiar to Lady Morgan's works, that her
+English readers require an English translation of her English, and her
+French readers a French translation of her French.' This was a fair hit,
+as also was the ridicule thrown upon such sentences as 'Cider is not
+held in any estimation by the <i>v&eacute;ritables Amphitryons</i> of
+rural <i>savoir faire</i>.' Croker professes to be shocked at Lady
+Morgan's mention of <i>Les Liaisons Dangereuses</i>, having hitherto
+cherished the hope that 'no British female had ever seen this detestable
+book'; while his outburst of virtuous indignation at her mention of the
+'superior effusions' of Parny, which some Frenchman had recommended to
+her, is really superb. 'Parny,' he exclaims, 'is the most beastly, the
+most detestably wicked and blasphemous of all the writers who have ever
+disgraced literature. <i>Les Guerres des Dieux</i> is the most dreadful
+tissue of obscenity and depravity that the devil ever inspired to the
+depraved heart of man, and we tremble with horror at the guilt of having
+read unwittingly even so much of the work as enables us to pronounce
+this character of it.'</p>
+
+<p>Croker concludes with the hope that he has given such an idea of
+this book as might prevent, in some degree, the circulation of trash
+which, under the name of a '<i>Lady</i> author,' might otherwise have
+found its way into the hands of young persons of both sexes, for whose
+perusal it was, on the score both of morals and politics, utterly unfit.
+Such a notice naturally defeated its own object, and <i>France</i> went
+triumphantly through several editions. The review attracted almost as
+much attention as the book, and many protests were raised against it.
+'What cruel work you make with Lady Morgan,' wrote Byron to Murray. 'You
+should recollect that she is a woman; though, to be sure, they are now
+and then very provoking, still as authoresses they can do no great harm;
+and I think it a pity so much good invective should have been laid out
+upon her, when there is such a fine field of us Jacobin gentlemen for
+you to work upon.' The Regent himself, according to Lady Charleville's
+report, had said of Croker: 'D----d blackguard to abuse a woman;
+couldn't he let her <i>France</i> alone, if it be all lies, and read her
+novels, and thank her, by Jasus, for being a good Irishwoman?'</p>
+
+<p>Lady Morgan, as presently appeared, was not only quite able to
+defend herself, but to give as good as she got. Peel, in a letter to
+Croker, says: 'Lady Morgan vows vengeance against you as the supposed
+author of the article in the <i>Quarterly</i>, in which her atheism,
+profanity, indecency, and ignorance are exposed. You are to be the hero
+of some novel of which she is about to be delivered. I hope she has not
+heard of your predilection for angling, and that she will not describe
+you as she describes one of her heroes, as "seated in his <i>piscatory</i>
+corner, intent on the destruction of the finny tribe."' 'Lady Morgan,'
+it seems, replies Croker, 'is resolved to make me read one of her
+novels. I hope I shall feel interested enough to learn the language. I
+wrote the first part of the article in question, but was called away to
+Ireland when it was in the press; and I am sorry to say that some
+blunders crept in accidentally, and one or two were premeditatedly
+added, which, however, I do not think Lady Morgan knows enough of either
+English, French, or Latin to find out. If she goes on, we shall have
+sport.'</p>
+
+<p>Early in 1818 Colburn wrote to suggest that the Morgans should
+proceed to Italy with a view to collaborating in a book on that country,
+and offered them the handsome sum of &pound;2000 for the copyright. By
+this time Sir Charles had lost most of his practice, owing to his
+publication of a scientific work, <i>The Outlines of the Physiology of
+Life</i>, which was considered objectionably heterodox by the Dublin
+public. There was no obstacle, therefore, to his leaving home for a
+lengthened period, and joining his wife in her literary labours. In May,
+the pair journeyed to London <i>en route</i> for the South, Lady Morgan
+taking with her the nearly finished manuscript of a new novel, <i>Florence
+Macarthy</i>. With his first reading of this book Colburn was so
+charmed, that he presented the author with a fine parure of amethysts as
+a tribute of admiration.</p>
+
+<p>According to the testimony of impartial witnesses, Lady Morgan made
+as decided a social success in Italy as she had done a couple of years
+earlier in France. Moore, who met the couple in Florence, notes in his
+diary for October 1819: 'Went to see Sir Charles and Lady Morgan; her
+success everywhere astonishing. Camac was last night at the Countess of
+Albany's (the Pretender's wife and Alfieri's), and saw Lady Morgan there
+in the seat of honour, quite the queen of the room.' In Rome the same
+appreciation awaited her. 'The Duchess of Devonshire,' writes her
+ladyship, 'is unceasing in her attentions. Cardinal Fesche (Bonaparte's
+uncle) is quite my beau.... Madame M&egrave;re (Napoleon's mother) sent
+to say she would be glad to see me; we were received quite in an
+imperial style. I never saw so fine an old lady--still quite handsome.
+The pictures of her sons hung round the room, all in royal robes, and
+her daughters and grandchildren, and at the head of them all, <i>old
+Mr. Bonaparte</i>. She is full of sense, feeling, and spirit, and not
+the least what I expected--vulgar.'</p>
+
+<p><i>Florence Macarthy</i> was published during its author's absence
+abroad. The heroine, Lady Clancare, a novelist and politician, a beauty
+and a wit, is obviously intended for Lady Morgan herself, while Lady
+Abercorn figures again under the title of Lady Dunore. But the most
+striking of all the character-portraits is Counsellor Con Crawley, who
+was sketched from Lady Morgan's old enemy, John Wilson Croker. According
+to Moore, Croker winced more under this caricature than under any of the
+direct attacks which were made upon him. Con Crawley, we are told, was
+of a bilious, saturnine constitution, even his talent being but the
+result of disease. These physical disadvantages, combined with an
+education 'whose object was pretension, and whose principle was
+arrogance, made him at once a thing fearful and pitiable, at war with
+its species and itself, ready to crush in manhood as to sting in the
+cradle, and leading his overweening ambition to pursue its object by
+ways dark and hidden--safe from the penalty of crime, and exposed only
+to the obloquy which he laughed to scorn. If ever there was a man formed
+alike by nature and education to betray the land which gave him birth,
+and to act openly as the pander of political corruption, or secretly as
+the agent of defamation; who would stoop to seek his fortune by
+effecting the fall of a frail woman, or would strive to advance it by
+stabbing the character of an honest one; who could crush aspiring merit
+behind the ambuscade of anonymous security, while he came forward openly
+in defence of the vileness which rank sanctified and influence
+protected--that man was Conway Crawley.'</p>
+
+<p>The truth of the portraiture of the whole Crawley
+family--exaggerated as it may seem in modern eyes--was at once
+recognised by Lady Morgan's countrymen. Sir Jonah Barrington, an
+undisputed authority on Irish manners and character, writes: 'The
+Crawleys are superlative, and suffice to bring before my vision, in
+their full colouring, and almost without a variation, persons and
+incidents whom and which I have many a time encountered.' Again, Owen
+Maddyn, who was by no means prejudiced in Lady Morgan's favour, admits
+that her attack on Croker had much effect in its day, and was written on
+the model of the Irish school of invective furnished by Flood and
+Grattan. As a novelist, he held that she pointed the way to Lever, and
+adds: 'The rattling vivacity of the Irish character, its ebullient
+spirit, and its wrathful eloquence of sentiment and language, she well
+portrayed; one can smell the potheen and turf smoke even in her pictures
+of a boudoir.' In this sentence are summed up the leading
+characteristics, not only of <i>Florence Macarthy</i>, but of all Lady
+Morgan's national romances.</p>
+
+<p><i>Italy</i> was published simultaneously in London and Paris in
+June, 1821, and produced an even greater sensation than the work on
+France, though Croker declared that it fell dead from the press, and
+devoted the greater part of his 'review' in the <i>Quarterly</i> to an
+analysis of Colburn's methods of advertisement. Criticism of a penal
+kind, he explained, was not called for, because, 'in the first place, we
+are convinced that this woman is wholly <i>incorrigible</i>; secondly,
+we hope that her indelicacy, vanity, and malignity are inimitable, and
+that, therefore, her example is very little dangerous; and thirdly,
+though every page teems with errors of all kinds, from the most
+disgusting to the most ludicrous, they are smothered in such Boeotian
+dulness that they can do no harm.' In curious contrast to this
+professional criticism is a passage in one of Byron's letters to Moore.
+'Lady Morgan,' writes the poet, 'in a <i>really excellent</i> book, I
+assure you, on Italy, calls Venice an ocean Rome; I have the very same
+expression in <i>Foscari</i>, and yet you know that the play was
+written months ago, and sent to England; the <i>Italy</i> I received
+only on the 16th.... When you write to Lady Morgan, will you thank her
+for her handsome speeches in her book about <i>my</i> books? Her work is
+fearless and excellent on the subject of Italy--pray tell her so--and I
+know the country. I wish she had fallen in with <i>me</i>; I could have
+told her a thing or two that would have confirmed her positions.'</p>
+
+<p>Almost simultaneously with the appearance of <i>Italy</i>, Colburn
+printed in his <i>New Monthly Magazine</i> a long, vehement, and rather
+incoherent attack by Lady Morgan upon her critics. The editor, Thomas
+Campbell, explained in an indignant letter to the <i>Times</i>, that
+the article had been inserted by the proprietor without being first
+submitted to the editorial eye, and that he was in no way responsible
+for its contents. Colburn also wrote to the <i>Times</i> to refute the <i>Quarterly</i>
+reviewer's statements regarding the sales of <i>Italy</i>, and publicly
+to declare his entire satisfaction at the result of the undertaking, and
+his willingness to receive from the author another work of equal
+interest on the same terms. In short, never was a book worse reviewed or
+better advertised.</p>
+
+<p>The next venture of the indefatigable Lady Morgan, who felt herself
+capable of dealing with any subject, no matter how little she might know
+of it, was a <i>Life of Salvator Rosa</i>. This, which was her own
+favourite among all her books, is a rather imaginative work, which
+hardly comes up to modern biographical standards. The author seems to
+have been influenced in her choice of a subject rather by the patriotic
+character of Salvator Rosa than by his artistic attainments. Lady Morgan
+was once asked by a fellow-writer where she got her facts, to which she
+replied, 'We all imagine our facts, you know--and then happily forget
+them; it is to be hoped our readers do the same.' Nevertheless, she
+seems to have taken a good deal of trouble to 'get up' the material for
+her biography; it was in her treatment of it that she sometimes allowed
+her ardent Celtic imagination to run away with her. About this time
+Colburn proposed that Sir Charles and Lady Morgan should contribute to
+his magazine, <i>The New Monthly</i>, and offered them half as much
+again as his other writers, who were paid at the rate of sixteen guineas
+a sheet. For this periodical Lady Morgan wrote a long essay on <i>Absenteeism</i>
+and other articles, some of which were afterwards republished.</p>
+
+<p>In the spring of 1824 the Morgans came to London for the season, and
+went much into the literary society that was dear to both their hearts.
+Lady Caroline Lamb took a violent fancy to Lady Morgan, to whom she
+confided her Byronic love-troubles, while Lady Cork, who still
+maintained a salon, did not neglect her old <i>prot&eacute;g&eacute;e</i>.
+The rough notes kept by Lady Morgan of her social adventures are not
+usually of much interest or importance, as she had little faculty or
+inclination for Boswellising, but the following entry is worth quoting:--</p>
+
+<p>'Lady Cork said to me this morning when I called Miss ---- a nice
+person, "Don't say nice, child, 'tis a bad word." Once I said to Dr.
+Johnson, "Sir, that is a very nice person." "A <i>nice</i> person," he
+replied; "what does that mean? Elegant is now the fashionable term, but
+it will go out, and I see this stupid <i>nice</i> is to succeed to it.
+What does nice mean? Look in my Dictionary; you will see it means
+correct, precise."'</p>
+
+<p>At Lydia White's famous <i>soir&eacute;es</i> Lady Morgan met Sydney
+Smith, Washington Irving, Hallam, Miss Jane Porter, Anacreon Moore, and
+many other literary celebrities. Her own rooms were thronged with a band
+of young Italian revolutionaries, whose country had grown too hot to
+hold them, and who talked of erecting a statue to the liberty-loving
+Irishwoman when Italy should be free. Dublin naturally seemed rather
+dull after all the excitement and delights of a London season, but Lady
+Morgan, though she loved to grumble at her native city, had not yet
+thought of turning absentee herself. Her popularity with her countrymen
+(those of her own way of thinking) had suffered no diminution, and her
+national celebrity was proved by the following verse from a ballad which
+was sung in the Dublin streets:-- </p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp; 'Och, Dublin's city, there's no doubtin',<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Bates every city on the say;<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; 'Tis there you'll hear O'Connell spoutin',<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And Lady Morgan making tay;<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; For 'tis the capital of the finest nation,<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Wid charmin' peasantry on a fruitful sod,<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Fightin' like divils for conciliation,<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; An' hatin' each other for the love of God.'</p>
+
+<p>Our heroine was hard at work at this time upon the last of her Irish
+novels, <i>The O'Briens and the O'Flaherties</i>, which was published
+early in 1827, and for the copyright of which Colburn paid her
+&pound;1350. It was the most popular of all her works, especially with
+her own country-folk, and is distinguished by her favourite blend of
+politics, melodrama, local colour, and rough satire on the ruling
+classes. The reviews as usual accused her of blasphemy and indecency,
+and so severe was the criticism in the <i>Literary Gazette</i>, then
+edited by Jerdan, that Colburn was stirred up to found a new literary
+weekly of his own, and, in conjunction with James Silk Buckingham,
+started the <i>Athenaeum</i>. Jerdan had asserted in the course of his
+review that 'In all our reading we never met with a description which
+tended so thoroughly to lower the female character.... Mrs. Behn and
+Mrs. Centlivre might be more unguarded; but the gauze veil cannot hide
+the deformities, and Lady Morgan's taste has not been of efficient power
+to filter into cleanliness the original pollution of her infected
+fountain.' Lady Morgan observes in her diary that she has a right to be
+judged by her peers, and threatens to summon a jury of matrons to say if
+they can detect one line in her pages that would tend to make any honest
+man her foe.</p>
+
+<p>There were other disadvantages attendant upon celebrity than those
+caused by inimical reviewers. No foreigner of distinction thought a
+visit to Dublin complete without an introduction to our author, who
+figures in several contemporary memoirs, not always in a flattering
+light. That curious personage, Prince P&uuml;ckler Muskau, was
+travelling through England and Ireland in 1828, and has left a little
+vignette of Lady Morgan in the published record of his journey. 'I was
+very eager,' he explains, 'to make the acquaintance of a lady whom I
+rate so highly as an authoress. I found her, however, very different
+from what I had pictured to myself. She is a little, frivolous, lively
+woman, apparently between thirty and forty, neither pretty nor ugly, but
+by no means inclined to resign all claims to the former, and with really
+fine expressive eyes. She has no idea of <i>mauvaise honte</i> or
+embarrassment; her manners are not the most refined, and affect the <i>aisance</i>
+and levity of the fashionable world, which, however, do not sit calmly
+or naturally upon her. She has the English weakness of talking
+incessantly of fashionable acquaintances, and trying to pose for very <i>recherch&eacute;</i>,
+to a degree quite unworthy of a woman of such distinguished talents;
+she is not at all aware how she thus underrates herself.' The <i>Quarterly
+Review</i> seized upon this passage with malicious delight. The prince,
+as the reviewer points out, had dropped one lump of sugar into his bowl
+of gall; he had guessed Lady Morgan's age at between thirty and forty.'
+Miss Owenson,' comments the writer, who was probably Croker, 'was an
+established authoress six-and-twenty years ago; and if any lady,
+player's daughter or not, knew what <i>she</i> knew when she published
+her first work at eight or nine years of age (which Miss Owenson must
+have been at that time according to the prince's calculation), she was
+undoubtedly such a juvenile prodigy as would be quite worthy to make a <i>case</i>
+for the <i>Gentleman's Magazine</i>.'</p>
+
+<p>Another observer, who was present at some of the Castle festivities,
+and who had long pictured Lady Morgan in imagination as a sylphlike and
+romantic person, has left on record his amazement when the celebrated
+lady stood before him. 'She certainly formed a strange figure in the
+midst of that dazzling scene of beauty and splendour. Every female
+present wore feathers and trains; but Lady Morgan scorned both
+appendages. Hardly more than four feet high, with a spine not quite
+straight, slightly uneven shoulders and eyes, Lady Morgan glided about
+in a close-cropped wig, bound with a fillet of gold, her large face all
+animation, and with a witty word for everybody. I afterwards saw her at
+the theatre, where she was cheered enthusiastically. Her dress was
+different from the former occasion, but not less original. A red Celtic
+cloak, fastened by a rich gold fibula, or Irish Tara brooch, imparted to
+her little ladyship a gorgeous and withal a picturesque appearance,
+which antecedent associations considerably strengthened.'</p>
+
+<p>In 1829 <i>The Book of the Boudoir</i> was published, with a preface
+in which Lady Morgan gives the following na&iuml;ve account of its
+genesis: 'I was just setting off to Ireland--the horses literally
+putting-to--when Mr. Colburn arrived with his flattering proposition
+[for a new book]. Taking up a scrubby manuscript volume which the
+servant was about to thrust into the pocket of the carriage, he asked
+what was that. I said it was one of my volumes of odds and ends, and
+read him my last entry. "This is the very thing," he said, and carried
+it off with him.' The book was correctly described as a volume of odds
+and ends, and was hardly worth preserving in a permanent shape, though
+it contains one or two interesting autobiographical scraps, such as the
+account of <i>My First Rout</i>, from which a quotation has already
+been given. A writer in <i>Blackwood</i> reviewed the work in a vein of
+ironical admiration, professing to be much impressed by the author's
+knowledge of metaphysics as exemplified in such a sentence as: 'The idea
+of cause is a consequence of our consciousness of the force we exert in
+subjecting externals to the changes dictated by our volition.' Unable to
+keep up the laudatory strain, even in joke, the reviewer (his style
+points to Christopher North) calls a literary friend to his assistance,
+who takes the opposite view, and declares that the book is 'a tawdry
+tissue of tedious trumpery; a tessellated texture of threadbare
+thievery; a trifling transcript of trite twaddle and trapessing
+tittle-tattle.... Like everything that falls from her pen, it is pert,
+shallow, and conceited, a farrago of ignorance, indecency, and
+blasphemy, a tag-rag and bob-tail style of writing--like a harlequin's
+jacket.'</p>
+
+<p>Lady Morgan bobbed up as irrepressibly as ever from under this
+torrent of (so-called) criticism, made a tour in France and Belgium for
+the purpose of writing more 'trapessing tittle-tattle,' and on her
+return to London, such were the profits on blasphemy and indecency,
+bought her first carriage. This equipage was a source of much amusement
+to her friends in Dublin, 'Neither she nor Sir Charles,' we are told,
+'knew the difference between a good carriage and a bad one--a carriage
+was a carriage to them. It was never known where this vehicle was
+bought, except that Lady Morgan declared it came from the first
+carriage-builder in London. In shape it was like a grasshopper, as well
+as in colour. Very high and very springy, with enormous wheels, it was
+difficult to get into, and dangerous to get out of. Sir Charles, who
+never in his life before had mounted a coach-box, was persuaded by his
+wife to drive his own carriage. He was extremely short-sighted, and wore
+large green spectacles out of doors. His costume was a coat much trimmed
+with fur, and heavily braided. James Grant, the tall Irish footman, in
+the brightest of red plush, sat beside him, his office being to jump
+down whenever anybody was knocked down, or run over, for Sir Charles
+drove as it pleased God. The horse was mercifully a very quiet animal,
+and much too small for the carriage, or the mischief would have been
+worse. Lady Morgan, in the large bonnet of the period, and a cloak lined
+with fur hanging over the back of the carriage, gave, as she conceived,
+the crowning grace to a neat and elegant turn-out. The only drawback to
+her satisfaction was the alarm caused by Sir Charles's driving; and she
+was incessantly springing up to adjure him to take care, to which he
+would reply with warmth, after the manner of husbands.'</p>
+
+<p>In 1880 Lady Morgan published her <i>France</i> (1829-30). This book
+was not a commission, but she had told Colburn that she was writing it,
+and as he made her no definite offer, she opened negotiations with the
+firm of Saunders and Otley. Colburn, who looked upon her as his special
+property, was furious at her desertion, and informed her that if she did
+not at once break off with Saunders and Otley, it would be no less
+detrimental to her literary than to her pecuniary interest. Undismayed
+by this threat, Lady Morgan accepted the offer of a thousand pounds made
+her by the rival firm. Colburn, who was a power in the literary market,
+kept his word. He advertised in his own periodicals 'LADY MORGAN AT
+HALF-PRICE,' and stated publicly that in consequence of the losses he
+had sustained by her former works, he had declined her new book, and
+that copies of all her publications might be had at half-price. In
+consequence of these and other machinations, the new <i>France</i>,
+which was at least as good a book as the old one, fell flat, and the
+unfortunate publishers were only able to make one payment of &pound;500.
+They tried to get their contract cancelled in court, and Colburn, who
+was called as a witness, admitted that he had done his best to injure
+Lady Morgan's literary reputation. Eventually, the matter was
+compromised, Saunders and Otley being allowed to publish Lady Morgan's
+next book, <i>Dramatic Scenes and Sketches</i>, as some compensation
+for their loss; but of this, too, they failed to make a success.</p>
+
+<p>The reviews of <i>France</i> were few and slighting, the wickedest
+and most amusing being by Theodore Hook. He quotes with glee the
+author's complacent record that she was compared to Moli&egrave;re by
+the Parisians, and that she had seen in a 'poetry-book' the following
+lines:-- </p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp; 'Slendal (<i>sic</i>), Morgan, Schlegel-ne vous
+effrayez pas--<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Muses! ce sont des noms fameux dans nos climats.'</p>
+
+<p>'Her ladyship,' continues Theodore, 'went to dine with one of those
+spectacle and sealing-wax barons, Rothschild, at Paris; where never was
+such a dinner, "no catsup and walnut pickle, but a mayonese fried in
+ice, like Ninon's description of Seveigne's (<i>sic</i>) heart," and to
+all this fine show she was led out by Rothschild himself. After the soup
+she took an opportunity of praising the cook, of whom she had heard
+much. "Eh bien," says Rothschild, laughing, as well he might, "he on his
+side has also relished your works, and here is a proof of it." "I really
+blush," says Miladi, "like Sterne's accusing spirit, as I give in the
+fact--but--he pointed to a column of the most ingenious confectionery
+architecture, on which my name was inscribed in spun sugar." There was a
+thing--Lady Morgan in spun sugar! And what does the reader think her
+ladyship did? She shall tell in her own dear words. "All I could do
+under my triumphant emotion I did. I begged to be introduced to the
+celebrated and flattering artist." It is a fact--to the cook; and
+another fact, which only shows that the Hebrew baron is a Jew <i>d'esprit</i>,
+is that after coffee, the cook actually came up, and was presented to
+her. "He," says her ladyship, "was a well-bred gentleman, perfectly free
+from pedantry, and when we had mutually complimented each other on our
+respective works, he bowed himself out."'</p>
+
+<p>In spite of her egoism and her many absurdities, it seems clear from
+contemporary evidence that in London, where she usually appeared during
+the season, Lady Morgan had a following. The names of most of the
+literary celebrities of the day appear amid the disjointed jottings of
+her diary. We hear of 'that egregious coxcomb D'Israeli, outraging the
+privilege a young man has of being absurd'; and Sydney Smith 'so
+natural, so <i>bon enfant</i>, so little of a wit <i>titr&eacute;</i>';
+and Mrs. Bulwer-Lytton, handsome, insolent, and unamiable; and Allan
+Cunningham, 'immense fun'; and Thomas Hood, 'a grave-looking personage,
+the picture of ill-health'; and her old critical enemy, Lord Jeffrey,
+with whom Lady Morgan started a violent flirtation. 'When he comes to
+Ireland,' she writes, 'we are to go to Donnybrook Fair together; in
+short, having cut me down with his tomahawk as a reviewer, he smothers
+me with roses as a man. I always say of my enemies before we meet, "Let
+me at them."'</p>
+
+<p>The other literary women were naturally the chief object of interest
+to her. Lady Morgan seems to have been fairly free from professional
+jealousy, though she hated her countrywoman, Lady Blessington, with a
+deadly hatred. Mrs. Gore, then one of the most fashionable novelists,
+she finds 'a pleasant little <i>rondelette</i> of a woman, something of
+my own style. We talked and laughed together, as good-natured women do,
+and agreed upon many points.' The learned Mrs. Somerville is described
+as 'a simple, little, middle-aged woman. Had she not been presented to
+me by name and reputation, I should have said she was one of the
+respectable twaddling matrons one meets at every ball, dressed in a snug
+mulberry velvet gown, and a little cap with a red flower. I asked her
+how she could descend from the stars to mix among us. She said she was
+obliged to go out with a daughter. From the glimpse of her last night, I
+should say there was no imagination, no deep moral philosophy, though a
+great deal of scientific lore, and a great deal of <i>bonhomie</i>.'
+For 'poor dear Jane Porter,' the author of <i>Scottish Chiefs</i>, Lady
+Morgan felt the natural contempt of a 'showy woman' for one who looks
+like a 'shabby canoness.' 'Miss Porter,' she records, 'told me she was
+taken for me the other night, and talked to <i>as such</i> by a party of
+Americans. She is tall, lank, lean, and lackadaisical, dressed in the
+deepest black, with a battered black gauze hat, and the air of a regular
+Melpomene. I am the reverse of all this, and <i>sans vanit&eacute;</i>,
+the best-dressed woman wherever I go. Last night I wore a blue satin,
+trimmed fully with magnificent point-lace, and stomacher <i>&agrave; la
+S&eacute;vign&eacute;</i>, light blue velvet hat and feathers, with an
+aigrette of sapphires and diamonds.' As Lady Morgan at this time was
+nearer sixty than fifty, rouged liberally, and made all her own dresses,
+her appearance in the costume above described must at least have been
+remarkable.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Morgan's last novel, a Belgian story called <i>The Princess,
+or the B&eacute;guine</i>, was published by Bentley in 1834, and for the
+first edition she received, &pound;350, a sad falling-off from the
+prices received in former days. As her popularity waned, she grew
+discontented with life in Dublin, 'the wretched capital of wretched
+Ireland,' as she calls it, and in a moment of mental depression she
+entered the characteristic query,'<i>Cui bono?</i>' in her diary. To the
+same faithful volume she confided complaints even of her beloved Morgan,
+but the fact that she could find nothing worse to reproach him with than
+a disinclination for fresh air and exercise, speaks volumes for his
+marital virtue. A more serious trouble came from failing eyesight, which
+in 1837 threatened to develop into total blindness. It was in this year,
+when things seemed at their darkest, that a pension of &pound;300 a year
+was conferred on her by Lord Melbourne, 'in recognition of her merits,
+literary and patriotic.' It was probably this unexpected accession of
+income that decided the Morgans to leave Dublin, and spend the remainder
+of their days in London. They found a pleasant little house in William
+Street, Knightsbridge, a new residential quarter which was just growing
+up under the fostering care of Mr. Cubitt. Lady Morgan went 'into
+raptures over the pretty new quarter,' and wrote some articles on
+Pimlico in the <i>Athen&aelig;um</i>. She also got up a successful
+agitation for an entrance into Hyde Park at what is now known as Albert
+Gate. For deserting Ireland, after receiving a pension for patriotism,
+and writing against the evils of Absenteeism, Lady Morgan was subjected
+to a good deal of sarcasm by her countrymen. But, as she pointed out,
+her property in Ireland was personal, not real, the tenant-farm of a
+drawing-room balcony, on which annual crops of mignonette were raised
+for home consumption, being the only territorial possession that she
+had ever enjoyed.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Morgan's eyesight must have temporarily improved with her
+change of dwelling, for in 1839 the first part of her last work of any
+importance, <i>Woman and her Master</i>, was published by Colburn, to
+whom she had at last become reconciled. This book, which was never
+finished, was designed to prove, among other things, that in spite of
+the subordination in which women have been kept, and in spite of all the
+artificial difficulties that have been put in their way, not only have
+they never been conquered in spirit, but that they have always been the
+depositaries of the vital and leading ideas of the time. The book is
+more soberly written than most of Lady Morgan's works, but it would
+probably be regarded by the modern reader as dull and superficial. It
+was generally believed that Sir Charles had assisted in its composition,
+and few men have ever wielded a heavier pen. The pair only issued one
+more joint work, <i>The Book Without a Name</i>, which appeared in
+1842, and consisted chiefly of articles and sketches that had already
+been published in the magazines.</p>
+
+<p>The Morgans now found their chief occupation and amusement in the
+society which they attracted to their cheerful little house. One or two
+sketches of the pair, as they appeared in their later days, have been
+left by contemporaries. Chorley, an intimate friend, observes that, like
+all the sceptics he ever approached, they were absurdly prejudiced, and
+proof against all new impressions. 'Neither of them, though both were
+literary and musical, could endure German literature and music, had got
+beyond the stale sarcasms of the <i>Anti-Jacobin</i>, or could admit
+that there is glory for such men as Weber, Beethoven, and Mendelssohn,
+as well as for Cimarosa and Paisiello.... Her familiar conversation was
+a series of brilliant, egotistic, shrewd, and genial sallies, and she
+could be either caressing or impudent. In the matter of self-approbation
+she had no Statute of Limitation, but boasted of having taught Taglioni
+to dance an Irish jig, and declared that she had created the Irish
+novel, though in the next breath she would say that she was a child when
+Miss Edgeworth was a grown woman.' Her blunders were proverbial, as when
+she asked in all simplicity, 'Who was Jeremy Taylor?' and on being
+presented to Mrs. Sarah Austin, complimented her on having written <i>Pride
+and Prejudice</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Another friend, Abraham Hayward, used to say that Lady Morgan had
+been transplanted to London too late, and that she was never free of the
+corporation of fine ladies, though she saw a good deal of them. 'She
+erroneously fancied that she was expected to entertain the company, be
+it what it might, and she was fond of telling stories in which she
+figured as the companion of the great, instead of confining herself to
+scenes of low Irish life, which she described inimitably. Lady Cork was
+accustomed to say, "I like Lady Morgan very much as an Irish blackguard,
+but I can't endure her as an English fine lady."'</p>
+
+<p>In 1843 Sir Charles died rather suddenly from heart disease. His
+wife mourned him sincerely, but not for long in solitude. She found the
+anaesthetic for her grief in society, and after a few months of
+widowhood writes: 'Everybody makes a point of having me out, and I am
+beginning to be familiarised with my great loss. London is the best
+place in the world for the happy and the unhappy; there is a floating
+capital of sympathy for every human good or evil. I am a nobody, and yet
+what kindness I am daily receiving.' Again, in 1845, after her sister's
+death, she notes in her diary: 'The world is my gin or opium; I take it
+for a few hours <i>per diem</i>--excitement, intoxication, absence. I
+return to my desolate home, and wake to all the horrors of sobriety....
+Yet I am accounted the agreeable rattle of the great ladies' coterie,
+and I talk <i>pas mal</i> to many clever men all day.... That Park near
+me, of which my beloved Morgan used to say, "It is ours more than the
+Queen's, we use it daily and enjoy it nightly"--that Park that I worked
+so hard to get an entrance into, I never walk in it; it seems to me
+covered with crape.'</p>
+
+<p>Among the friends of Lady Morgan's old age were the Carter Halls,
+Hepworth Dixon, Miss Jewsbury, Hayward, and Douglas Jerrold. Lord
+Campbell, old Rogers, and Cardinal Wiseman frequented her <i>soir&eacute;es</i>,
+though with the last-named she had waged a pamphlet war over the
+authenticity of St. Peter's chair at Rome. Rogers was reported to be
+engaged to one of Lady Morgan's attractive nieces, the Miss Clarkes, who
+often stayed with her. It was in allusion to this rumour that he said,
+'Whenever my name is coupled with that of a young lady in this manner, I
+make it a point of honour to say I have been refused.' To the last, we
+are told, Lady Morgan preserved the natural vivacity and aptness of
+repartee that had made her the delight of Dublin society half a century
+before. 'I know I am vain,' she said once to Mrs. Hall, 'but I have a
+right to be. It is not put on and off like my rouge; it is always with
+me.... I wrote books when your mothers worked samplers, and demanded
+freedom for Ireland when Dan O'Connell scrambled for gulls' eggs in the
+crags of Derrynane.... Look at the number of books I have written. Did
+ever woman move in a brighter sphere than I do? I have three invitations
+to dinner to-day, one from a duchess, one from a countess, and the third
+from a diplomatist, a very witty man, who keeps the best society in
+London.'</p>
+
+<p>Lady Morgan was fond of boasting that she had supported herself
+since she was fourteen (for which read seventeen or eighteen), and
+insisted on the advantage of giving every girl a profession by which she
+could earn her living, if the need arose. Speaking to Mrs. Hall on the
+subject of some girls who had been suddenly bereft of fortune, she
+exclaimed: 'They do everything that is fashionable imperfectly; their
+drawing, singing, dancing, and languages amount to nothing. They were
+educated to marry, and had they had time, they might have gone off with,
+and hereafter <i>from</i>, husbands. I desire to give every girl, no
+matter her rank, a trade or profession. Cultivate what is necessary to
+the position she is born to; cultivate all things in moderation, but one
+thing to perfection, no matter what it is, for which she has a talent:
+give her a staff to lay hold of; let her feel, "This will carry me
+through life without dependence."'</p>
+
+<p>With the assistance of Miss Jewsbury Lady Morgan, in the last years
+of her life, prepared a volume of reminiscences, which she called <i>The
+Odd Volume</i>. This, which was published in 1859, only deals with a
+short period of her career, and is of little literary interest. The <i>Athen&aelig;um</i>,
+in the course of a laudatory review, observed that 'Lady Morgan had
+lived through the love, admiration, and malignity of three generations
+of men, and was, in short, a literary Ninon, who seemed as brisk and
+captivating in the year 1859 as when George was Prince, and the author
+of "Kate Kearney" divided the laureateship of society and song with Tom
+Moore.'</p>
+
+<p>Lady Morgan, though now an octogenarian, was by no means pleased at
+these remarks. She still prided herself on her fascinations, was never
+tired and never bored, and looked upon any one who died under a hundred
+years of age as a suicide. 'You have more strength and spirit, as well
+as more genius, than any of us,' wrote Abraham Hayward to her. 'We must
+go back to the brilliant women of the eighteenth century to find
+anything like a parallel to you and your <i>soir&eacute;es</i>.' But
+bronchitis was an enemy with which even her high spirit was powerless to
+cope. She had an attack in 1858, but threw it off, and on Christmas Day
+gave a dinner, at which she told Irish stories with all her old
+vivacity, and sang 'The Night before Larry was Stretched.' On St.
+Patrick's Day, 1859, she gave a musical matin&eacute;e, but caught cold
+the following week, and after a short illness, died on April 16th.</p>
+
+<p>Thus ended the career of one of the most flattered and best abused
+women of the century. Held up as the Irish Madame de Sta&euml;l by her
+admirers, and run down as a monster of impudence and iniquity by her
+enemies, it is no wonder that her character, by no means innately
+refined, became hardened, if not coarsened, by so unenviable a
+notoriety. Still, to her credit be it remembered that she never lost a
+friend, and that she converted more than one impersonal enmity (as in
+the case of Jeffrey and Lockhart) into a personal friendship. In spite
+of her passion for the society of the great, she wrote and worked
+throughout her whole career for the cause of liberty, and she was ever
+on the side of the oppressed. An incorrigible flirt before marriage, she
+developed into an irreproachable matron, while her natural frivolity and
+feather-headedness never tempted her to neglect her work, nor interfered
+with her faculty for making most advantageous business arrangements.
+'With all her frank vanity,' we are told, 'she had shrewd good sense,
+and she valued herself much more on her industry than on her genius,
+because the one, she said, she owed to her organisation, but the other
+was a virtue of her own rearing.' It would be impossible to conclude a
+sketch of Lady Morgan more appropriately than by the following lines of
+Leigh Hunt, which she herself was fond of quoting, and in which her
+personal idiosyncrasies are pleasantly touched off:-- </p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 'And dear Lady Morgan, see, see, when she
+comes,<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; With her pulses all beating for freedom like
+drums,<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; So Irish, so modish, so mixtish, so wild;<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; So committing herself as she talks--like a
+child.<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; So trim, yet so easy--polite, yet high-hearted,<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; That truth and she, try all she can, won't be
+parted;<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; She'll put you your fashions, your latest new
+air,<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And then talk so frankly, she'll make you all
+stare.'<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
+
+<p style="font-weight: bold; text-align: center;"><big><a name="WILLIS"></a> <big>NATHANIEL
+PARKER WILLIS</big><br>
+<br>
+</big></p>
+<div style="text-align: center;"> </div>
+
+<p style="font-weight: bold; text-align: center;"><big><img
+ src="images/Willis.jpg" title="Nathaniel Parker Willis"
+ alt="Nathaniel Parker Willis" style="width: 388px; height: 608px;"><br>
+<br>
+</big></p>
+<div style="text-align: center;"> </div>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 20%;">
+
+<p style="font-weight: bold; text-align: center;">PART I</p>
+
+<p>Any fool, said a wise man, can write an interesting book if he will
+only take the trouble to set down exactly what he has seen and heard.
+Unfortunately, it is only a very special kind of fool who is capable of
+recording exactly what he sees and hears--a rare bird who flourishes
+perhaps once in a century, and is remembered long after wiser men are
+forgotten. It is not contended that the subject of this memoir was a
+fool in the crude sense of the word, though he was responsible for a
+good deal of folly; but he was inspired by that impertinent curiosity,
+that happy lack of dignity, and that passion for the trivial and the
+intimate, which, when joined to a natural talent for observation and a
+picturesque narrative style, enable the possessor to illuminate a circle
+and a period in a fashion never achieved by the most learned
+lucubrations of the profoundest scholars. Thanks to his Boswellising
+powers, 'Namby-Pamby Willis,' as he was called by his numerous enemies,
+has left an admirably vivid picture of the literary society of London in
+the 'thirties,' a picture that steadily increases in value as the period
+at which it was painted recedes into the past.</p>
+
+<p>Willis came of a family that had contrived, not unsuccessfully, to
+combine religion with journalism. His immediate forebears seem to have
+been persons of marked individuality, and his pedigree was, for the New
+World, of quite respectable antiquity. The founder of the family, George
+Willis, was born early in the seventeenth century, and emigrated to New
+England about 1730, where he worked at his trade of brickmaking and
+building. Our hero's great-grandfather was a patriotic sailmaker, who
+assisted at a certain historic entertainment, when tar, feathers, and
+hot tea were administered gratis to his Majesty's tax-collector at
+Boston. His wife, Abigail, was a lady of character and maxims, who saved
+some tea for her private use when three hundred cases were emptied into
+Boston Harbour, and exhorted her family never to eat brown bread when
+they could get white, and never to go in at the back door when they
+might go in at the front. The son of this worthy couple conducted a Whig
+newspaper in Boston during the Rebellion, and became one of the pioneer
+journalists of the West. His son, Nathaniel's sire, was invited, in
+1803, to start a newspaper at Portland, Maine, where the future
+Penciller was born in 1806, one year before his fellow-townsman
+Longfellow.</p>
+
+<p>A few years later, Mr. Willis returned to Boston, where, in 1816, he
+started the <i>Boston Recorder</i>, the first newspaper, he was
+accustomed to say, that had ever been run on religious lines. He seems
+to have been a respectable, but narrow-minded man, who loved long
+devotions and many services, and looked upon dancing, card-playing and
+stage-plays as works of the Evil One. His redeeming points were a sense
+of humour and a keen appreciation of female beauty, which last
+characteristic he certainly bequeathed to his son. It was his custom to
+sit round the fire with his nine children on winter evenings, and tell
+them stories about the old Dutch tiles, representing New Testament
+scenes, with which the chimney-corner was lined. The success of these
+informal Scripture lessons led him to establish a religious paper for
+young people called <i>The Youth's Companion</i>, in which some of our
+hero's early verses appeared. His wife, Hannah Parker, is described as a
+charming woman, lively, impulsive, and emotional. Her son, Nathaniel,
+whose devotion to her never wavered, used to say, 'My veins are teeming
+with the quicksilver spirit my mother gave me.'</p>
+
+<p>Willis the younger was sent to school at Boston, where he had
+Emerson for a schoolfellow, and afterwards to the university of Yale,
+where he wrote much poetry, and was well received in the society of the
+place on account of his good looks, easy manners, and precocious
+literary reputation. On leaving Yale, he was delivered of a volume of
+juvenile poems, and then settled down in Boston to four years'
+journalistic work. Samuel Goodrich, better known in England under his
+pseudonym of 'Peter Parley,' engaged him to edit some annuals and
+gift-books, an employment which the young man found particularly
+congenial. In his <i>Recollections</i> Peter Parley draws a comparison
+between his two contributors, Hawthorne and Willis, and records that
+everything Willis wrote attracted immediate attention, while the early
+productions of Hawthorne passed almost unnoticed.</p>
+
+<p>In 1829 Willis started on his own account with the <i>American
+Monthly Magazine</i>, which had an existence of little more than two
+years. He announced that he could not afford to pay for contributions,
+as he expected only a small circulation, and he wrote most of the copy
+himself. Every month there were discursive, gossiping editorial articles
+in that 'personal' vein which has been worked with so much industry in
+our own day. He took his readers into his confidence, prattled about his
+japonica and his pastilles, and described his favourite bird, a scarlet
+trulian, and his dogs, Ugolino and L. E. L., who slept in the
+waste-paper basket. He professed to write with a bottle of Rudesheimer
+and a plate of olives at his elbow, and it was hinted that he ate fruit
+in summer with an amber-handled fork to keep his palm cool!</p>
+
+<p>These youthful affectations had a peculiarly exasperating effect
+upon men of a different type; and Willis became the butt of the more
+old-fashioned critics, who vied with each other in inventing opprobrious
+epithets to shower upon the head of this young puppy of journalism.
+However, Nathaniel was not a person who could easily be suppressed, and
+he soon became one of the most popular magazine-writers of his time, his
+prose being described by an admirer as 'delicate and brief like a white
+jacket--transparent like a lump of sugar in champagne--soft-tempered
+like the sea-breeze at night.' Unfortunately, the magazines paid but
+little, even for prose of the above description, and Willis presently
+found himself in financial difficulties; while, with all his
+acknowledged fascinations, he was unlucky in his first love-affair. He
+became engaged to a beautiful girl called Mary Benham, but her guardian
+broke off the match, and the lady, who seems to have had an inclination
+for literary men, afterwards married Motley, the historian of the Dutch
+Republic.</p>
+
+<p>In 1831 the <i>American Monthly Magazine</i> ceased to appear, and
+Willis, leaving Boston and his creditors without regret, obtained the
+post of assistant-editor on the <i>New York Mirror</i>, a weekly paper
+devoted to literature, light fiction, and the fine arts. It was the
+property of Morris, author of the once world-famous song, 'Woodman,
+spare that Tree,' and the editor-in-chief was Theodore Fay, a novelist
+of some distinction. Soon after his appointment it was decided that
+Willis should be sent to Europe as foreign correspondent of his paper. A
+sum of about a hundred pounds was scraped together for his expenses, and
+it was arranged that he should write weekly letters at the rate of two
+guineas a letter. In the autumn of 1831 he sailed in a merchant-vessel
+for Havre, whence he journeyed to Paris in November. Here he spent the
+first five or six months of his tour, and here began the series of
+'Pencillings by the Way,' a portion of which gained him rather an
+unwelcome notoriety in English society by reason of the 'personalities'
+it contained. When published in book form the Pencillings were
+considerably toned down, and the proper names were represented by
+initials, so that people who read them then for the first time wondered
+what all the excitement had been about. As the chapters which relate to
+England are of most interest to English readers, Willis's continental
+adventures need only be briefly noticed. The extracts here quoted are
+taken from the original letters as they appeared in the <i>New York
+Mirror</i>, which differ in many respects from the version that was
+published in London after the attack by the <i>Quarterly Review</i>.</p>
+
+<p>In Paris Willis found himself in his element, and was made much of
+by the Anglo-French community, which was then under the special
+patronage of Lafayette. One of the most interesting of his new
+acquaintances was the Countess Guiccioli, upon whose appearance and
+manners he comments with characteristic frankness.</p>
+
+<p>'I met the Guiccioli yesterday in the Tuileries,' he writes shortly
+after his arrival. 'She looks much younger than I anticipated, and is a
+handsome blonde, apparently about thirty. I am told by a gentleman who
+knows her that she has become a great flirt, and is quite spoiled by
+admiration. The celebrity of Lord Byron's attachment would certainly
+make her a very desirable acquaintance were she much less pretty than
+she really is, and I am told her drawing-room is thronged with lovers of
+all nations contending for a preference which, having once been given,
+should be buried, I think, for ever.' A little later he has himself been
+introduced to the Guiccioli, and he describes an interview which he has
+had with her, when the conversation turned upon her friendship with
+Shelley.</p>
+
+<p>'She gave me one of his letters to herself as an autograph,' he
+narrates. 'She says he was at times a little crazy--<i>fou</i>, as she
+expressed it--but there never was a nobler or a better man. Lord Byron,
+she says, loved him as a brother.... There were several miniatures of
+Byron hanging up in the room; I asked her if any of them were perfect in
+the resemblance. "No," she said, "that is the most like him," taking
+down a miniature by an Italian artist, "<i>mais il &eacute;tait beaucoup
+plus beau--beaucoup--beaucoup</i>." She reiterated the word with a very
+touching tenderness, and continued to look at the portrait for some
+time.... She went on talking of the painters who had drawn Byron, and
+said the American, West's, was the best likeness. I did not tell her
+that West's portrait of herself was excessively flattered. I am sure no
+one would know her, from the engraving at least. Her cheek-bones are
+high, her forehead is badly shaped, and altogether the frame of her
+features is decidedly ugly. She dresses in the worst taste too, and yet
+for all this, and poetry and celebrity aside, the countess is both a
+lovely and a fascinating woman, and one whom a man of sentiment would
+admire at this age very sincerely, but not for beauty.'</p>
+
+<p>The cholera frightened Willis away from Paris in April, but before
+he left, the United States minister, Mr. Rives, appointed him honorary
+attach&eacute; to his own embassy, a great social advantage to the young
+man, who was thereby enabled to obtain the <i>entr&eacute;e</i> into
+court circles in every country that he visited. At the same time the
+appointment somewhat misled his numerous new acquaintances on the
+subject of his social position, while the 'spurious' attach&eacute;ship
+afterwards became a weapon in the hands of his enemies. However, for the
+time being, the young correspondent thoroughly enjoyed his novel
+experiences, and contrived to communicate his enjoyment to his readers.
+His letters were eagerly read by his countrymen, and are said to have
+been copied into no less than five hundred newspapers. He eschewed
+useful information, gave impressions rather than statistics, and was
+fairly successful in avoiding the style of the guide-book. The summer
+and autumn of 1832 were spent in northern Italy, Florence being the
+traveller's headquarters. He had letters of introduction to half the
+Italian nobility, and was made welcome in the court circles of Tuscany.
+In the autumn he was flirting at the Baths of Lucca, and at this time he
+had formed a project of travelling to London by way of Switzerland. 'In
+London,' he writes to his sister, 'I mean to make arrangements with the
+magazines, and then live abroad altogether. It costs so little here, and
+one lives so luxuriously too, and there is so much to fill one's mind
+and eye, that I think of returning to naked America with ever-increasing
+repugnance. I love my country, but the <i>ornamental</i> is my vocation,
+and of this she has none.' This programme was changed, and Willis spent
+the winter between Rome, Florence, and Venice. Wherever he went he made
+friends, but his progress was in itself a feat of diplomacy, and few
+people dreamt that the dashing young attach&eacute; depended for his
+living upon his contributions to a newspaper, payment for which did not
+always arrive with desirable punctuality. 'I have dined,' he writes to
+his mother, 'with a prince one day, and alone in a cook-shop the next.'
+He explains that he can live on about sixty pounds a year at Florence,
+paying four or five shillings a week for his rooms, breakfasting for
+fourpence, and dining quite magnificently for a shilling.</p>
+
+<p>In June 1833, Willis was invited by the officers of an American
+frigate to accompany them on a six months' cruise in the Mediterranean.
+This was far too good an offer to be refused, since it would have been
+impossible to get a peep at the East under more ideal conditions of
+travel. Willis's letters from Greece and Turkey are among the best and
+happiest that he wrote, for the weather was perfect, the company was
+pleasant (there were ladies on board), and the reception they met with
+wherever they weighed anchor was most hospitable; while the Oriental
+mode of life appealed to our hero's highly-coloured, romantic taste. In
+the island of &AElig;gina he was introduced to Byron's Maid of Athens,
+once the beautiful Teresa Makri, now plain Mrs. Black, with an ugly
+little boy, and a Scotch terrier that snapped at the traveller's heels.
+He describes the <i>ci-devant</i> Maid of Athens as a handsome woman,
+with a clear dark skin, and a nose and forehead that formed the straight
+line of the Greek model.</p>
+
+<p>'Her eyes are large,' he continues, 'and of a soft, liquid hazel,
+and this is her chief beauty. There is that looking out of the soul
+through them which Byron always described as constituting the loveliness
+that most moved him.... We met her as simple Mrs. Black, whose husband's
+terrier had worried us at the door, and we left her feeling that the
+poetry she called forth from the heart of Byron was her due by every law
+of loveliness.'</p>
+
+<p>By this time the fame of the <i>Pencillings</i> had reached London;
+and at Smyrna Willis found a letter awaiting him from the <i>Morning
+Herald</i>, which contained an offer of the post of foreign
+correspondent at a salary of &pound;200 a year. But as his letters would
+have to be mainly political, and as he might be expected to act as
+war-correspondent, which was scarcely in his line, he decided to refuse
+the offer. On leaving the frigate he loitered through Italy,
+Switzerland, and France to England, arriving at Dover on June 1, 1834.
+While at Florence he had made the acquaintance of Walter Savage Landor,
+who had given him some valuable letters of introduction to people in
+England, among them one to Lady Blessington. Landor also put into
+Willis's hands a package of books, whose temporary disappearance through
+some mismanagement roused the formidable wrath of the old poet. In his <i>Letter
+to an Author</i>, printed at the end of <i>Pericles and Aspasia</i>,
+Landor describes the transaction (which related to an American edition
+of the <i>Imaginary Conversations</i>), and continues:--</p>
+
+<p>'I regret the appearance of his book (the <i>Pencillings by the Way</i>)
+more than the disappearance of mine.... My letter of presentation to
+Lady Blessington threw open (I am afraid) too many folding-doors, some
+of which have been left rather uncomfortably ajar. No doubt his
+celebrity as a poet, and his dignity as a diplomatist, would have
+procured him all those distinctions in society which he allowed so
+humble a person as myself the instrumentality of conferring. Greatly as
+I have been flattered by the visits of American gentlemen, I hope that
+for the future no penciller of similar composition will deviate in my
+favour to the right hand of the road from Florence to Fiesole.'</p>
+
+<p>The end of this storm in a teacup was that the books, which had
+safely arrived in New York, returned as safely to London, where they
+were handed over to their rightful owner, but not in time, as Willis
+complained, to keep him from going down to posterity astride the finis
+to <i>Pericles and Aspasia</i>. Long afterwards he expressed his hope
+that Landor's biographers would either let him slip off at Lethe's
+wharf, or else do him justice in a note. Before this unfortunate
+incident, Landor and Willis had corresponded on cordial terms. The old
+poet wrote to say how much he envied his correspondent the evenings he
+passed in the society of 'the most accomplished and graceful of all our
+fashionable world, my excellent friend, Lady Blessington,' while the
+American could not sufficiently express his gratitude for the
+introduction to that lady, 'my lodestar and most valued friend,' as he
+called her, 'for whose acquaintance I am so much indebted to you, that
+you will find it difficult in your lifetime to diminish my obligations.'</p>
+
+<p>Willis seems to have arrived in England prepared to like everything
+English, and he began by falling in love with the Ship Hotel at Dover,
+'with its bells that <i>would</i> ring, doors that <i>would</i> shut,
+blazing coal fires [on June 1], and its landlady who spoke English, and
+was civil--a greater contrast to the Continent could hardly he
+imagined.' The next morning he was in raptures over the coach that took
+him to London, with its light harness, four beautiful bays, and dashing
+coachman, who discussed the Opera, and hummed airs from the <i>Puritani</i>.
+He saw a hundred charming spots on the road that he coveted with quite
+a heartache, and even the little houses and gardens in the suburbs
+pleased his taste--there was such an <i>affectionateness</i> in the
+outside of every one of them. Regent Street he declares to be the finest
+street he has ever seen, and he exclaims, 'The Toledo of Naples, the
+Corso of Rome, the Rue de la Paix, and the Boulevards of Paris are
+really nothing to Regent Street.'</p>
+
+<p>Willis called on Lady Blessington in the afternoon of the day after
+his arrival, but was informed that her ladyship was not yet down to
+breakfast. An hour later, however, he received a note from her inviting
+him to call the same evening at ten o'clock. She was then living at
+Seamore House, while D'Orsay had lodgings in Curzon Street. Willis tells
+us that he found a very beautiful woman exquisitely dressed, who looked
+on the sunny side of thirty, though she frankly owned to forty, and was,
+in fact, forty-five. Lady Blessington received the young American very
+cordially, introduced him to the magnificent D'Orsay, and plunged at
+once into literary talk. She was curious to know the degree of
+popularity enjoyed by English authors in America, more especially by
+Bulwer and D'Israeli, both of whom she promised that he should meet at
+her house.</p>
+
+<p>'D'Israeli the elder,' she said, 'came here with his son the other
+night. It would have delighted you to see the old man's pride in him. As
+he was going away, he patted him on the head, and said, "Take care of
+him, Lady Blessington, for my sake. He is a clever lad, but wants
+ballast. I am glad he has the honour to know you, for you will check him
+sometimes when I am away...." D'Israeli the younger is quite his own
+character of Vivian Grey, crowded with talent, but very <i>soign&eacute;</i>
+of his curls, and a bit of a coxcomb. There is no reverse about him,
+however, and he is the only <i>joyous</i> dandy I ever saw.' Then the
+conversation turned upon Byron, and Willis asked if Lady Blessington had
+known La Guiccioli. 'No; we were at Pisa when they were together,' she
+replied. 'But though Lord Blessington had the greatest curiosity to see
+her, Lord Byron would never permit it. "She has a red head of her own,"
+said he, "and don't like to show it." Byron treated the poor creature
+dreadfully ill. She feared more than she loved him.'</p>
+
+<p>On concluding this account of his visit, Willis observes that there
+can be no objection to his publishing such personal descriptions and
+anecdotes in an American periodical, since 'the English just know of our
+existence, and if they get an idea twice a year of our progress in
+politics, they are comparatively well informed. Our periodical
+literature is never even heard of. I mention this fact lest, at first
+thought, I might seem to have abused the hospitality or the frankness of
+those on whom letters of introduction have given me claims for
+civility.' Alas, poor Willis! He little thought that one of the most
+distinguished and most venomous of British critics would make a long arm
+across the Atlantic, and hold up his prattlings to ridicule and
+condemnation.</p>
+
+<p>The following evening our Penciller met a distinguished company at
+Seamore House, the two Bulwers, Edward and Henry; James Smith of
+'Rejected Addresses' fame; Fonblanque, the editor of the <i>Examiner</i>;
+and the young Duc de Richelieu. Of Fonblanque, Willis observes: 'I
+never saw a worse face, sallow, seamed, and hollow, his teeth irregular,
+his skin livid, his straight black hair uncombed. A hollow, croaking
+voice, and a small, fiery black eye, with a smile like a skeleton's,
+certainly did not improve his physiognomy.' Fonblanque, as might have
+been anticipated, did not at all appreciate this description of his
+personal defects, when it afterwards appeared in print. Edward Bulwer
+was quite unlike what Willis had expected. 'He is short,' he writes,
+'very much bent, slightly knock-kneed, and as ill-dressed a man for a
+gentleman as you will find in London.... He has a retreating forehead,
+large aquiline nose, immense red whiskers, and a mouth contradictory of
+all talent. A more good-natured, habitually smiling, nerveless
+expression could hardly be imagined.' Bulwer seems to have made up for
+his appearance by his high spirits, lover-like voice, and delightful
+conversation, some of which our Boswell has reported.</p>
+
+<p>'Smith asked Bulwer if he kept an amanuensis. "No," he said, "I
+scribble it all out myself, and send it to the press in a most
+ungentlemanlike hand, half print, half hieroglyphics, with all its
+imperfections on its head, and correct in the proof--very much to the
+dissatisfaction of the publisher, who sends me in a bill of &pound;16,
+6s. 4d. for extra corrections. Then I am free to confess I don't know
+grammar. Lady Blessington, do you know grammar? There never was such a
+thing heard of before Lindley Murray. I wonder what they did for grammar
+before his day! Oh, the delicious blunders one sees when they are
+irretrievable! And the best of it is the critics never get hold of them.
+Thank Heaven for second editions, that one may scratch out one's blots,
+and go down clean and gentlemanlike to posterity." Smith asked him if he
+had ever reviewed one of his own books. "No, but I could! And then how I
+should like to recriminate, and defend myself indignantly! I think I
+could be preciously severe. Depend upon it, nobody knows a book's faults
+so well as its author. I have a great idea of criticising my books for
+my posthumous memoirs. Shall I, Smith? Shall I, Lady Blessington?"'</p>
+
+<p>Willis fell into conversation with the good-natured, though gouty
+James Smith, who talked to him of America, and declared that there never
+was so delightful a fellow as Washington Irving. 'I was once,' he said,
+'taken down with him into the country by a merchant to dinner. Our
+friend stopped his carriage at the gate of his park, and asked if we
+would walk through the grounds to the house. Irving refused, and held me
+down by the coat-tails, so that we drove on to the house together,
+leaving our host to follow on foot. "I make it a principle," said
+Irving, "never to walk with a man through his own grounds. I have no
+idea of praising a thing whether I like it or not. You and I will do
+them to-morrow by ourselves."' 'The Rejected Addresses,' continues
+Willis, 'got on his crutches about three o'clock in the morning, and I
+made my exit with the rest, thanking Heaven that, though in a strange
+country, my mother-tongue was the language of its men of genius.'</p>
+
+<p>One of the most interesting passages in the <i>Pencillings</i> is
+that in which Willis describes a breakfast at Crabb Robinson's chambers
+in the Temple, where he met Charles and Mary Lamb, a privilege which he
+seems thoroughly to have appreciated. 'I never in my life,' he declares,
+'had an invitation more to my taste. The <i>Essays of Elia</i> are
+certainly the most charming things in the world, and it has been, for
+the last ten years, my highest compliment to the literary taste of a
+friend to present him with a copy.... I arrived half an hour before
+Lamb, and had time to learn something of his peculiarities. Some family
+circumstances have tended to depress him of late years, and unless
+excited by convivial intercourse, he never shows a trace of what he once
+was. He is excessively given to mystifying his friends, and is never so
+delighted as when he has persuaded some one into a belief in one of his
+grave inventions.... There was a rap at the door at last, and enter a
+gentleman in black small clothes and gaiters, short and very slight in
+his person, his hair just sprinkled with grey, a beautiful, deep-set,
+grey eye, aquiline nose, and a very indescribable mouth. His sister,
+whose literary reputation is very closely associated with her brother's,
+came in after him. She is a small, bent figure, evidently a victim to
+ill-health, and hears with difficulty. Her face has been, I should
+think, a fine, handsome one, and her bright grey eye is still full of
+intelligence and fire....</p>
+
+<p>'I had set a large arm-chair for Miss Lamb. "Don't take it, Mary,"
+said Lamb, pulling it away from her very gravely. "It looks as if you
+were going to have a tooth drawn." The conversation was very local, but
+perhaps in this way I saw more of the author, for his manner of speaking
+of their mutual friends, and the quaint humour with which he complained
+of one, and spoke well of another, was so completely in the vein of his
+inimitable writings, that I could have fancied myself listening to an
+audible composition of new Elia. Nothing could be more delightful than
+the kindness and affection between the brother and sister, though Lamb
+was continually taking advantage of her deafness to mystify her on every
+topic that was started. "Poor Mary," he said, "she hears all of an
+epigram but the point." "What are you saying of me, Charles?" she asked.
+"Mr. Willis," said he, raising his voice, "admires your <i>Confessions
+of a Drunkard</i> very much, and I was saying that it was no merit of
+yours that you understood the subject."</p>
+
+<p>'The conversation presently turned upon literary topics, and Lamb
+observed: "I don't know much of your American authors. Mary, there,
+devours Cooper's novels with a ravenous appetite with which I have no
+sympathy. The only American book I ever read twice was the <i>Journal
+of Edward Woolman</i>, a Quaker preacher and tinker, whose character is
+one of the finest I ever met. He tells a story or two about negro slaves
+that brought the tears into my eyes. I can read no prose now, though
+Hazlitt sometimes, to be sure--but then Hazlitt is worth all the modern
+prose-writers put together." I mentioned having bought a copy of <i>Elia</i>
+the last day I was in America, to send as a parting gift to one of the
+most lovely and talented women in the country. "What did you give for
+it?" asked Lamb. "About seven-and-six." "Permit me to pay you that,"
+said he, and with the utmost earnestness he counted the money out on the
+table. "I never yet wrote anything that would sell," he continued. "I am
+the publisher's ruin. My last poem won't sell a copy. Have you seen it,
+Mr. Willis?" I had not. "It is only eighteenpence, and I'll give you
+sixpence towards it," and he described to me where I should find it
+sticking up in a shop-window in the Strand.</p>
+
+<p>'Lamb ate nothing, and complained in a querulous tone of the veal
+pie. There was a kind of potted fish, which he had expected that our
+friend would procure for him. He inquired whether there was not a morsel
+left in the bottom of the last pot. Mr. Robinson was not sure. "Send and
+see," said Lamb, "and if the pot has been cleaned, bring me the lid. I
+think the sight of it would do me good." The cover was brought, upon
+which there was a picture of the fish. Lamb kissed it with a reproachful
+look at his friend, and then left the table and began to wander round
+the room with a broken, uncertain step, as if he almost forgot to put
+one leg before the other. His sister rose after a while, and commenced
+walking up and down in the same manner on the opposite side of the
+table, and in the course of half an hour they took their leave.' Landor,
+in commenting on this passage, says it is evident that Willis 'fidgeted
+the Lambs,' and seems rather unaccountably annoyed at his having alluded
+to Crabb Robinson simply as 'a barrister.'</p>
+
+<p>In London Willis appears to have fallen upon his feet from the very
+first. To the end of his life he looked back upon his first two years in
+England as the happiest and most successful period in his whole career.
+It was small wonder that he became a little dazzled and intoxicated by
+the brilliancy of his surroundings, which spoilt him for the homelier
+conditions of American life. 'What a star is mine,' he wrote to his
+sister Julia, three days after landing at Dover. 'All the best society
+of London exclusives is now open to me--<i>me!</i> without a sou in my
+pocket beyond what my pen brings me, and with not only no influence from
+friends at home, but with a world of envy and slander at my back.... In
+a literary way I have already had offers from the <i>Court Magazine</i>,
+the <i>Metropolitan</i>, and the <i>New Monthly</i>, of the first
+price for my articles. I sent a short tale, written in one day, to the <i>Court
+Magazine</i>, and they gave me eight guineas for it at once. I lodge in
+Cavendish Square, the most fashionable part of the town, paying a guinea
+a week for my lodgings, and am as well off as if I had been the son of
+the President.'</p>
+
+<p>Willis was constantly at Lady Blessington's house, where he met some
+of the best masculine society of the day. At one dinner-party among his
+fellow-guests were D'Israeli, Bulwer, Procter (Barry Cornwall), Lord
+Durham, and Sir Martin Shee. It was his first sight of Dizzy, whom he
+found looking out of the window with the last rays of sunlight reflected
+on the gorgeous gold flowers of an embroidered waistcoat. A white stick
+with a black cord and tassel, and a quantity of chains about his neck
+and pocket, rendered him rather a conspicuous object. 'D'Israeli,' says
+our chronicler, 'has one of the most remarkable faces I ever saw. He is
+vividly pale, and but for the energy of his action and the strength of
+his lungs, would seem a victim to consumption. His eye is as black as
+Erebus, and has the most mocking, lying-in-wait expression conceivable.
+His mouth is alive with a kind of impatient nervousness, and when he has
+burst forth with a particularly successful cataract of expression, it
+assumes a curl of triumphant scorn that would be worthy of
+Mephistopheles. A thick, heavy mass of jet-black ringlets falls over his
+left cheek almost to his collarless stock, while on the right temple it
+is parted and put away with the smooth carefulness of a girl's, and
+shines most unctuously with "thy incomparable oil, Macassar."' Willis
+was always interested in dress, being himself a born dandy, and he was
+inclined to judge a man by the cut of his coat and the set of his hat.
+On this occasion he remarks that Bulwer was very badly dressed as usual,
+while Count D'Orsay was very splendid, but quite indefinable. 'He seemed
+showily dressed till you looked to particulars, and then it seemed only
+a simple thing well fitted to a very magnificent person.'</p>
+
+<p>The conversation ran at first on Sir Henry Taylor's new play, <i>Philip
+van Artevelde</i>, which the company thought overrated, and then passed
+to Beckford, of <i>Vathek</i> fame, who had already retired from the
+world, and was living at Bath in his usual eccentric fashion. Dizzy was
+the only person present who had met him, and, declares Willis, 'I might
+as well attempt to gather up the foam of the sea as to convey an idea of
+the extraordinary language in which he clothed his description. There
+were at least five words in every sentence which must have been very
+much astonished at the use to which they were put, and yet no others
+apparently could so well have conveyed his idea. He talked like a
+racehorse approaching the winning-post, every muscle in action, and the
+utmost energy of expression flowing out in every burst. It is a great
+pity he is not in Parliament.'</p>
+
+<p>At midnight Lady Blessington left the table, when the conversation
+took a political turn, but D'Israeli soon dashed off again with a story
+of an Irish dragoon who was killed in the Peninsular. 'His arm was shot
+off, and he was bleeding to death. When told he could not live, he
+called for a large silver goblet, out of which he usually drank his
+claret. He held it to the gushing artery, and filled it to the brim,
+then poured it slowly out upon the ground, saying, "If that had been
+shed for old Ireland." You can have no idea how thrillingly this little
+story was told. Fonblanque, however, who is a cold political satirist,
+could see nothing in a man's "decanting his claret" that was in the
+least sublime, so "Vivian Grey" got into a passion, and for a while was
+silent.'</p>
+
+<p>Willis was now fairly launched in London society, literary and
+fashionable. He went to the Opera to hear Grisi, then young and pretty,
+and Lady Blessington pointed out the beautiful Mrs. Norton, looking like
+a queen, and Lord Brougham flirting desperately with a lovely woman,
+'his mouth going with the convulsive twitch that so disfigures him, and
+his most unsightly of pug-noses in the strongest relief against the red
+lining of the box.' He breakfasted with 'Barry Cornwall,' whose poetry
+he greatly admired, and was introduced to the charming Mrs. Procter and
+the 'yellow-tressed Adelaide,' then only eight or nine years old.
+Procter gave his visitor a volume of his own poems, and told him
+anecdotes of the various authors he had known, Hazlitt, Lamb, Keats, and
+Shelley. Another interesting entertainment was an evening party at
+Edward Bulwer's house. Willis arrived at eleven, and found his hostess
+alone, playing with a King Charles' spaniel, while she awaited her
+guests.</p>
+
+<p>'The author of <i>Pelham</i>,' he writes, 'is a younger son, and
+depends on his writings for a livelihood; and truly, measuring works of
+fancy by what they will bring, a glance round his luxurious rooms is
+worth reams of puffs in the Quarterlies. He lives in the heart of
+fashionable London, entertains a great deal, and is expensive in all his
+habits, and for this pay Messrs. Clifford, Pelham, and Aram--most
+excellent bankers. As I looked at the beautiful woman before me, waiting
+to receive the rank and fashion of London, I thought that close-fisted
+old literature never had better reason for his partial largess.'</p>
+
+<p>Willis was astonished at the neglect with which the female portion
+of the assemblage was treated, no young man ever speaking to a young
+lady except to ask her to dance. 'There they sit with their mammas,' he
+observes, 'their hands before them in the received attitude; and if
+there happens to be no dancing, looking at a print, or eating an ice, is
+for them the most entertaining circumstance of the evening. Late in the
+evening a charming girl, who is the reigning belle of Naples, came in
+with her mother from the Opera, and I made this same remark to her. "I
+detest England for that very reason," she said frankly. "It is the
+fashion in London for young men to prefer everything to the society of
+women. They have their clubs, their horses, their rowing matches, their
+hunting, and everything else is a <i>bore</i>! How different are the
+same men at Naples! They can never get enough of one there."... She
+mentioned several of the beaux of last winter who had returned to
+England. "Here have I been in London a month, and these very men who
+were at my side all day on the Strada Nuova, and all but fighting to
+dance three times with me of an evening, have only left their cards. Not
+because they care less about me, but because it is not the fashion--it
+would be talked about at the clubs; it is <i>knowing</i> to let us
+alone."'</p>
+
+<p>There were only three men at the party, according to Willis, who
+could come under the head of <i>beaux</i>, but there were many
+distinguished persons. There was Byron's sister, Mrs. Leigh, a thin,
+plain, middle-aged woman, of a serious countenance, but with very
+cordial, pleasing manners. Sheil, the famous Irish orator, small, dark,
+deceitful, and talented-looking, with a squeaky voice, was to be seen in
+earnest conversation with the courtly old Lord Clarendon. Fonblanque,
+with his pale, dislocated-looking face, was making the amiable, with a
+ghastly smile, to Lady Stepney, author of <i>The Road to Ruin</i> and
+other fashionable novels. The bilious Lord Durham, with his Brutus head
+and severe countenance, high-bred in appearance in spite of the worst
+possible coat and trousers, was talking politics with Bowring. Prince
+Moscowa, son of Marshal Ney, a plain, determined-looking young man, was
+unconscious of everything but the presence of the lovely Mrs. Leicester
+Stanhope. Her husband, afterwards Sir Leicester, who had been Byron's
+companion in Greece, was introduced to Willis, and the two soon became
+on intimate terms.</p>
+
+<p>In the course of the season Willis made the acquaintance of Miss
+Mitford, who invited him to spend a week with her at her cottage near
+Reading. In a letter to her friend, Miss Jephson, Miss Mitford says: 'I
+also like very much Mr. Willis, an American author, who is now
+understood to be here to publish his account of England. He is a very
+elegant young man, more like one of the best of our peers' sons than a
+rough republican.' The admiration was apparently mutual, for Willis, in
+a letter to the author of <i>Our Village</i>, says: 'You are
+distinguished in the world as the "gentlewoman" among authoresses, as
+you are for your rank merely in literature. I have often thought you
+very enviable for the universality of that opinion about you. You share
+it with Sir Philip Sidney, who was in his day the <i>gentleman</i> among
+authors. I look with great interest for your new tragedy. I think your
+mind is essentially dramatic; and in that, in our time, you are alone. I
+know no one else who could have written <i>Rienzi</i>, and I felt <i>Charles
+I.</i> to my fingers' ends, as one feels no other modern play.'</p>
+
+<p>Willis was less happy in his relations with Harriet Martineau, to
+whom he was introduced just before her departure for America. 'While I
+was preparing for my travels,' she writes, in her own account of the
+interview, 'an acquaintance brought a buxom gentleman, whom he
+introduced under the name of Willis. There was something rather engaging
+in the round face, brisk air, and <i>enjouement</i> of the young man;
+but his conscious dandyism and unparalleled self-complacency spoiled the
+satisfaction, though they increased the inclination to laugh.... He
+whipped his bright little boot with his bright little cane, while he ran
+over the names of all his distinguished fellow-countrymen, and declared
+that he would send me letters to them all.' Miss Martineau further
+relates that the few letters she presented met with a very indifferent
+reception. Her indignation increased when she found that in his private
+correspondence Willis had given the impression that she was one of his
+most intimate friends. In his own account of the interview he merely
+says: 'I was taken by the clever translator of Faust to see the
+celebrated Miss Martineau. She has perhaps at this moment the most
+general and enviable reputation in England, and is the only one of the
+literary clique whose name is mentioned without some envious
+qualification.'</p>
+
+<p>A budget of literary news sent to the <i>Mirror</i> includes such
+items as that 'D'Israeli is driving about in an open carriage with Lady
+S., looking more melancholy than usual. The absent baronet, whose place
+he fills, is about to bring an action against him, which will finish his
+career, unless he can coin the damages in his brain. Mrs. Hemans is
+dying of consumption in Ireland. I have been passing a week at a
+country-house, where Miss Jane Porter [author of <i>Scottish Chiefs</i>]
+and Miss Pardoe [author of <i>Beauties of the Bosphorus</i>] were
+staying. Miss Porter is one of her own heroines grown old, a still noble
+wreck of beauty.... Dined last week with Joanna Baillie at
+Hampstead--the most charming old lady I ever saw. To-day I dine with
+Longman, to meet Tom Moore, who is living <i>incog.</i> near this Nestor
+of publishers, and pegging hard at his <i>History of Ireland</i>....
+Lady Blessington's new book makes a great noise. Living as she does
+twelve hours out of the twenty-four in the midst of the most brilliant
+and intellectually exhausting circle in London, I only wonder how she
+found time to write it. Yet it was written in six weeks! Her novels sell
+for a hundred pounds more than any other author's, except Bulwer's.
+Bulwer gets &pound;1400; Lady Blessington, &pound;400; Mrs. Norton,
+&pound;250; Lady Charlotte Bury, &pound;200; Grattan, &pound;300; and
+most other authors below this. Captain Marryat's gross trash sells
+immensely about Wapping and Portsmouth, and brings him in &pound;500 or
+&pound;600 the book--but that can scarce be called literature. D'Israeli
+cannot sell a book <i>at all</i>, I hear. Is not that odd? I would give
+more for one of his books than for forty of the common saleable things
+about town.'</p>
+
+<p>One more description of a literary dinner at Lady Blessington's may
+be quoted before Willis's account of this, his first and most memorable
+London season, is brought to an end. Among the company on this occasion
+were Moore, D'Israeli, and Dr. Beattie, the King's physician, who was
+himself a poet. Moore had been ruralising for a year at Slopperton
+Cottage, and, before his arrival, D'Israeli expressed his regret that he
+should have been met on his return to town with a savage article in <i>Fraser</i>
+on his supposed plagiarisms. Lady Blessington declared that he would
+never see it, since he guarded himself against the sight and knowledge
+of criticism as other people guarded against the plague. Some one
+remarked on Moore's passion for rank. 'He was sure to have five or six
+invitations to dine on the same day,' it was said, 'and he tormented
+himself with the idea that he had perhaps not accepted the most
+exclusive. He would get off from an engagement with a countess to dine
+with a marchioness, and from a marchioness to accept the invitation of a
+duchess. As he cared little for the society of men, and would sing and
+be delightful only for the applause of women, it mattered little whether
+one circle was more talented than another.' At length Mr. Moore was
+announced, and the poet, 'sliding his little feet up to Lady
+Blessington, made his compliments with an ease and gaiety, combined with
+a kind of worshipping deference, that were worthy of a prime minister at
+the Court of Love.... His eyes still sparkle like a champagne bubble,
+though the invader has drawn his pencillings about the corners; and
+there is a kind of wintry red that seems enamelled on his cheek, the
+eloquent record of the claret his wit has brightened. His mouth is the
+most characteristic feature of all. The lips are delicately cut, and as
+changeable as an aspen; but there is a set-up look about the lower
+lip--a determination of the muscle to a particular expression, and you
+fancy that you can see wit astride upon it. It is arch, confident, and
+half diffident, as if he were disguising his pleasure at applause, while
+another bright gleam of fancy was breaking upon him. The slightly tossed
+nose confirms the fun of his expression, and altogether it is a face
+that sparkles, beams, and radiates.'</p>
+
+<p>The conversation at dinner that night was the most brilliant that
+the American had yet heard in London. Sir Walter Scott was the first
+subject of discussion, Lady Blessington having just received from Sir
+William Gell the manuscript of a volume on the last days of Sir Walter
+Scott, a melancholy chronicle of ruined health and weakened intellect,
+which was afterwards suppressed. Moore then described a visit he had
+paid to Abbotsford, when his host was in his prime. 'Scott,' he said,
+'was the most manly and natural character in the world. His hospitality
+was free and open as the day; he lived freely himself, and expected his
+guests to do the same.... He never ate or drank to excess, but he had no
+system; his constitution was Herculean, and he denied himself nothing. I
+went once from a dinner-party at Sir Thomas Lawrence's to meet Scott at
+another house. We had hardly entered the room when we were set down to a
+hot supper of roast chicken, salmon, punch, etc., and Sir Walter ate
+immensely of everything. What a contrast between this and the last time
+I saw him in London! He had come to embark for Italy, quite broken down
+both in mind and body. He gave Mrs. Moore a book, and I asked him if he
+would make it more valuable by writing in it. He thought I meant that he
+should write some verses, and said, "I never write poetry now." I asked
+him to write only his name and hers, and he attempted it, but it was
+quite illegible.'</p>
+
+<p>O'Connell next became the topic of conversation, and Moore declared
+that he would be irresistible if it were not for two blots on his
+character, viz. the contributions in Ireland for his support, and his
+refusal to give satisfaction to the man he was willing to attack. 'They
+may say what they will of duelling,' he continued, 'but it is the great
+preserver of the decencies of society. The old school which made a man
+responsible for his words was the better.' Moore related how O'Connell
+had accepted Peel's challenge, and then delayed a meeting on the ground
+of his wife's illness, till the law interfered. Another Irish patriot
+refused a meeting on account of the illness of his daughter, whereupon a
+Dublin wit composed the following epigram upon the two:--&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp; 'Some men with a horror of slaughter,<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Improve on the Scripture command.<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And honour their--wife and their daughter--<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That their days may be long in the
+land.'</p>
+
+<p>Alluding to Grattan's dying advice to his son, 'Always be ready with
+the pistol,' Moore asked, 'Is it not wonderful that, with all the
+agitation in Ireland, we have had no such men since his time? The whole
+country in convulsion--people's lives, fortune, religion at stake, and
+not a gleam of talent from one's year's end to another. It is natural
+for sparks to be struck out in a time of violence like this--but
+Ireland, for all that is worth living for, <i>is dead</i>! You can
+scarcely reckon Sheil of the calibre of the spirits of old, and
+O'Connell, with all his faults, stands alone in his glory.'</p>
+
+<p>In the drawing-room, after dinner, some allusion to the later
+Platonists caused D'Israeli to flare up. His wild black eyes glistened,
+and his nervous lips poured out eloquence, while a whole ottomanful of
+noble exquisites listened in amazement. He gave an account of Thomas
+Taylor, one of the last of the Platonists, who had worshipped Jupiter in
+a back-parlour in London a few years before. In his old age he was
+turned out of his lodgings, for attempting, as he said, to worship his
+gods according to the dictates of his conscience, his landlady having
+objected to his sacrificing a bull to Jupiter in her parlour. The
+company laughed at this story as a good invention, but Dizzy assured
+them it was literally true, and gave his father as his authority.
+Meanwhile Moore 'went glittering on' with criticisms upon Grisi and the
+Opera, and the subject of music being thus introduced, he was led, with
+great difficulty, to the piano. Willis describes his singing as 'a kind
+of admirable recitative, in which every shade of thought is syllabled
+and dwelt upon, and the sentiment of the song goes through your blood,
+warming you to the very eyelids, and starting your tears if you have a
+soul or sense in you. I have heard of women fainting at a song of
+Moore's; and if the burden of it answered by chance to a secret in the
+bosom of the listener, I should think that the heart would break with
+it. After two or three songs of Lady Blessington's choice, he rambled
+over the keys a while, and then sang 'When first I met thee' with a
+pathos that beggars description. When the last word had faltered out, he
+rose and took Lady Blessington's hand, said Good-night, and was gone
+before a word was uttered. For a full minute after he closed the door no
+one spoke. I could have wished for myself to drop silently asleep where
+I sat, with the tears in my eyes and the softness upon my heart.'<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 20%;">
+
+<p style="font-weight: bold; text-align: center;"> PART II</p>
+
+<p> Having received invitations to stay with Lord Dalhousie and the Duke
+of Gordon, Willis went north at the beginning of September, 1834. The
+nominal attraction of Scotland he found, rather to his dismay, was the
+shooting. The guest, he observes, on arriving at a country-house, is
+asked whether he prefers a flint or a percussion lock, and a
+double-barrelled Manton is put into his hands; while after breakfast the
+ladies leave the table, wishing him good sport. 'I would rather have
+gone to the library,' says the Penciller. 'An aversion to walking,
+except upon smooth flag-stones, a poetical tenderness on the subject of
+putting birds "out of their misery," and hands much more at home with
+the goose-quill than the gun, were some of my private objections to the
+order of the day.' At Dalhousie, the son of the house, Lord Ramsay, and
+his American visitor were mutually astonished at each other's appearance
+when they met in the park, prepared for a morning's sport.</p>
+
+<p>'From the elegant Oxonian I had seen at breakfast,' writes Willis,
+'he (Lord Ramsay) was transformed into a figure something rougher than
+his Highland dependant, in a woollen shooting-jacket, pockets of any
+number and capacity, trousers of the coarsest plaid, hobnailed shoes and
+leather gaiters, and a habit of handling his gun that would have been
+respected on the Mississippi. My own appearance in high-heeled French
+boots and other corresponding gear, for a tramp over stubble and marsh,
+amused him equally; but my wardrobe was exclusively metropolitan, and
+there was no alternative.' It was hard and exciting work, the novice
+discovered, to trudge through peas, beans, turnips, and corn, soaked
+with showers, and muddied to the knees till his Parisian boots were
+reduced to the consistency of brown paper. He came home, much to his own
+relief, without having brought the blood of his host's son and heir on
+his head, and he made a mental note never to go to Scotland again
+without hobnailed boots and a shooting-jacket.</p>
+
+<p>On leaving Dalhousie Willis spent a few days in Edinburgh, where he
+breakfasted with Professor Wilson, <i>alias</i> Christopher North. The
+Professor, he says, talked away famously, quite oblivious of the fact
+that the tea was made, and the breakfast-dishes were smoking on the
+table. He spoke much of Blackwood, who then lay dying, and described him
+as a man of the most refined literary taste, whose opinion of a book he
+would trust before that of any one he knew. Wilson inquired if his guest
+had made the acquaintance of Lockhart. 'I have not,' replied Willis. 'He
+is almost the only literary man in London I have not met; and I must
+say, as the editor of the <i>Quarterly Review</i>, and the most unfair
+and unprincipled critic of the day, I have no wish to know him. I never
+heard him well spoken of. I have probably met a hundred of his
+acquaintances, but I have not yet seen one who pretended to be his
+friend.' Wilson defended the absent one, who, he said, was the mildest
+and most unassuming of men, and dissected a book for pleasure, without
+thinking of the feelings of the author.</p>
+
+<p>The breakfast had been cooling for an hour when the Professor leant
+back, with his chair still towards the fire, and 'seizing the teapot as
+if it were a sledge-hammer, he poured from one cup to the other without
+interrupting the stream, overrunning both cup and saucer, and partly
+flooding the tea-tray. He then set the cream towards me with a
+carelessness that nearly overset it, and in trying to reach an egg from
+the centre of the table, broke two. He took no notice of his own
+awkwardness, but drank his cup of tea at a single draught, ate his egg
+in the same expeditious manner, and went on talking of the "Noctes," and
+Lockhart, and Blackwood, as if eating his breakfast were rather a
+troublesome parenthesis in his conversation.' Wilson offered to give his
+guest letters to Wordsworth and Southey, if he intended to return by the
+Lakes. 'I lived a long time in their neighbourhood,' he said, 'and know
+Wordsworth perhaps as well as any one. Many a day I have walked over the
+hills with him, and listened to his repetition of his own poetry, which,
+of course, filled my mind completely at the time, and perhaps started
+the poetical vein in me, though I cannot agree with the critics that my
+poetry is an imitation of Wordsworth's.'</p>
+
+<p>'Did Wordsworth repeat any other poetry than his own?'</p>
+
+<p>'Never in a single instance, to my knowledge. He is remarkable for
+the manner in which he is wrapped up in his own poetical life.
+Everything ministers to it. Everything is done with reference to it. He
+is all and only a poet.'</p>
+
+<p>'What is Southey's manner of life?'</p>
+
+<p>'Walter Scott said of him that he lived too much with women. He is
+secluded in the country, and surrounded by a circle of admiring friends,
+who glorify every literary project he undertakes, and persuade him, in
+spite of his natural modesty, that he can do nothing wrong. He has great
+genius, and is a most estimable man.'</p>
+
+<p>On the same day that he breakfasted with Wilson, this fortunate
+tourist dined with Jeffrey, with whom Lord Brougham was staying.
+Unluckily, Brougham was absent, at a public dinner given to Lord Grey,
+who also happened to be in Edinburgh at the time. Willis was charmed
+with Jeffrey, with his frank smile, hearty manner, and graceful style of
+putting a guest at his ease. But he cared less for the political
+conversation at table. 'It had been my lot,' he says, 'to be thrown
+principally among Tories (<i>Conservatives</i> is the new name) since my
+arrival in England, and it was difficult to rid myself at once of the
+impressions of a fortnight passed in the castle of a Tory earl. My
+sympathies on the great and glorious occasion [the Whig dinner to Lord
+Grey] were slower than those of the rest of the company, and much of
+their enthusiasm seemed to me overstrained. Altogether, I entered less
+into the spirit of the hour than I could have wished. Politics are
+seldom witty or amusing; and though I was charmed with the good sense
+and occasional eloquence of Lord Jeffrey, I was glad to get upstairs to <i>chasse-caf&eacute;</i>
+and the ladies.'</p>
+
+<p>Willis aggravated a temporary lameness by dancing at the ball that
+followed the Whig banquet, and was compelled to abandon a charming
+land-route north that he had mapped out, and allow himself to be taken
+'this side up' on a steamer to Aberdeen. Here he took coach for
+Fochabers, and thence posted to Gordon Castle. At the castle he found
+himself in the midst of a most distinguished company; the page who
+showed him to his room running over the names of Lord Aberdeen and Lord
+Claude Hamilton, the Duchess of Richmond and her daughter, Lady Sophia
+Lennox, Lord and Lady Stormont, Lord and Lady Mandeville, Lord and Lady
+Morton, Lord Aboyne, Lady Keith, and twenty other lesser lights. The
+duke himself came to fetch his guest before dinner, and presented him to
+the duchess and the rest of the party. In a letter to Lady Blessington
+Willis says: 'I am delighted with the duke and duchess. He is a
+delightful, hearty old fellow, full of fun and conversation, and she is
+an uncommonly fine woman, and, without beauty, has something agreeable
+in her countenance. <i>Pour moi-m&eacute;me</i>, I get on better
+everywhere than in your presence. I only fear I talk too much; but all
+the world is particularly civil to me, and among a score of people, no
+one of whom I had ever seen yesterday, I find myself quite at home
+to-day.'</p>
+
+<p>The ten days at Gordon Castle Willis afterwards set apart in his
+memory as 'a bright ellipse in the usual procession of joys and
+sorrows.' He certainly made the most of this unique opportunity of
+observing the manners and customs of the great. The routine of life at
+the castle was what each guest chose to make it. 'Between breakfast and
+lunch,' he writes, 'the ladies were usually invisible, and the gentlemen
+rode, or shot, or played billiards. At two o'clock a dish or two of hot
+game and a profusion of cold meats were set on small tables, and
+everybody came in for a kind of lounging half meal, which occupied
+perhaps an hour. Thence all adjourned to the drawing-room, under the
+windows of which were drawn up carriages of all descriptions, with
+grooms, outriders, footmen, and saddle-horses for gentlemen and ladies.
+Parties were then made up for driving or riding, and from a pony-chaise
+to a phaeton and four, there was no class of vehicle that was not at
+your disposal. In ten minutes the carriages were all filled, and away
+they flew, some to the banks of the Spey or the seaside, some to the
+drives in the park, and all with the delightful consciousness that speed
+where you would, the horizon scarce limited the possessions of your
+host, and you were everywhere at home. The ornamental gates flying open
+at your approach; the herds of red deer trooping away from the sound of
+your wheels; the stately pheasants feeding tamely in the immense
+preserves; the stalking gamekeepers lifting their hats in the dark
+recesses of the forest--there was something in this perpetual reminder
+of your privileges which, as a novelty, was far from disagreeable. I
+could not, at the time, bring myself to feel, what perhaps would be more
+poetical and republican, that a ride in the wild and unfenced forest of
+my own country would have been more to my taste.'</p>
+
+<p>Willis came to the conclusion that a North American Indian, in his
+more dignified phase, closely resembled an English nobleman in manner,
+since it was impossible to astonish either. All violent sensations, he
+observes, are avoided in high life. 'In conversation nothing is so "odd"
+(a word that in English means everything disagreeable) as emphasis, or a
+startling epithet, or gesture, and in common intercourse nothing is so
+vulgar as any approach to "a scene." For all extraordinary admiration,
+the word "capital" suffices; for all ordinary praise, the word "nice";
+for all condemnation in morals, manners, or religion, the word
+"odd.".... What is called an overpowering person is immediately shunned,
+for he talks too much, and excites too much attention. In any other
+country he would be considered amusing. He is regarded here as a
+monopoliser of the general interest, and his laurels, talk he never so
+well, overshadow the rest of the company.'</p>
+
+<p>On leaving Gordon Castle, Willis crossed Scotland by the Caledonian
+Canal, and from Fort William jolted in a Highland cart through Glencoe
+to Tarbet on Lomond. Thence the regulation visits were paid to Loch
+Katrine, the Trossachs and Callander. Another stay at Dalhousie Castle
+gave the tourist an opportunity of seeing Abbotsford, where he heard
+much talk of Sir Walter Scott. Lord Dalhousie had many anecdotes to tell
+of Scott's school-days, and Willis recalled some reminiscences of the
+Wizard that he had heard from Moore in London. 'Scott was the soul of
+honesty,' Moore had said. 'When I was on a visit to him, we were coming
+up from Kelso at sunset, and as there was to be a fine moon, I quoted to
+him his own rule for seeing "fair Melrose aright," and proposed to stay
+an hour and enjoy it. "Bah," said Scott. "I never saw it by moonlight."
+We went, however, and Scott, who seemed to be on the most familiar terms
+with the cicerone, pointed to an empty niche, and said to him: "I think
+I have a Virgin and Child that will just do for your niche. I'll send it
+to you." "How happy you have made that man," I said. "Oh," said Scott,
+"it was always in the way, and Madam Scott is constantly grudging it
+house-room. We're well rid of it." Any other man would have allowed
+himself at least the credit of a kind action.'</p>
+
+<p>After a stay at a Lancashire country-house, Willis arrived at
+Liverpool, where he got his first sight of the newly-opened railway to
+Manchester. In the letters and journals of the period, it is rather
+unusual to come upon any allusion to the great revolution in
+land-travelling. We often read of our grandfathers' astonishment at the
+steam-packets that crossed the Atlantic in a fortnight, but they seem to
+have slid into the habit of travelling by rail almost as a matter of
+course, much as their descendants have taken to touring in motor-cars.
+Willis the observant, however, has left on record his sensations during
+his first journey by rail.</p>
+
+<p>'Down we dived into the long tunnel,' he relates, 'emerging from the
+darkness at a pace that made my hair sensibly tighten, and hold on with
+apprehension. Thirty miles in the hour is pleasant going when one is a
+little accustomed to it, it gives one such a pleasant contempt for time
+and distance. The whizzing past of the return trains, going in the
+opposite direction with the same degree of velocity--making you recoil
+in one second, and a mile off the next--was the only thing which, after
+a few minutes, I did not take to very kindly.'</p>
+
+<p>Willis adds to our obligations by reporting the cries of the
+newsboys at the Elephant and Castle, where all the coaches to and from
+the South stopped for twenty minutes. On the occasion that our traveller
+passed through, the boys were crying 'Noospipper, sir! Buy the morning
+pippers, sir! <i>Times, Herald, Chrinnicle,</i> and <i>Munning Post</i>,
+sir--contains Lud Brum's entire innihalation of Lud Nummanby--Ledy Flor
+'Estings' murder by Lud Melbun and the Maids of Honour--debate on the
+Croolty-Hannimals Bill, and a fatil catstrophy in conskens of loosfer
+matches! Sixpence, only sixpence!'</p>
+
+<p>In November Willis returned to London, and took lodgings in Vigo
+Street. During the next ten months he seems to have done a good deal of
+work for the magazines, and to have been made much of in society as a
+literary celebrity. His stories and articles, which appeared in the <i>New
+Monthly Magazine</i> under the pseudonym of Philip Slingsby, were
+eagerly read by the public of that day. He was presented at court,
+admitted to the Athenacum and Travellers' Clubs, and patronised by Lady
+Charlotte Bury and Lady Stepney, ladies who were in the habit of writing
+bad novels, and giving excellent dinners. Madden, Lady Blessington's
+biographer, who saw a good deal of Willis at this time, says that he was
+an extremely agreeable young man, somewhat over-dressed, and a little
+too <i>d&eacute;monstratif</i>, but abounding in good spirits. 'He was
+observant and communicative, lively and clever in conversation, having
+the peculiar art of making himself agreeable to ladies, old and young, <i>d&eacute;gag&eacute;</i>
+in his manner, and on exceedingly good terms with himself.'</p>
+
+<p>Not only had Willis the <i>entr&eacute;e</i> into fashionable
+Bohemia, but he was well received in many families of unquestionable
+respectability. Elderly and middle-aged ladies were especially attracted
+by his flattering attentions and deferential manners, and at this time
+two of his most devoted friends were Mrs. Shaw of the Manor House, Lee,
+a daughter of Lord Erskine, and Mrs. Skinner of Shirley Park, the wife
+of an Indian nabob. Their houses were always open to him, and he says in
+a letter to his mother: 'I have two homes in England where I am loved
+like a child. I had a letter from Mrs. Shaw, who thought I looked
+low-spirited at the opera the other night. "Young men have but two
+causes of unhappiness," she writes, "love and money. If it is <i>money</i>,
+Mr. Shaw wishes me to say you shall have as much as you want; if it is <i>love</i>,
+tell us the lady, and perhaps we can help you." I spend my Sundays
+alternately at their splendid country-house, and at Mrs. Skinner's, and
+they can never get enough of me. I am often asked if I carry a
+love-philter with me.'</p>
+
+<p>At Shirley Park, Willis struck up a friendship with Jane Porter, and
+made the acquaintance of Lady Morgan, Praed, John Leech, and Martin
+Tupper. Mrs. Skinner professed to be extremely anxious to find him a
+suitable wife, and in a confidential letter to her, he writes: 'You say
+if you had a daughter you would give her to me. If you <i>had</i> one, I
+should certainly take you at your word, provided this <i>expos&eacute;</i>
+of my poverty did not change your fancy. I should like to marry in
+England, and I feel every day that my best years and best affections are
+running to waste. I am proud to <i>be</i> an American, but as a literary
+man, I would rather <i>live</i> in England. So if you know of any
+affectionate and <i>good</i> girl who would be content to live a quiet
+life, and could love your humble servant, you have full power to dispose
+of me, <i>provided</i> she has five hundred a year, or as much more as
+she likes. I know enough of the world to cut my throat, rather than
+bring a delicate woman down to a dependence on my brains for support.'</p>
+
+<p>In March of this year, 1835, Willis produced his <i>Melanie, and
+other Poems</i>, which was 'edited' by Barry Cornwall. He received the
+honour of a parody in the <i>Bon Gaultier Ballads</i>, entitled 'The
+Fight with the Snapping Turtle, or the American St. George.' In this
+ballad Willis and Bryant are represented as setting out to kill the
+Snapping Turtle, spurred on by the offer of a hundred dollars reward.
+The turtle swallows Willis, but is thereupon taken ill, and having
+returned him to earth again, dies in great agony. When he claims the
+reward, he is informed that:-- </p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp; 'Since you dragged the tarnal crittur<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From the bottom of the ponds,<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Here's the hundred dollars due you<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>All in Pennsylvanian bonds.</i>'</p>
+
+<p>At the end of the poem is a drawing of a pair of stocks, labelled
+'The only good American securities,' Willis seems to have been too busy
+to Boswellise this season, but we get a glimpse of him in his letters to
+Miss Mitford, and one or two of the notes in his diary are worth
+quoting. On April 22 he writes to the author of <i>Our Village</i> in
+his usual flattering style: 'I am anxious to see your play and your next
+book, and I quite agree with you that the drama is your <i>pied</i>,
+though I think laurels, and spreading ones, are sown for you in every
+department of writing. Nobody ever wrote better prose, and what could
+not the author of <i>Rienzi</i> do in verse. For myself, I am far from
+considering myself regularly embarked in literature, and if I can live
+without it, or ply any other vocation, shall vote it a thankless trade,
+and save my "entusymussy" for my wife and children--when I get them. I
+am at present steeped to the lips in London society, going to
+everything, from Devonshire House to a publisher's dinner in Paternoster
+Row, and it is not a bad <i>olla podrida</i> of life and manners. I dote
+on "England and true English," and was never so happy, or so at a loss
+to find a minute for care or forethought.'</p>
+
+<p>In his diary for June 30, Willis notes: 'Breakfasted with Samuel
+Rogers. Talked of Mrs. Butler's book, and Rogers gave us suppressed
+passages. Talked critics, and said that as long as you cast a shadow,
+you were sure that you possessed substance. Coleridge said of Southey,
+"I never think of him but as mending a pen." Southey said of Coleridge,
+"Whenever anything presents itself to him in the form of a duty, that
+moment he finds himself incapable of looking at it."' On July 9 we have
+the entry: 'Dined with Dr. Beattie, and met Thomas Campbell.... He spoke
+of Scott's slavishness to men of rank, but said it did not interfere
+with his genius. Said it sunk a man's heart to think that he and Byron
+were dead, and there was nobody left to praise or approve.... He told a
+story of dining with Burns and a Bozzy friend, who, when Campbell
+proposed the health of <i>Mr</i>. Burns, said, "Sir, you will always be
+known as <i>Mr</i>. Campbell, but posterity will talk of <i>Burns</i>."
+He was playful and amusing, and drank gin and water.'</p>
+
+<p>While staying with the Skinners in August, Willis met his fate in
+the person of Miss Mary Stace, daughter of a General Stace. After a
+week's acquaintance he proposed to her, and was accepted. She was, we
+are told, a beauty of the purest Saxon type, with a bright complexion,
+blue eyes, light-brown hair, and delicate, regular features. Her
+disposition was clinging and affectionate, and she had enjoyed the
+religious bringing up that her lover thought of supreme importance to a
+woman. General Stace agreed to allow his daughter &pound;300 a year,
+which with the &pound;400 that Willis made by his pen, was considered a
+sufficient income for the young couple to start housekeeping upon.</p>
+
+<p>Willis, who had promised to pay Miss Mitford a visit in the autumn,
+writes to her on September 22, to explain that all his plans were
+altered. 'Just before starting with Miss Jane Porter on a tour that was
+to include Reading,' he says, 'I went to a picnic, fell in love with a
+blue-eyed girl, and (after running the gauntlet successfully through
+France, Italy, Greece, Germany, Asia Minor, and Turkey) I renewed my
+youth, and became "a suitor for love." I am to be married (<i>sequitur</i>)
+on Thursday week.... The lady who is to take me, as the Irish say, "in
+a present," is some six years younger than myself, gentle, religious,
+relying, and unambitious. She has never been whirled through the gay
+society of London, so is not giddy or vain. She has never swum in a
+gondola, or written a sonnet, so has a proper respect for those who
+have. She is called pretty, but is more than that in <i>my</i> eyes;
+sings as if her heart were hid in her lips, and <i>loves</i> me.... We
+are bound to Paris for a month (because I think amusement better than
+reflection when a woman makes a doubtful bargain), and by November we
+return to London for the winter, and in the spring sail for America to
+see my mother. I have promised to live mainly on this side of the water,
+and shall return in the course of a year to try what contentment may be
+sown and reaped in a green lane in Kent.'</p>
+
+<p>While the happy pair were on their honeymoon, Lady Blessington had
+undertaken to see the <i>Pencillings by the Way</i> through the press.
+For the first edition Willis received &pound;250, but he made, from
+first to last, about a thousand pounds by the book. Its appearance in
+volume form had been anticipated by Lockhart's scathing review in the <i>Quarterly</i>
+for September 1835. The critic, annoyed at Willis's strictures on
+himself in the interview with Professor Wilson, attacked the <i>Pencillings</i>,
+as they had appeared in the <i>New York Mirror</i>, with all proper
+names printed in full, and many personal details that were left out in
+the English edition. Lockhart always knew how to stab a man in the
+tenderest place, and he stabbed Willis in his gentility. After pointing
+out that while visiting in London and the provinces as a young American
+sonneteer of the most ultra-sentimental delicacy, the Penciller was all
+the time the regular paid correspondent of a New York Journal, he
+observes that the letters derive their powers of entertainment chiefly
+from the light that they reflect upon the manners and customs of the
+author's own countrymen, since, from his sketches of English interiors,
+the reader may learn what American breakfast, dinners, and table-talk
+are <i>not</i>; or at all events what they were not in those circles of
+American society with which the writer happened to be familiar.</p>
+
+<p>'Many of <i>this person's</i> discoveries,' continues Lockhart,
+warming to his work, 'will be received with ridicule in his own country,
+where the doors of the best houses were probably not opened to him as
+liberally as those of the English nobility. In short, we are apt to
+consider him as a just representative--not of the American mind and
+manners generally--but only of the young men of fair education among the
+busy, middling orders of mercantile cities. In his letters from Gordon
+Castle there are bits of solid, full-grown impudence and impertinence;
+while over not a few of the paragraphs is a varnish of conceited
+vulgarity which is too ludicrous to be seriously offensive.... We can
+well believe that Mr. Willis depicted the sort of society that most
+interests his countrymen, "born to be slaves and struggling to be
+lords," their servile adulation of rank and talent; their stupid
+admiration of processions and levees, are leading features of all the
+American books of travel.... We much doubt if all the pretty things we
+have quoted will so far propitiate Lady Blessington as to make her again
+admit to her table the animal who has printed what ensues. [Here follows
+the report of Moore's conversation on the subject of O'Connell.] As far
+as we are acquainted with English or American literature, this is the
+first example of a man creeping into your home, and forthwith, before
+your claret is dry on his lips, printing <i>table-talk on delicate
+subjects, and capable of compromising individuals</i>.'</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Quarterly</i> having thus given the lead, the rest of the
+Tory magazines gaily followed suit. Maginn flourished his shillelagh,
+and belaboured his victim with a brutality that has hardly ever been
+equalled, even by the pioneer journals of the Wild West. 'This is a
+goose of a book,' he begins, 'or if anybody wishes the idiom changed,
+the book of a goose. There is not an idea in it beyond what might
+germinate in the brain of a washerwoman.' He then proceeds to call the
+author by such elegant names as 'lickspittle,' 'beggarly skittler,'
+jackass, ninny, haberdasher, 'fifty-fifth rate scribbler of
+gripe-visited sonnets,' and 'namby-pamby writer in twaddling albums kept
+by the mustachioed widows or bony matrons of Portland Place.'</p>
+
+<p>The people whose hospitality Willis was accused of violating wrote
+to assure him of the pleasure his book had given them. Lord Dalhousie
+writes: 'We all agree in one sentiment, that a more amusing and
+delightful production was never issued by the press. The Duke and
+Duchess of Gordon were here lately, and expressed themselves in similar
+terms.' Lady Blessington did not withdraw her friendship, but Willis
+admits, in one of his letters, that he had no deeper regret than that
+his indiscretion should have checked the freedom of his approach to her.
+As a result of the slashing reviews, the book sold with the readiness of
+a <i>succ&eacute;s de scandale</i>, though it had been so rigorously
+edited for the English market, that very few indiscretions were left.</p>
+
+<p>The unexpurgated version of the <i>Pencillings</i> was, however,
+copied into the English papers and eagerly read by the persons most
+concerned, such as Fonblanque, who bitterly complained of the libel upon
+his personal appearance, O'Connell, who broke off his lifelong
+friendship with Moore, and Captain Marryat, who was furious at the
+remark that his 'gross trash' sold immensely in Wapping. Like Lockhart,
+he revenged himself by an article in his own magazine, the <i>Metropolitan</i>,
+in which he denounced Willis as a 'spurious attach&eacute;,' and made
+dark insinuations against his birth and parentage. This attack was too
+personal to be ignored. Willis demanded an apology, to which Marryat
+replied with a challenge, and after a long correspondence, most of which
+found its way into the <i>Times</i>, a duel was fixed to take place at
+Chatham. At the last moment the seconds managed to arrange matters
+between their principals, and the affair ended without bloodshed. This
+was fortunate for Willis, who was little used to fire-arms, whilst
+Marryat was a crack shot.</p>
+
+<p>In his preface to the first edition of the <i>Pencillings</i> Willis
+explains that the ephemeral nature and usual obscurity of periodical
+correspondence gave a sufficient warrant to his mind that his
+descriptions would die where they first saw the light, and that
+therefore he had indulged himself in a freedom of detail and topic only
+customary in posthumous memoirs. He expresses his astonishment that this
+particular sin should have been visited upon him at a distance of three
+thousand miles, when the <i>Quarterly</i> reviewer's own fame rested on
+the more aggravated instance of a book of personalities published under
+the very noses of the persons described (<i>Peter's Letters to his
+Kinsfolk</i>). After observing that he was little disposed to find
+fault, since everything in England pleased him, he proceeds: 'In one
+single instance I indulged myself in strictures upon individual
+character.... I but repeated what I had said a thousand times, and never
+without an indignant echo to its truth, that the editor of that Review
+was the most unprincipled critic of the age. Aside from its flagrant
+literary injustice, we owe to the <i>Quarterly</i> every spark of
+ill-feeling that has been kept alive between England and America for the
+last twenty years. The sneers, the opprobrious epithets of this bravo of
+literature have been received in a country where the machinery of
+reviewing was not understood, as the voice of the English people, and
+animosity for which there was no other reason has been thus periodically
+fed and exasperated. I conceive it to be my duty as a literary man--I <i>know</i>
+it is my duty as an American--to lose no opportunity of setting my heel
+on this reptile of criticism. He has turned and stung me. Thank God, I
+have escaped the slime of his approbation.'</p>
+
+<p>The winter was spent in London, and in the following March Willis
+brought out his <i>Inklings of Adventure</i>, a reprint of the stories
+that had appeared in various magazines over the signature of Philip
+Slingsby. These were supposed to be real adventures under a thin
+disguise of fiction, and the public eagerly read the tawdry little tales
+in the hope of discovering the identities of the <i>dramatis
+person&aelig;</i>. The majority of the 'Inklings' deal with the
+romantic adventures of a young literary man who wins the affection of
+high-born ladies, and is made much of in aristrocratic circles. The
+author revels in descriptions of luxurious boudoirs in which recline
+voluptuous blondes or exquisite brunettes, with hearts always at the
+disposal of the all-conquering Philip Slingsby. Fashionable fiction,
+however, was unable to support the expense of a fashionable
+establishment, and in May 1836 the couple sailed for America. Willis
+hoped to obtain a diplomatic appointment, and return to Europe for good,
+but all his efforts were vain, and he was obliged to rely on his pen for
+a livelihood. His first undertaking was the letterpress for an
+illustrated volume on American scenery; and for some months he travelled
+about the country with the artist who was responsible for the
+illustrations. On one of his journeys he fell in love with a pretty spot
+on the banks of the Owego Creek, near the junction with the Susquehanna,
+and bought a couple of hundred acres and a house, which he named
+Glenmary after his wife.</p>
+
+<p>Here the pair settled down happily for some five years, and here
+Willis wrote his pleasant, gossiping <i>Letters from Under a Bridge</i>
+for the <i>New York Mirror</i>. In these he prattled of his garden, his
+farm, his horses and dogs, and the strangers within his gates.
+Unfortunately, he was unable to devote much attention to his farm, which
+was said to grow nothing but flowers of speed, but was forced to spend
+more and more time in the editorial office, and to write hastily and
+incessantly for a livelihood. In 1839, owing to a temporary coolness
+with the proprietor of the <i>Mirror</i>, Willis accepted the proposal
+of his friend, Dr. Porter, that he should start a new weekly paper
+called the <i>Corsair</i>, one of a whole crop of pirate weeklies that
+started up with the establishment of the first service of Atlantic
+liners. In May 1839 the first steam-vessel that had crossed the ocean
+anchored in New York Harbour, and thenceforward it was possible to
+obtain supplies from the European literary markets within a fortnight of
+publication. It was arranged between Dr. Parker and Willis that the
+cream of the contemporary literature of England, France, and Germany
+should be conveyed to the readers of the <i>Corsair</i>, and of course
+there was no question of payment to the authors whose wares were thus
+appropriated.</p>
+
+<p>The first number of the <i>Corsair</i> appeared in January 1839, but
+apparently piracy was not always a lucrative trade, for the paper had an
+existence of little more than a year. In the course of its brief career,
+however, Willis paid a flying visit to England, where he accomplished a
+great deal of literary business. He had written a play called <i>The
+Usurer Matched</i>, which was brought out by Wallack at the Surrey
+Theatre, and is said to have been played to crowded houses during a
+fairly long run, but neither this nor any of his other plays brought the
+author fame or fortune. During this season he published his <i>Loiterings
+of Travel</i>, a collection of stories and sketches, a fourth edition
+of the <i>Pencillings</i>, an English edition of <i>Letters from Under
+a Bridge</i>, and arranged with Virtue for works on Irish and Canadian
+scenery. In addition to all this, he was contributing jottings in London
+to the <i>Corsair</i>. As might be supposed, he had not much time for
+society, but he met a few old friends, made acquaintance with Kemble and
+Kean, went to a ball at Almack's, and was present at the famous Eglinton
+Tournament, which watery catastrophe he described for his paper. One of
+the most interesting of his new acquaintances was Thackeray, then
+chiefly renowned as a writer for the magazines. On July 26 Willis writes
+to Dr. Porter:--</p>
+
+<p>'I have engaged a new contributor to the <i>Corsair</i>. Who do you
+think? The author of <i>Yellowplush</i> and <i>Major Gahagan</i>. He
+has gone to Paris, and will write letters from there, and afterwards
+from London for a guinea a <i>close</i> column of the <i>Corsair</i>--cheaper
+than I ever did anything in my life. For myself, I think him the very
+best periodical writer alive. He is a royal, daring, fine creature too.'
+In his published <i>Jottings</i>, Willis told his readers that 'Mr.
+Thackeray, the author, breakfasted with me yesterday, and the <i>Corsair</i>
+will be delighted to hear that I have engaged this cleverest and most
+gifted of all the magazine-writers of London to become <i>a regular
+correspondent of the Corsair</i>.... Thackeray is a tall,
+athletic-looking man of about forty-five [he was actually only
+eight-and-twenty], with a look of talent that could never be mistaken.
+He is one of the most accomplished draughtsmen in England, as well as
+the most brilliant of periodical writers.' Thackeray only wrote eight
+letters for the <i>Corsair</i>, which were afterwards republished in
+his <i>Paris Sketch-book</i>. There is an allusion to this episode in <i>The
+Adventures of Philip</i>, the hero being invited to contribute to a New
+York journal called <i>The Upper Ten Thousand</i>, a phrase invented by
+Willis.</p>
+
+<p>When the <i>Corsair</i> came to an untimely end, Willis had no
+difficulty in finding employment on other papers. He is said to have
+been the first American magazine-writer who was tolerably well paid, and
+at one time he was making about a thousand a year by periodical work.
+That his name was already celebrated among his own countrymen seems to
+be proved by the story of a commercial gentleman at a Boston tea-party
+who 'guessed that Goethe was the N.P. Willis of Germany.' The tales
+written about this time were afterwards collected into a volume called <i>Dashes
+at Life with a Free Pencil</i>. Thackeray made great fun of this work
+in the <i>Edinburgh Review</i> for October 1845, more especially of that
+portion called 'The Heart-book of Ernest Clay.' 'Like Caesar,' observed
+Thackeray, 'Ernest Clay is always writing of his own victories.
+Duchesses pine for him, modest virgins go into consumption and die for
+him, old grandmothers of sixty forget their families and their
+propriety, and fall on the neck of this "Free Pencil."' He quotes with
+delight the description of a certain Lady Mildred, one of Ernest Clay's
+numerous loves, who glides into the room at a London tea-party, 'with a
+step as elastic as the nod of a water-lily. A snowy turban, from which
+hung on either temple a cluster of crimson camellias still wet with the
+night-dew; long raven curls of undisturbed grace falling on shoulders of
+that indescribable and dewy coolness which follows a morning bath.' How
+naively, comments the critic, does this nobleman of nature recommend the
+use of this rare cosmetic!</p>
+
+<p>In spite of his popularity, Willis's affairs were not prospering at
+this time. He had received nothing from the estate of his father-in-law,
+who died in 1839, his publisher failed in 1842, and he was obliged to
+sell Glenmary and remove to New York, whence he had undertaken to send a
+fortnightly letter to a paper at Washington. This was the year of
+Dickens's visit to America, and Willis was present at the 'Boz Ball,'
+where he danced with Mrs. Dickens, to whom he afterwards did the honours
+of Broadway. In 1843 Willis made up his difference with Morris, and
+again became joint-editor of the <i>Mirror</i>, which, a year later,
+was changed from a weekly to a daily paper. His contributions to the
+journal consisted of stories, poems, letters, book-notices, answers to
+correspondents, and editorial gossip of all kinds.</p>
+
+<p>In March 1845 Mrs. Willis died in her confinement, leaving her
+(temporarily) broken-hearted husband with one little girl. 'An angel
+without fault or foible' was his epitaph upon the woman to whom, in
+spite of his many fictitious <i>bonnes fortunes</i>, he is said to have
+been faithfully attached. But Willis was not born to live alone, and in
+the following summer he fell in love with a Miss Cornelia Grinnell at
+Washington, and was married to her in October, 1846. The second Mrs.
+Willis was nearly twenty years younger than her husband, but she was a
+sensible, energetic young woman, who made him an excellent wife.</p>
+
+<p>The title of the <i>Mirror</i> had been changed to that of <i>The
+Home Journal</i>, and under its new name it became a prosperous paper.
+Willis, who was the leading spirit of the enterprise, set himself to
+portray the town, chronicling plays, dances, picture-exhibitions, sights
+and entertainments of all kinds in the airy manner that was so keenly
+appreciated by his countrymen. He was recognised as an authority on
+fashion, and his correspondence columns were crowded with appeals for
+guidance in questions of dress and etiquette. He was also a favourite in
+general society, though he is said to have been, next to Fenimore
+Cooper, the best-abused man of letters in America. One of his most
+pleasing characteristics was his ready appreciation and encouragement of
+young writers, for he was totally free from professional jealousy. He
+was the literary sponsor of Aldrich, Bayard Taylor, and Lowell, among
+others, and the last-named alludes to Willis in his <i>Fable for Critics</i>
+(1848) in the following flattering lines: </p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp; 'His nature's a glass of champagne with the foam on't,<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As tender as Fletcher, as witty as Beaumont;<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; So his best things are done in the heat of the moment.<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; *&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+*<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; He'd have been just the fellow to sup at the 'Mermaid,'<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Cracking jokes at rare Ben, with an eye to the barmaid,<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; His wit running up as Canary ran down,--<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The topmost bright bubble on the wave of the town.'</p>
+
+<p>After 1846 Willis wrote little except gossiping paragraphs and other
+ephemera. In answer to remonstrances against this method of frittering
+away his talents, he was accustomed to reply that the public liked
+trifles, and that he was bound to go on 'buttering curiosity with the
+ooze of his brains.' He read but little in later life, nor associated
+with men of high intellect or serious aims, but showed an
+ever-increasing preference for the frivolous and the feminine. In 1850
+he published another volume of little magazine stories called <i>People
+I have Met</i>. This appeared in London as well as in New York, and
+Thackeray again revenged himself for that close column which had been
+rewarded by an uncertain guinea, by holding up his former editor to
+ridicule. With mischievous delight he describes the amusement that is to
+be found in N.P. Willis's society, 'amusement at the immensity of N.P.'s
+blunders; amusement at the prodigiousness of his self-esteem; amusement
+always with or at Willis the poet, Willis the man, Willis the dandy,
+Willis the lover--now the Broadway Crichton--once the ruler of fashion
+and heart-enslaver of Bond Street, and the Boulevard, and the Corso, and
+the Chiaja, and the Constantinople Bazaars. It is well for the general
+peace of families that the world does not produce many such men; there
+would be no keeping our wives and daughters in their senses were such
+fascinators to make frequent apparitions among us; but it is comfortable
+that there should have been a Willis; and as a literary man myself, and
+anxious for the honour of that profession, I am proud to think that a
+man of our calling should have come, should have seen, should have
+conquered as Willis has done.... There is more or less of truth, he
+nobly says, in these stories--more or less truth, to be sure there
+is--and it is on account of this more or less truth that I for my part
+love and applaud this hero and poet. We live in our own country, and
+don't know it; Willis walks into it, and dominates it at once. To know a
+duchess, for instance, is given to very few of us. He sees things that
+are not given to us to see. We see the duchess in her carriage, and gaze
+with much reverence on the strawberry-leaves on the panels, and her
+grace within; whereas the odds are that that lovely duchess has had, one
+time or the other, a desperate flirtation with Willis the Conqueror.
+Perhaps she is thinking of him at this very moment, as her jewelled hand
+presses her perfumed handkerchief to her fair and coroneted brow, and
+she languidly stops to purchase a ruby bracelet at Gunter's, or to sip
+an ice at Howell and James's. He must have whole mattresses stuffed with
+the blonde or raven or auburn tresses of England's fairest daughters.
+When the female English aristocracy read the title of <i>People I have
+Met</i>, I can fancy the whole female peerage of Willis's time in a
+shudder; and the melancholy marchioness, and the abandoned countess, and
+the heart-stricken baroness trembling as each gets the volume, and asks
+of her guilty conscience, "Gracious goodness, is the monster going to
+show up me?"'</p>
+
+<p>In 1853 Willis, who had been obliged to travel for the benefit of
+his declining health, took a fancy to the neighbourhood of the Hudson,
+and bought fifty acres of waste land, upon which he built himself a
+house, and called the place Idlewild. Here he settled down once more to
+a quiet country life, took care of his health, cultivated his garden,
+and wrote long weekly letters to the <i>Home Journal</i>. He had by
+this time five children, middle age had stolen upon him, and now that he
+could no longer pose as his own allconquering hero, his hand seems to
+have lost its cunning. His editorial articles, afterwards published
+under the appropriate title of <i>Ephemera</i>, grew thinner and
+flatter with the passing of the years; yet slight and superficial as the
+best of them are, they were the result of very hard writing. His
+manuscripts were a mass of erasures and interlineations, but his copy
+was so neatly prepared that even the erasures had a sort of 'wavy
+elegance' which the compositors actually preferred to print. His
+mannerisms and affectations grew upon him in his later years, and he
+became more and more addicted to the coining of new words and phrases,
+only a few of which proved effective. Besides the now well-worn term,
+the 'upper ten thousand,' he is credited with the invention of
+'Japonicadom,' 'come-at-able,' and 'stay-at-home-ativeness.' One or two
+of his sayings may be worth quoting, such as his request for Washington
+Irving's blotting-book, because it was the door-mat on which the
+thoughts of his last book had wiped their sandals before they went in;
+and his remark that to ask a literary man to write a letter after his
+day's work was like asking a penny-postman to take a walk in the evening
+for the pleasure of it.</p>
+
+<p>On the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861, Willis went to Washington
+as war-correspondent of his paper. It does not appear that he saw any
+harder service than the dinners and receptions of the capitol, since an
+opportune fit of illness prevented his following the army to Bull's Run.
+The correspondent who took his place on the march had his career cut
+short by a Southern bullet. Willis, meanwhile, was driving about with
+Mrs. Lincoln, with whom he became a favourite, although she reproached
+him for his want of tact in speaking of her 'motherly expression' in one
+of his published letters, she being at that time only thirty-six. He met
+Hawthorne at Washington, and describes him as very shy and reserved in
+manner, but adds, 'I found he was a lover of mine, and we enjoyed our
+acquaintance very much.' One of the minor results of the great Civil War
+was the extinguishing of Willis's literary reputation; his frothy
+trifling suddenly became obsolete when men had sterner things to think
+about than the cut of a coat, or the etiquette of a morning call. The
+nation began to demand realities, even in its fiction, the circulation
+of the <i>Home Journal</i> fell off, and Willis, who had always affected
+a horror of figures and business matters generally, found himself in
+financial difficulties. He was obliged to let Idlewild, and return, in
+spite of his rapidly failing health, to the editorial office at New York.</p>
+
+<p>The last few years of Willis's career afford a melancholy contrast
+to its brilliant opening. Health, success, prosperity--all had deserted
+him, and nothing remained but the editorial chair, to which he clung
+even after epileptic attacks had resulted in paralysis and gradual
+softening of the brain. The failure of his mental powers was kept secret
+as long as possible, but in November, 1866, he yielded to the entreaties
+of his wife and children, knocked off work for ever, and went home to
+die. His last few months were passed in helpless weakness, and he only
+occasionally recognised those around him. The end came on January 20,
+1867, his sixty-first birthday.</p>
+
+<p>Selections from Willis's prose works have been published within
+recent years in America, and a new edition of his poems has appeared in
+England, while a carefully written Life by Mr. De Beers is included in
+the series of 'American Men of Letters.' But in this country at least
+his fame, such as it is, will rest upon his sketches of such celebrities
+as Lamb, Moore, Bulwer, D'Orsay, and D'Israeli. As long as we retain any
+interest in them and their works, we shall like to know how they looked
+and dressed, and what they talked about in private life. It is
+impossible altogether to approve of the Penciller--his absurdities were
+too marked, and his indiscretions too many--yet it is probable that few
+who have followed his meteor-like career will be able to refrain from
+echoing Thackeray's dictum: 'It is comfortable that there should have
+been a Willis!'<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;">
+
+<p><br>
+</p>
+
+<p style="font-weight: bold; text-align: center;"><big><a
+ name="STANHOPE"></a> <big>LADY HESTER STANHOPE</big><br>
+<br>
+</big></p>
+<div style="text-align: center;"> </div>
+<div style="text-align: center;"><img src="images/Stanhope1.jpg"
+ title="Lady Hester Stanhope. From a drawing by R. J. Hamerton"
+ alt="Lady Hester Stanhope. From a drawing by R. J. Hamerton"
+ style="width: 388px; height: 608px;"><br>
+</div>
+<div style="text-align: center;"> <br>
+</div>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 20%;">
+
+<p style="font-weight: bold; text-align: center;">PART I</p>
+
+<p>There are few true stories that are distinguished by a well-marked
+moral. If we study human chronicles we generally find the ungodly
+flourishing permanently like a green bay-tree, and the righteous
+apparently forsaken and begging his bread. But it occasionally happens
+that a human life illustrates some moral lesson with the triteness and
+crudity of a Sunday-school book, and of such is the career of Lady
+Hester Stanhope, a Pitt on the mother's side, and more of a Pitt in
+temper and disposition than her grandfather, the great Commoner himself.
+Her story contains the useful but conventional lesson that pride goeth
+before a fall, and that all earthly glory is but vanity, together with a
+warning against the ambition that o'erleaps itself, and ends in failure
+and humiliation. That humanity will profit by such a lesson, whether
+true or invented for didactic purposes, is doubtful, but at least Nature
+has done her best for once to usurp the seat of the preacher, 'to point
+a moral and adorn a tale.' Lady Hester, who was born on March 12,1776,
+was the eldest daughter of Charles, third Earl of Stanhope, by his first
+wife Hester, daughter of the great Lord Chatham. Lord Stanhope seems to
+have been an uncomfortable person, who combined scientific research with
+democratic principles, and contrived to quarrel with most of his family.
+In order to live up to his theories he laid down his carriage and
+horses, effaced the armorial bearings from his plate, and removed from
+his walls some famous tapestry, because it was 'so d----d
+aristocratical.' If one of his daughters happened to look better than
+usual in a becoming hat or frock, he had the garment laid away, and
+something coarse put in its place. The children were left almost
+entirely to the care of governesses and tutors, their step-mother, the
+second Lady Stanhope (a Grenville by birth) being a fashionable fine
+lady, who devoted her whole time to her social duties, while Lord
+Stanhope was absorbed by his scientific pursuits. The home was not a
+happy one, either for the three girls of the first marriage, or for the
+three sons of the second. In 1796 Rachel, the youngest daughter, eloped
+with a Sevenoaks apothecary named Taylor, and was cast off by her
+family; and in 1800 Griselda, the second daughter, married a Mr. Tekell,
+of Hampshire. In this year Hester left her home, which George III used
+to call Democracy Hall, and went to live with her grandmother, the
+Dowager Lady Stanhope.</p>
+
+<p>On the death of Lady Stanhope in 1803, Lady Hester was offered a
+home by her uncle, William Pitt, with whom she remained until his death
+in 1806. Pitt became deeply attached to his handsome, high-spirited
+niece. He believed in her sincerity and affection for himself, admired
+her courage and cleverness, laughed at her temper, and encouraged her
+pride. She seems to have gained a considerable influence over her uncle,
+and contrived to have a finger in most of the ministerial pies. When
+reproached for allowing her such unreserved liberty of action in state
+affairs, Pitt was accustomed to reply, 'I let her do as she pleases; for
+if she were resolved to cheat the devil himself, she would do it.' 'And
+so I would,' Lady Hester used to add, when she told the story. If we may
+believe her own account, Pitt told her that she was fit to sit between
+Augustus and M&aelig;cenas, and assured her that 'I have plenty of good
+diplomatists, but they are none of them military men; and I have plenty
+of good officers, but not one of them is worth sixpence in the cabinet.
+If you were a man, Hester, I would send you on the Continent with 60,000
+men, and give you <i>carte blanche</i>, and I am sure that not one of
+my plans would fail, and not one soldier would go with his boots
+unblacked.' This admiration, according to the same authority, was shared
+by George III, who one day on the Terrace at Windsor informed Mr. Pitt
+that he had got a new and superior minister in his room, and one,
+moreover, who was a good general. 'There is my new minister,' he added,
+pointing at Lady Hester. 'There is not a man in my kingdom who is a
+better politician, and there is not a woman who better adorns her sex.
+And let me say, Mr. Pitt, you have not reason to be proud you are a
+minister, for there have been many before you, and will be many after
+you; but you have reason to be proud of her, who unites everything that
+is great in man and woman.'</p>
+
+<p>All this must, of course, be taken with grains of salt, but it is
+certain that Lady Hester occupied a position of almost unparalleled
+supremacy for a woman, that she dispensed patronage, lectured ministers,
+and snubbed princes. On one occasion Lord Mulgrave, who had just been
+appointed Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, found a broken
+egg-spoon on the breakfast-table at Walmer, and asked, 'How can Mr. Pitt
+have such a spoon as this?' 'Don't you know,' retorted Lady Hester,
+'that Mr. Pitt sometimes uses very slight and weak instruments wherewith
+to effect his ends?' Again, when Mr. Addington wished to take the title
+of Lord Raleigh, Lady Hester determined to prevent what she regarded as
+a desecration of a great name. She professed to have seen a caricature,
+which she minutely described, representing Mr. Addington as Sir Walter
+Raleigh, and the King as Queen Elizabeth. Mr. Pitt, believing the story,
+repeated it to Addington and others, with the result that messengers
+were despatched to all the print-shops to buy up the whole impression.
+Of course no such caricature was to be found, but the prospective peer
+had received a fright, and chose the inoffensive title of Lord Sidmouth.
+Lady Hester despised Lord Liverpool for a well-meaning blunderer, but
+she hated and distrusted Canning, whom she was accustomed to describe as
+a fiery, red-headed Irish politician, who was never staunch to any
+person or any party; and she declared that by her scoldings she had
+often made him blubber like a schoolboy. It cannot be supposed that her
+ladyship was popular with the numerous persons, high and low, who came
+under the ban of her displeasure, or suffered from her pride; but she
+was young, handsome, and witty, her position was unassailable, and as
+long as her uncle chose to laugh at her insolence and her
+eccentricities, no lesser power presumed to frown.</p>
+
+<p>For her beauty in youth we must again take her own account on trust,
+since she never consented to sit for her portrait, and in old age her
+recollection of her vanished charms may have been coloured by some
+pardonable exaggeration. 'At twenty,' she told a chronicler, 'my
+complexion was like alabaster, and at five paces distant the sharpest
+eyes could not discover my pearl necklace from my skin. My lips were of
+such a beautiful carnation that, without vanity, I can assure you, very
+few women had the like. A dark-blue shade under the eyes, and the blue
+veins that were observable through the transparent skin, heightened the
+brilliancy of my features. Nor were the roses wanting in my cheeks; and
+to all this was added a permanency in my looks that no sort of fatigue
+could impair.' She was fond of relating an anecdote of a flattering
+impertinence on the part of Beau Brummell, who, meeting her at a ball,
+coolly took the earrings out of her ears, telling her that she should
+not wear such things, as they hid the fine turn of her cheek, and the
+set of head upon her neck. Lady Hester frankly admitted, however, that
+it was her brilliant colouring that made her beauty, and once observed,
+in reply to a compliment on her appearance: 'If you were to take every
+feature in my face, and lay them one by one on the table, there is not a
+single one that would bear examination. The only thing is that, put
+together and lighted up, they look well enough. It is homogeneous
+ugliness, and nothing more.'</p>
+
+<p>With Pitt's death in January, 1806, as by the stroke of a magic
+wand, all the power, all the glory, and all the grandeur came to a
+sudden end, and the great minister's favourite niece fell to the level
+of a private lady, with a moderate income, no influence, and a host of
+enemies. On his deathbed, Pitt had asked that an annuity of &pound;1500
+might be granted to Lady Hester, but in the end only &pound;1200 was
+awarded to her, a trifling income for one with such exalted ideas of her
+own importance. A house was taken in Montagu Square, where Lady Hester
+entertained her half-brothers, Charles and James Stanhope, when their
+military duties allowed of their being in town. Here she led but a
+melancholy life, for her means would not allow of her keeping a
+carriage, and she fancied that it was incompatible with her dignity to
+drive in a hackney-coach, or to walk out attended by a servant. In 1809
+Charles Stanhope, like his chief, Sir John Moore, fell at Corunna.
+Charles was Lady Hester's favourite brother, and tradition says that Sir
+John Moore was her lover. Be that as it may, she broke up her
+establishment in town at this time, and retired to a lonely cottage in
+Wales, where she amused herself in superintending her dairy and
+physicking the poor. But she suffered in health and spirits, the
+contrast of the present with the past was too bitter to be endured in
+solitude, and in 1810 she decided to go abroad, and spend a year or two
+in the south. A young medical man, Dr. Meryon, [Footnote: Afterwards
+Lady Hester's chronicler.] was engaged to accompany her as her
+travelling physician, and the party further consisted of her brother,
+James Stanhope, and a friend, Mr. Nassau Sutton, together with two or
+three servants. Lady Hester was only thirty when her uncle died, but it
+does not seem to have been considered that she required any chaperonage,
+either at home or on her travels, nor does it appear that Lord Stanhope
+(who lived till 1816) took any further interest in her proceedings.</p>
+
+<p>On February 10, 1810, the travellers sailed for the Mediterranean on
+board the frigate <i>Jason</i>. It is not necessary to follow them over
+the now familiar ground of the early part of their tour. Gibraltar
+(whence Captain Stanhope left to join his regiment at Cadiz), Malta,
+Athens, Constantinople, these were the first stopping-places, and in
+each Lady Hester was treated with great respect by the authorities, and
+went her own way in defiance of all native customs and prejudices. At
+Athens her party was joined by Lord Sligo, who was making some
+excavations in the neighbourhood, and by Lord Byron, who had just won
+fresh laurels by swimming the Hellespont. Lady Hester formed but a poor
+opinion of the poet, whose affectations she used to mimic with
+considerable effect. 'I think Lord Byron was a strange character,' she
+said, many years later. 'His generosity was for a motive, his avarice
+was for a motive; one time he was mopish, and nobody was to speak to
+him; another, he was for being jocular with everybody.... At Athens I
+saw nothing in him but a well-bred man, like many others: for as for
+poetry, it is easy enough to write verses; and as for the thoughts, who
+knows where he got them? Many a one picks up some old book that nobody
+knows anything about, and gets his ideas out of it. He had a great deal
+of vice in his looks--his eyes set close together, and a contracted
+brow. O Lord! I am sure he was not a liberal man, whatever else he might
+be. The only good thing about his looks was this part [drawing her hand
+under her cheek, and down the front of her neck], and the curl on his
+forehead.'</p>
+
+<p>The winter of 1810 was passed at Constantinople, and the early part
+of 1811 at the Baths of Brusa. As Lady Hester had decided to spend the
+following winter in Egypt, a Greek vessel was hired for herself and her
+party, which now consisted of two gentlemen, Mr. Bruce and Mr. Pearce,
+besides her usual retinue, and on October 23 the travellers set sail for
+Alexandria. After experiencing contrary winds for two or three weeks,
+the ship sprang a leak, and the cry of 'All hands to the pumps' showed
+that danger was imminent. Lady Hester took the announcement of the
+misfortune with the greatest calmness, dressed herself, and ordered her
+maid to pack a small box with a few necessaries. It soon became evident
+that the ship could not keep afloat much longer, and that the passengers
+and crew must take to the long-boat if they wished to escape with their
+lives. They contrived, in spite of the high sea that was running, to
+steer their boat into a little creek on a rock off the island of Rhodes,
+and here, without either food or water, they remained for thirty hours
+before they were rescued, and taken ashore. Even then their state was
+hardly less pitiable, for they were wet through, had no change of
+clothes, and possessed hardly enough money for their immediate
+necessities. Lady Hester described her adventure in the following
+letter, dated Rhodes, December, 1811:--</p>
+
+<p>'I write one line by a ship which came in here for a few hours, just
+to tell you we are safe and well. Starving thirty hours on a bare rock,
+without even fresh water, being half naked and drenched with wet, having
+traversed an almost trackless country over dreadful rocks and mountains,
+laid me up at a village for a few days, but I have since crossed the
+island on an ass, going for six hours a day, which proves I am pretty
+well, now, at least.... My locket, and the valuable snuff-box Lord Sligo
+gave me, and two pelisses, are all I have saved--all the
+travelling-equipage for Smyrna is gone; the servants naked and unarmed;
+but the great loss of all is the medicine-chest, which saved the lives
+of so many travellers in Greece.'</p>
+
+<p>As they had lost nearly all their clothes, and knew that it would be
+impossible to procure a European refit in these regions, the travellers
+decided to adopt Turkish costumes. Dr. Meryon made a journey to Smyrna,
+where he raised money, and bought necessary articles for the shipwrecked
+party at Rhodes. On his return, laden with purchases, after an absence
+of five weeks, 'the packing-cases were opened [to quote his own
+description], and we assumed our new dresses. Ignorant at that time of
+the distinctions of dress which prevail in Turkey, every one flattered
+himself that he was habited becomingly. Lady Hester and Mr. Bruce little
+suspected, what proved to be the case, that their exterior was that of
+small gentry, and Mr. Pearce and myself thought we were far from looking
+like <i>Cha&ocirc;oshes</i> with our yatagans stuck in our girdles.'
+Lady Hester, it may be noted, had determined to adopt the dress of a
+Turkish gentleman, in order that she might travel unveiled, a proceeding
+that would have been impossible in female costume.</p>
+
+<p>The offer of a passage on a British frigate from Rhodes to
+Alexandria was gladly accepted by Lady Hester and her friends, and on
+February 14, 1812, they got their first glimpse of the Egyptian coast.
+After a fortnight spent in Alexandria, they proceeded to Cairo, where
+the pasha, who had never seen an Englishwoman of rank before, desired
+the honour of a visit from Lady Hester. In order to dazzle the eyes of
+her host, she arrayed herself in a magnificent Tunisian costume of
+purple velvet, elaborately embroidered in gold. For her turban and
+girdle she bought two cashmere shawls that cost &pound;50 each, her
+pantaloons cost &pound;40, her pelisse and waistcoat &pound;50, her
+sabre &pound;20, and her saddle &pound;35, while other articles
+necessary for the completion of the costume cost a hundred pounds more.
+The pasha sent five horses to convey herself and her friends to the
+palace, and much honour was shown her in the number of silver sticks
+that walked before her, and in the privilege accorded to her of
+dismounting at the inner gate. After the interview, the pasha reviewed
+his troops before his distinguished visitor, and presented her with a
+charger, magnificently caparisoned, which she sent to England as a
+present to the Duke of York, her favourite among all the royal princes.</p>
+
+<p>The next move was to Jaffa, where preparations were made for the
+regulation pilgrimage to Jerusalem. In her youth Lady Hester had been
+told by Samuel Brothers, the Prophet, that she was to visit Jerusalem,
+to pass seven years in the desert, to become the Queen of the Jews, and
+to lead forth a chosen people. Now, as she journeyed towards the Holy
+City with her cavalcade of eleven camels and thirteen horses, she saw
+the first part of the prophecy fulfilled, and laughingly avowed that she
+expected to see its final accomplishment. Lady Hester had now replaced
+her gorgeous Tunisian dress by a travelling Mameluke's costume,
+consisting of a satin vest, a red cloth jacket shaped like a spencer,
+and trimmed with gold lace, and loose, full trousers of the same cloth.
+Over this she wore a flowing white burnous, whose folds formed a
+becoming drapery to her majestic figure. In this costume she was
+generally mistaken by the natives for a young Bey with his moustaches
+not yet grown, but we are told that her assumption of male dress was
+severely criticised by the English residents in the Levant.</p>
+
+<p>From Jerusalem the party made a leisurely tour through Syria,
+visiting C&aelig;sarea, Acre, Nazareth, Sayda, where Lady Hester was
+entertained by her future enemy, the Emir Beshyr, prince of the
+Dr&ucirc;zes, and on September 1, 1812, arrived at Damascus, where a
+lengthened stay was made. Lady Hester had been warned that it would be
+dangerous for a woman, unveiled and in man's dress, to enter Damascus,
+which was then one of the most fanatical towns in all the Turkish
+dominions. But the granddaughter of Pitt feared neither Turk nor
+Christian, and rode through the streets daily with uncovered face, and
+though crowds assembled to see her start, she received honours instead
+of the expected insults. 'A grave yet pleasing look,' writes her
+chronicler, 'an unembarrassed yet commanding demeanour, met the ideas of
+the Turks, whose manners are of this caste.... When it is considered how
+fanatical the people of Damascus were, and in what great abhorrence they
+held infidels; that native Christians could only inhabit a particular
+quarter of the town; and that no one of these could ride on horseback
+within the walls, or wear as part of his dress any coloured cloth or
+showy turban, it will be a matter for surprise how completely these
+prejudices were set aside in favour of Lady Hester, and of those persons
+who were with her. She rode out every day, and according to the custom
+of the country, coffee was poured on the ground before her horse to do
+her honour. It was said that, in going through a bazaar, all the people
+rose up as she passed, an honour never paid but to a pasha, or to the
+mufti.'</p>
+
+<p>From the moment of her arrival at Damascus, Lady Hester had busied
+herself in arranging for a journey to the ruins of Palmyra. The
+expedition was considered not only difficult but dangerous, and she was
+assured that a large body of troops would be necessary to protect her
+from the robber tribes of the desert. While the practicability of the
+enterprise was still being anxiously discussed by her Turkish advisers,
+Lady Hester received a visit from a certain Nasar, son of Mahannah, Emir
+of the Anizys [Footnote: Dr. Meryon's somewhat erratic spelling of
+Oriental names is followed throughout this memoir.] (the collective name
+given to several of the Bedouin tribes ranging that part of the desert),
+who told her that he had heard of her proposed expedition, and that he
+came to warn her against attempting to cross the desert under military
+escort, since in that case she would be treated as an enemy by the
+tribes. But, he added, if she would place herself under the protection
+of the Arabs, and rely upon their honour, they would pledge themselves
+to conduct her from Hamah to Palmyra and back again in safety. The
+result of this interview was that Lady Hester declined the pasha's offer
+of troops, and leaving the doctor to wind up affairs at Damascus she
+departed alone, ostensibly for Hamah, a city on the highroad to Aleppo.
+But having secretly arranged a meeting with the Emir Mahannah in the
+desert, she rode straight to his camp, accompanied by Monsieur and
+Madame Lascaris, who were living in the neighbourhood, and by a Bedouin
+guide. In a letter to General Oakes, dated January 25, 1813, she gives
+the following account of her first experiment upon the good faith of the
+Arabs:--</p>
+
+<p>'I went with the great chief, Mahannah el Fadel (who commands 40,000
+men), into the desert for a week, and marched for three days with their
+camp. I was treated with the greatest respect and hospitality, and it
+was the most curious sight I ever saw; horses and mares fed upon camel's
+milk; Arabs living upon little else except rice; the space around me
+covered with living things; 1600 camels coming to water from one tribe
+only; the old poets from the banks of the Euphrates singing the praises
+of the ancient heroes; women with lips dyed bright blue, and nails red,
+and hands all over flowers and different designs; a chief who is obeyed
+like a great king; starvation and pride so mixed that really I could not
+have had an idea of it.... However, I have every reason to be perfectly
+contented with their conduct towards me, and I am the Queen with them
+all.'</p>
+
+<p>The preparations for the journey occupied nearly two months, the
+cavalcade being on a magnificent scale. Twenty-two camels were to carry
+the baggage, twenty-five horsemen formed the retinue, in addition to the
+Bedouin escort, led by Nasar, the Emir's son. Still the risk was great,
+for Lady Hester carried with her many articles of value, and of course
+was wholly at the mercy of her conductors, who got their living by
+plunder. But she sought the remains of Zenobia as well as the ruins of
+Palmyra, and had set her heart upon seeing the city which had been
+governed by one of her own sex, and owed its chief magnificence to her
+genius. Mr. Bruce, writing to General Oakes just before the start,
+observes: 'If Lady Hester succeeds in this undertaking, she will at
+least have the merit of being the first European female who has ever
+visited this once celebrated city. Who knows but she may prove another
+Zenobia, and be destined to restore it to its ancient splendour?'</p>
+
+<p>The cavalcade set out on March 20, a sum of about &pound;50 being
+paid over to the Emir for his escort, with the promise of twice as much
+more on the safe return of the party. The journey seems to have been
+uneventful save for the occasional sulks of the Bedouin leader, and the
+petty thefts of his followers. The inhabitants of Palmyra had been
+warned of the approach of the 'great white queen,' who rode a mare worth
+forty purses, and had in her possession a book which instructed her
+where to find treasure, and a bag of herbs with which she could
+transmute stones into gold. By way of welcome a body of about two
+hundred men, armed with matchlocks, went out to meet her, and displayed
+for her amusement a mock attack on, and defence of, a caravan. The
+guides led the cavalcade up through the long colonnade, which is
+terminated by a triumphal arch, the shaft of each of the pillars having
+a projecting pedestal, or console, on which a statue once stood. 'What
+was our surprise,' writes Dr. Meryon, 'to see, as we rode up the avenue,
+that several beautiful girls had been placed on these pedestals in the
+most graceful postures, and with garlands in their hands.... On each
+side of the arch other girls stood by threes, while a row of six was
+arranged across the gate of the arch with thyrsi in their hands. While
+Lady Hester advanced, these living statues remained immovable on their
+pedestals; but when she had passed, they leaped to the ground, and
+joined in a dance by her side. On reaching the triumphal arch, the whole
+in groups, both men and girls, danced round her. Here some bearded
+elders chanted verses in her praise, and all the spectators joined in
+the chorus. Lady Hester herself seemed to partake of the emotions to
+which her presence in this remote spot had given rise. Nor was the
+wonder of the Palmyrenes less than our own. They beheld with amazement a
+woman who had ventured thousands of miles from her own country, and
+crossed a waste where hunger and thirst were the least of the perils to
+be dreaded.' It may be observed that the people of Syria, excited by the
+achievements of Sir Sydney Smith, had begun to imagine that their land
+might be occupied by the English, and perhaps regarded Lady Hester as an
+English princess who had come to prepare the way, if not to take
+possession.</p>
+
+<p>The travellers were only allowed a week in which to examine the
+ruins of Palmyra, being hurried away by Prince Nasar on the plea that an
+attack was expected from a hostile tribe. After resting for a time at
+Hamah, and taking an affectionate farewell of their friendly Bedouins
+(Lady Hester was enrolled as an Anizy Arab of the tribe of Melken), they
+journeyed to Laodicea, which was believed to be free from the plague
+that was raging in other parts of Syria, and here the summer months were
+spent. In October Mr. Bruce received letters which obliged him to return
+at once to England, and, as Dr. Meryon observes, 'he therefore
+reluctantly prepared to quit a lady in whose society he had so long
+travelled, and from whose conversation and experience of the world so
+much useful knowledge was to be acquired.' Lady Hester had now renounced
+the idea of returning to Europe, at any rate for the present. She had
+some thoughts of taking a journey overland to Bussora, and had also
+entered into a correspondence with the chief of the Wahabys, with a view
+to travelling across the desert to visit him in his capital of
+Der&aacute;ych; but she finally decided on remaining for some months
+longer in Syria. She had heard of a house, once a monastery, at Mar
+Elias, near Sayda (the ancient Sidon), which could be hired for a small
+rent. The house was taken, the luggage shipped to Sayda, and Lady Hester
+and her doctor were preparing to follow, when both fell ill of a
+malignant fever, which they believed to be a species of plague. For some
+time Lady Hester's life was despaired of, but thanks to her splendid
+constitution, she pulled through, though she was not strong enough to
+leave Laodicea until January, 1814.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Hester had now become a sojourner instead of a traveller in the
+East, and, abandoning European customs altogether, she conformed
+entirely to the mode of life of the Orientals. Mar Elias, which was
+situated on a spur of Mount Lebanon, in a barren and rocky region,
+consisted of a one-storied stone building with flat roofs, enclosing a
+small paved court. 'Since her illness,' writes Dr. Meryon, 'Lady
+Hester's character seemed to have changed. She became simple in her
+habits, almost to cynicism. Scanning men and things with a wonderful
+intelligence, she commented upon them as if the motives of human action
+were laid open to her inspection.' The plague having again broken out in
+the neighbourhood, the party at Mar Elias were insulated upon their
+rock, and during the early days of their tenancy were in much the same
+position as the crew of a well-victualled ship at sea, having abundance
+of fresh provisions, but no books, no newspapers, and no intercourse
+with the outer world.</p>
+
+<p>In the autumn an expedition to the ruins of Baalbec was undertaken,
+and at Beyrout, on the way home, a servant brought the news that a
+Z&acirc;ym, or Capugi Bashi, [Footnote: Nominally a door-keeper,
+according to Dr. Meryon, but actually a Turkish official of high rank.]
+was at that town on his road to Sayda, and was reported to be going to
+capture Lady Hester, and carry her to Constantinople. Her ladyship
+received the announcement with her usual composure, and it turned out
+that she had long expected the Capugi Bashi, and knew the object of his
+visit. Scarcely had the travellers arrived at Mar Elias than a message
+came to Lady Hester, requesting her to meet the Z&acirc;ym at the house
+of the governor of Sayda, since it was not customary for a Turkish
+official to go to a Christian's house. But in this case the haughty
+Moslem had reckoned without his host. Lady Hester returned so spirited
+an answer that the Z&acirc;ym at once ordered his horses, and galloped
+over to Mar Elias. The doctor and the secretary, knowing nothing of the
+mission, felt considerable doubt of his intentions, and put loaded
+pistols in their girdles, determined that if he had a bowstring under
+his robes, no use should be made of it while they had a bullet at his
+disposal. In the Turkish dominions, it must be understood, a Capugi
+Bashi seldom comes into the provinces unless for some affair of
+strangling, beheading, confiscation, or imprisonment, and his presence
+is the more dreaded, as it is never known on whose head the blow will
+fall.</p>
+
+<p>In this case, fortunately, the Capugi's visit had no sinister
+motive. The fact was now divulged that Lady Hester had been given a
+manuscript, said to have been copied by a monk from the records of a
+Frank monastery in Syria, which disclosed the hiding-places of immense
+hoards of money buried in certain specified spots in the cities of
+Ascalon and Sayda. Lady Hester, having convinced herself of the
+genuineness of the manuscript, had written to the Sultan through Mr.,
+afterwards Sir Robert, Liston, for permission to make the necessary
+excavations, at the same time offering to forego all pecuniary benefit
+that might accrue from her labours. The custom of burying money in times
+of danger is so common in the East that credence was easily lent to the
+story, while the fact that treasure might lie for centuries untouched,
+even though the secret of its existence was known to several persons,
+was possible in a country where digging among ruins always excites
+dangerous suspicions in the minds of the authorities, and where the
+discovery of a jar of coins almost invariably leads to the ruin of the
+finder, who is supposed to keep back more than he reveals.</p>
+
+<p>The Sultan evidently believed that the matter was worth examination,
+for he had sent the Capugi from Constantinople to invest Lady Hester
+with greater authority over the Turks than had ever been granted even to
+a European ambassador. It was arranged that the first excavations should
+be made at Ascalon, and though Lady Hester, having only just returned
+from Baalbec, felt disinclined to set out at once on another long
+journey, the Z&acirc;ym urged her to lose no time, and himself went on
+to Acre to make the necessary preparations. As her income barely
+sufficed for her own expenditure, she resolved to ask the English
+Government to pay the cost of her search, holding that the honour which
+would thereby accrue to the English name was a sufficient justification
+for her demand.</p>
+
+<p>'I shall beg of you,' she said to Dr. Meryon, 'to keep a regular
+account of every article, and will then send in my bill to Government by
+Mr. Liston; when, if they refuse to pay me, I shall put it in the
+newspapers, and expose them. And this I shall let them know very
+plainly, as I consider it my right, and not as a favour; for if Sir A.
+Paget put down the cost of his servants' liveries after his embassy to
+Vienna, and made Mr. Pitt pay him, &pound;70,000 for four years, I
+cannot see why I should not do the same.'</p>
+
+<p>On February 15, 1815, Lady Hester left Mar Elias on horseback,
+followed by her usual retinue, and on arriving at Acre spent about three
+weeks in preparing for the work at Ascalon. In compliance with the
+firmans sent by the Porte to all the governors of Syria, she was treated
+with distinctions usually paid to no one under princely rank. 'Whenever
+she went out,' writes Dr. Meryon, 'she was followed by a crowd of
+spectators; and the curiosity and admiration which she had very
+generally excited throughout Syria were now increased by her supposed
+influence in the affairs of Government, in having a Capugi Bashi at her
+command.... No Turk now paid her a visit without wearing his mantle of
+ceremony, and every circumstance showed the ascendency she had gained in
+public opinion.' In addition to her own six tents, twenty more were
+furnished for her suite, besides twenty-two tent-pitchers, twelve mules
+to carry the baggage, and twelve camels to carry the tents. To Lady
+Hester's use was appropriated a gorgeous tilted palanquin or litter,
+covered with crimson cloth, and ornamented with gilded balls. In case
+she preferred riding, her mare and her favourite black ass were led in
+front of the litter. A hundred men of the Haw&agrave;ry cavalry escorted
+the procession, which left Acre on March 18, and arrived at Jaffa ten
+days later. Here a short halt was made, and on the last day of March
+they set off for Ascalon, their animals laden with shovels, pickaxes,
+and baskets. On arriving at their destination the tents were pitched in
+the midst of the ruins, while a cottage was fitted up for Lady Hester
+without the walls. Orders were at once despatched to the neighbouring
+villages for relays of labourers to work at the excavations. These men
+received no pay, being requisitioned by Government, but they were well
+fed and humanely treated by their English employer. The excavations were
+carried on for about a fortnight on the site indicated in the mysterious
+paper. During the first three days nothing was found except bones,
+fragments of pillars, and a few vases and bottles; but on the fourth day
+a fine, though mutilated, colossal statue was discovered, which
+apparently represented a deified king. Dr. Meryon made a sketch of the
+marble, and pointed out to Lady Hester that her labours had at least
+brought to light a treasure that would be valuable in the eyes of lovers
+of art, and that the ruins would be memorable for the enterprise of a
+woman who had rescued the remains of antiquity from oblivion. To his
+astonishment and dismay she replied, 'It is my intention to break up the
+statue, and have it thrown into the sea, precisely in order that such a
+report may not get abroad, and I lose with the Porte all the merit of my
+disinterestedness.' In vain Dr. Meryon represented that such an act
+would be an unpardonable vandalism, and was the less excusable since the
+Turks had neither claimed the statue, nor protested against its
+preservation. Her only answer was: 'Malicious people may say I came to
+search for antiquities for my country, and not for treasures for the
+Porte. So, go this instant, take with you half-a-dozen stout fellows,
+and break it into a thousand pieces.' Michaud, in his account of the
+affair, says that the Turks clamoured for the destruction of the statue,
+believing that the trunk was full of gold, and that Lady Hester had it
+broken up in order to prove to them their error. Be this as it may,
+reports were afterwards circulated in Ascalon that the statue had
+actually contained treasure, half of which was handed over to the Porte,
+and half kept by Lady Hester.</p>
+
+<p>On the sixth day two large stone troughs were discovered, upon which
+lay four granite pillars. This sight revived the hopes of the searchers,
+for it was thought that the mass of granite could not have fallen into
+such a position accidentally, but must have been placed there to conceal
+something of value. Great was the disappointment of all concerned when,
+on removing the pillars, the troughs were found to be empty. The
+excavations of the next four days having produced nothing of any value,
+the work was brought to an end, by Lady Hester's desire, on April 14.
+She had come to the conclusion that when Gezzar Pasha embellished the
+city of Acre by digging for marble among the ruins of Ascalon, he had
+been fortunate enough to discover the treasure, and she believed that
+his apparent mania for building was only a cloak to conceal his real
+motives for excavating. The officials and soldiers were handsomely
+rewarded for their trouble, and Lady Hester set out on her homeward
+journey, minus her tents, palanquin, military escort, and other emblems
+of grandeur, but with no loss of dignity or serenity.</p>
+
+<p>On returning to Mar Elias, she caused some excavations to be made
+near Sayda, but with no better success, and after a few days the work
+was abandoned. Lady Hester had been obliged to borrow a sum of money for
+her expenses from Mr. Barker, the British consul at Aleppo, and now,
+observes Dr. Meryon, 'as she had throughout proposed to herself no
+advantage but the celebrity which success would bring on her own name
+and that of the English nation, and as she had acted with the cognisance
+of our minister at Constantinople, she fancied that she had a claim upon
+the English Government for her expenses. Accordingly, she sent our
+ambassador an account of her proceedings, and after showing that all she
+had done was for the credit of her country, she asserted her right to be
+reimbursed. She was unsuccessful, however, in her application, and the
+expenses weighed heavily upon her means. Yet hitherto she had never been
+in debt, and by great care and economy she still contrived to keep out
+of it.'</p>
+
+<p>Lady Hester having apparently decided to spend the remainder of her
+days in Syria, Dr. Meryon informed her that he was anxious to return to
+his own country, but that he would not leave her until a substitute had
+been engaged. Accordingly, Giorgio, the Greek interpreter, was
+despatched to England to engage the doctor's successor, and to execute a
+number of commissions for his mistress. During the autumn Lady Hester
+was actively employed in stirring up the authorities to avenge the death
+of a French traveller, Colonel Boutin, who had been murdered by the
+Ansarys on the road between Hamah and Laodicea. As the pasha of the
+district had made no effort to trace or punish the murderers, she had
+taken the matter into her own hands, holding that the common cause of
+travellers demanded that such a crime should not go unpunished. Dr.
+Meryon vainly tried to dissuade her from this course of action, urging
+that the French consuls were bound to sift the affair, and that she, in
+taking so active a part, was exposing herself to the vengeance of the
+mountain tribes. As usual, the only effect of remonstrance was to make
+her more determined to persevere in the course she had marked out for
+herself. In the result, she succeeded in inducing the pasha to send a
+punitive expedition into the mountains, and herself directed the
+commandant, by information secretly obtained, where the criminals were
+to be found. Mustafa Aga Berber, governor of the district, led the
+expedition, and carried fire and sword into the Ansary country. It was
+reported that he burnt the villages of the assassins, and sent several
+heads to the pasha as tokens of his victories. Lady Hester received a
+vote of thanks from the French Chamber of Deputies, after a speech by
+Comte Delaborde, explaining the services she had rendered.</p>
+
+<p>News of the great events that were taking place in France had now
+reached Sayda, and Lady Hester, whose foible it was to think that the
+successors of Pitt could do no right, was highly displeased at the
+action of the British Government. She gave vent to her sentiments in the
+following letter, dated April 1816, to her cousin the Marquis
+(afterwards Duke) of Buckingham:--</p>
+
+<p>'You cannot doubt that a woman of my character and (I presume to
+say) understanding must have held in contempt and aversion all the
+statesmen of the present day, whose unbounded ignorance and duplicity
+have brought ruin on France, have spread their own shame through all
+Europe, and have exposed themselves not only to ridicule, but to the
+curses of present and future generations. One great mind, one single,
+enlightened statesman, whose virtues had equalled his talents, was all
+that was wanting to effect, at this unexampled period, the welfare of
+all Europe, by taking advantage of events the most extraordinary that
+have occurred in any era.... Cease therefore to torment me. I will not
+live in Europe, even were I, in flying from it, compelled to beg my
+bread. Once only will I go to France, to see you and James, but only
+that once. I will not be a martyr for nothing. The granddaughter of
+Chatham, the niece of the illustrious Pitt, feels herself blush that she
+was born in England--that England who has made her accursed gold the
+counterpoise to justice; that England who puts weeping humanity in
+irons, who has employed the valour of her troops, destined for the
+defence of her national honour, as the instrument to enslave a freeborn
+people; and who has exposed to ridicule and humiliation a monarch [Louis
+XVIII.] who might have gained the goodwill of his subjects if those
+intriguing English had left him to stand or fall upon his own merits.'</p>
+
+<p>The announcement of the arrival of the Princess of Wales at Acre,
+and the possibility that she might extend her journey to Sayda, induced
+Lady Hester to embark for Antioch, where she professed to have business
+with the British consul. It was considered an act of great daring on her
+part to go into a district inhabited entirely by the Ans&aacute;rys, on
+whom she had lately wrought so signal a vengeance. But the
+Ans&aacute;rys had apparently no desire to bring upon themselves a
+second punitive expedition, and though Lady Hester spent most of her
+time in a retired cottage outside the town, in defiance of the warning
+that her life was in danger, the tribes forbore to molest her. In
+September she returned to Mar Elias; and, a few weeks later, Giorgio
+returned from England, bringing with him an English surgeon and
+twenty-seven packing-cases filled with presents, to be distributed among
+Lady Hester's Turkish friends and acquaintances. On January 18, 1817,
+Dr. Meryon, having initiated his successor into Eastern manners and
+customs, took leave of his employer, and sailed for Europe, little
+thinking that he would ever set foot in Syria again.<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: center;"><a name="STANHOPE2"></a><img
+ src="images/Stanhope2.jpg"
+ title="Lady Hester Stanhope. From a drawing by R. J. Hamerton"
+ alt="Lady Hestor Stanhope. From a drawing by R. J. Hamerton."
+ style="width: 388px; height: 608px;"> <br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<div style="text-align: center;"> </div>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 20%;">
+
+<p style="font-weight: bold; text-align: center;"> PART II</p>
+
+<p> During the next ten or twelve years, we get but a few scanty
+glimpses of the white Queen of the Desert. After Dr. Meryon's departure,
+Lady Hester removed to a house in the village of Dar J&ocirc;on, or
+Djoun, a few miles from Mar Elias. To this house she added considerably,
+laid out some magnificent gardens, and enclosed the whole within high
+walls, after the manner of a mediaeval fortress. Here she seems to have
+passed her time in encouraging the Dr&ucirc;zes to rise against Ibrahim
+Pasha, intriguing against the British consuls, and attempting to bolster
+up the declining authority of the Sultan. In the intervals of political
+business she occupied herself with superintending her building and
+gardening operations, physicking the sick, and tyrannising over her
+numerous servants. At Mar Elias, which she still kept in her own hands,
+she maintained an eccentric old Frenchman, General Loustaunau,[Footnote:
+Dr. Meryon's spelling.] who had formerly been in the service of a Hindu
+rajah, but who, in his forlorn old age, had wandered to Syria, and
+there, by dint of applying scriptural texts to contemporary events, had
+earned the title of a prophet. Like Samuel Brothers, he prophesied
+marvellous things of Lady Hester's future, which she, rendered credulous
+by her solitary life in a mystic land, where her own power and
+importance were the chief facts in her mental horizon, came at length to
+believe.</p>
+
+<p>In the <i>Memoirs of a Babylonian Princess</i> by the Emira Asmar,
+daughter of the Emir Abdallah Asmar, the author tells us that as a girl
+she paid a long visit to the Emir Beshyr, prince of the Dr&ucirc;zes.
+During this visit, which apparently took place in the early 'twenties,'
+she was sent with a present of fruit to a neighbour's house, and there
+found a guest, a tall and splendid figure, arrayed in masculine costume,
+and engaged in smoking a narghila. The stranger, who talked Arabic with
+elegance and fluency, discoursed on the subject of astrology, and tried
+to dissuade the Emira from taking a projected journey to the west, where
+she declared the sun had set, and the hearts of the people retained not
+a spark of the virtues of their forefathers. 'Soon afterwards,'
+continues the author, 'she rose, and took her departure, attended by a
+large retinue. A spirited charger stood at the gate, champing the bit
+with fiery impatience. She put her foot in the stirrup, and vaulting
+nimbly into the saddle, which she bestrode like a man, started off at a
+rapid pace, galloping over rocks and mountains in advance of her suite,
+with a fearlessness and address that would have done honour to a
+Mameluke.' The stranger was, of course, none other than Lady Hester
+Stanhope, who, at that time, was on friendly terms with the Emir Beshyr,
+afterwards her bitterest enemy.</p>
+
+<p>In 1826 Lady Hester wrote to invite Dr. Meryon to return to her
+service for a time, and he, who seems all his life to have 'heard the
+East a-calling,' could not resist the invitation, though his movements
+were now hampered by a wife and children. He began at once to make
+preparations for his departure, but was unable to start before September
+1827. Meanwhile, Lady Hester had been gulled by an English traveller,
+designated as 'X.' in her letters, who had induced her to believe that
+he was empowered by the Duke of Sussex, the Duke of Bedford, and a
+committee of Freemasons, to offer her such sums as would extricate her
+out of her embarrassments, and to settle an income upon her for life.
+How a woman who professed to have an almost supernatural insight into
+the characters and thoughts of men, could have been deceived by this
+story, it is hard to understand; but apparently the difficulties of her
+situation, occasioned by her custom of making large presents to the
+pashas in order to keep up her authority, as well as by her benevolence
+to the poor in her neighbourhood, rendered her willing to catch at any
+straw for help. This 'X' had promised to send her a hundred purses for
+her current expenses, and to bring out from England masons and
+carpenters to enlarge her dwelling, in order that she might entertain
+the many distinguished people who desired to come and see her. In a
+letter to Dr. Meryon on this subject, Lady Hester writes:--</p>
+
+<p>'If X.'s story is true, and my debts, amounting to nearly
+&pound;10,000, are to be paid, then I shall go on making sublime and
+philosophical discoveries, and employing myself in deep, abstract
+studies. In that case I shall want a mason, carpenter, etc., income made
+out &pound;4000 a year, and &pound;1000 more for people like you, and
+&pound;500 ready money that I may stand clear. In the event that all
+that has been told me is a lie.... I shall give up everything for life
+to my creditors, and throw myself as a beggar on Asiatic charity, and
+wander far without one parra in my pocket, with the mare from the stable
+of Solomon in one hand, and a sheaf of the corn of Beni-Israel in the
+other. I shall meet death, or that which I believe to be written, which
+no mortal can efface. On September 7, Dr. Meryon and his family embarked
+at Leghorn for Cyprus, but on nearing Candia their merchant brig, which
+was taking out stores to the Turks, was attacked by a Greek vessel,
+whose officers took possession of the cargo, and also of all the
+passengers' property, except that belonging to the English party, which
+they left unmolested. The Italian captain was obliged to put back to
+Leghorn, and here Dr. Meryon heard the news of the battle of Navarino,
+and of the shelter afforded by Lady Hester Stanhope to two hundred
+refugee Europeans from Sayda. By this time she was at daggers-drawn with
+the Emir Beshyr, whose rival she had helped and protected. The Emir
+revenged himself by publishing in the village an order that all her
+native servants were to return to their homes, upon pain of losing their
+property and their lives. 'I gave them all their option,' she writes.
+'And most of them remained firm. Since that, he has threatened to seize
+and murder them here, which he shall not do without taking my life too.
+Besides this, he has given orders in all the villages that men, women,
+and children who render me the smallest service shall be cut in a
+thousand pieces. My servants cannot go out, and the peasants cannot
+approach the house. Therefore, I am in no very pleasant situation, being
+deprived of the necessary supplies of food, and what is worse, of water;
+for all the water here is brought on mules' backs up a great steep.'</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Meryon was unable to resume his voyage at this time, but in
+1828, the news that a malignant fever had attacked the household at
+J&ocirc;on, and carried off Lady Hester's companion, Miss Williams, gave
+rise to fresh plans for a visit to Syria. The doctor had, however, so
+much difficulty in overcoming his wife's fears of the voyage, that it
+was not until November, 1830, that he could induce her to embark at
+Marseilles on a vessel bound for the East. The party arrived at Beyrout
+on December 8, and found that Lady Hester had sent camels and asses to
+bring them on their way, together with a characteristic note to the
+effect that it would give her much pleasure to see the doctor, but that,
+as for his family, they must not expect any other attentions than such
+as would make them comfortable in their new home. She hoped that Dr.
+Meryon would not take this ill, as she had warned him that she did not
+think English ladies could make themselves happy in Syria, and,
+therefore, he who had chosen to bring them must take the consequences.
+This letter was but the first of a long series of affronts put upon Mrs.
+Meryon, the result of Lady Hester's dislike of her own sex, and probably
+also of her objection to the presence of another Englishwoman in a spot
+where she had reigned so long as the only specimen of her race.</p>
+
+<p>A cottage had been provided in the village of J&ocirc;on for the
+travellers, and the ladies were escorted thither by the French
+secretary, while the doctor hastened to report himself to Lady Hester,
+who received him with the greatest cordiality, kissing him on both
+cheeks, and placing him beside her on the sofa. Remembering her
+overweening pride of birth, he was astonished at his reception, more
+especially as, in the early part of her travels, she had never even
+condescended to take his arm, that honour being reserved exclusively for
+members of the aristocracy. He found her ladyship in good health and
+spirits, but barely provided with the necessaries of life, having been
+robbed of nearly all her articles of value by the native servants during
+her last illness. A rush-bottomed chair, a deal table, dishes of common
+yellow earthenware, bone-handled knives and forks, and two or three
+silver spoons, were all that remained of her former grandeur, and the
+dinner was on a par with the furniture.</p>
+
+<p>The house, which had been hired at a rental of &pound;20 from a
+Turkish merchant, had been greatly enlarged, and the gardens, with their
+summer-houses, covered alleys, and serpentine walks, were superior to
+most English gardens of the same size. Lady Hester's constant outlay in
+building arose from her idea that people would fly to her for succour
+and protection during the revolutions that she believed to be impending
+all over the world; her camels, asses, and mules were kept with the same
+view, and her servants were taught to look forward with awe to events of
+a supernatural nature, when their services and energies would be taxed
+to the utmost. In choosing a solitary life in the wilderness, far
+removed from all the comforts and pleasures of civilisation, Lady Hester
+seems to have been actuated by her craving for absolute power, which
+could not be gratified in any European community. It was her pleasure to
+dwell apart, surrounded by dependants and slaves, and out of reach of
+that influence and restraint which are necessarily endured by each
+member of a civilised society. She had become more violent in her temper
+than formerly, and treated her servants with great severity when they
+were negligent of their duties. Her maids and female slaves she punished
+summarily, and boasted that there was nobody who could give such a slap
+in the face, when required, as she could. At Mar Elias her servants,
+when tired of her tyranny, frequently absconded by night, and took
+refuge in Sayda, only two miles away; but at Dar Joon their retreat was
+cut off by mountain tracts, inhabited only by wolves and jackals, and
+they were consequently almost helpless in the hands of their stern
+mistress. The establishment at this time consisted of between thirty and
+forty servants, labourers, and slaves, most of whom are described as
+dirty, lazy, and dishonest. Between them they did badly the work that
+half-a-dozen Europeans would have done respectably, but then the
+Europeans would not have stood the slaps and scoldings that the natives
+took as a matter of course.</p>
+
+<p>For the last fifteen years Lady Hester had seldom left her bed till
+between two and five o'clock in the afternoon, nor returned to it before
+the same hour next morning; while for four years she had never stirred
+beyond the precincts of her own domain, though she took some air and
+exercise in the garden. Except when she was asleep, her bell was
+incessantly ringing, her servants were running to and fro, and the whole
+house was kept in commotion. During the greater part of the day she sat
+up in bed, writing, talking, scolding, and interviewing her work-people.
+Few of her <i>employ&eacute;s</i> escaped from her presence without
+reproof, and as no one was allowed to exercise his own discretion in his
+work, her directing spirit was always in the full flow of activity. 'On
+one and the same day,' says Dr. Meryon,' I have known her to dictate
+papers that concerned the political welfare of a pashalik, and descend
+to trivial details about the composition of a house-paint, the making of
+butter, drenching a sick horse, choosing lambs, or cutting out a maid's
+apron. The marked characteristic of her mind was the necessity that she
+laboured under of incessantly talking.' Her conversations, we are told,
+frequently lasted for seven or eight hours at a stretch, and at least
+one of her visitors was kept so long in discourse that he fainted away
+with fatigue. Dr. Meryon bears witness to her marvellous colloquial
+powers, her fund of anecdote, and her talent for mimicry, but observes
+that every one who conversed with her retired humbled from her presence,
+since her language was always calculated to bring men down to their
+proper level, to strip off affectation, and to expose conceit.</p>
+
+<p>At this time her political influence was on the wane, but a few
+years previously, when her financial affairs were in a more flourishing
+condition, and when it was observed that the pashas valued her opinion
+and feared her censure, she had obtained an almost despotic power over
+the neighbouring tribes. A remarkable proof of her personal courage, and
+also of the supernatural awe with which she was regarded, was shown by
+her open defiance of the Emir Beshyr, in whose principality she lived,
+but who was unable to reduce her, either by threats or persecution, to
+even a nominal submission to his rule. Not only did she give public
+utterance to her contemptuous opinion of the Emir, but she openly
+assisted his relation and rival, the Sheikh Beshyr; yet no vengeance
+either of the bowstring or the poisoned cup rewarded her rebellion or
+her intrigues.</p>
+
+<p>Her religious views, at this time, were decidedly complicated in
+character. She firmly believed in astrology, of which she had made a
+special study, and to some extent in demonology. But more remarkable was
+her faith in the early coming of a Messiah, or Mahedi, on which occasion
+she expected to play a glorious part. The prophecies of Samuel Brothers
+and of General Loustaunau had taken firm possession of her mind, more
+especially since their words had been corroborated by a native
+soothsayer, Metta by name, who brought her an Arabic book which, he
+said, contained allusions to herself. Finding a credulous listener, he
+read and expounded a passage relating to a European woman who was to
+come and live on Mount Lebanon at a certain epoch, and obtain power and
+influence greater than a sultan's. A boy without a father was to join
+her there, whose destiny was to be fulfilled under her wing; while the
+coming of the Mahedi, who was to ride into Jerusalem on a horse born
+saddled, would be preceded by famine, pestilence, and other calamities.
+For a long time Lady Hester was persuaded that the Due de Reichstadt was
+the boy in question, but after his death she fixed upon another youth.
+In expectation of the coming of the Mahedi she kept two thoroughbred
+mares, which no one was suffered to mount. One of these animals, named
+Laila, had a curious malformation of the back, not unlike a Turkish
+saddle in shape, and was destined by its mistress to bear the Mahedi
+into Jerusalem, while on the other, Lulu, Lady Hester expected to ride
+by his side on the great day. 'Hundreds and thousands of distressed
+persons,' she was accustomed to say, 'will come to me for assistance and
+shelter. I shall have to wade in blood, but it is the will of God, and I
+shall not be afraid.' Borne up by these glorious expectations, she never
+discussed her debts, her illnesses, and her other trials, without at the
+same time picturing to herself a brighter future, when the neglect with
+which she had been treated by her family would meet with its just
+punishment, and her star would rise again to gladden the world, and more
+especially those who had been faithful to her in the time of adversity.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as Mrs. Meryon was settled in her new home, and had
+recovered from the fatigue of the journey, Lady Hester appointed a day
+for her reception. What happened at the momentous interview we are not
+told, except that at the close Lady Hester attired her visitor in a
+handsome Turkish spencer of gold brocade, and wound an embroidered
+muslin turban round her head. Unfortunately, Mrs. Meryon, not
+understanding the Eastern custom of robing honoured guests, took off the
+garments before she went away, and laid them on a table, a grievous
+breach of etiquette in her hostess's eyes. Still, matters went on fairly
+smoothly until, about the end of January, a messenger came from Damascus
+to ask that Dr. Meryon might be allowed to go thither to cure a friend
+of the pasha's, who had an affection of the mouth. Lady Hester was
+anxious that the doctor should obey the call, but, greatly to her
+annoyance, he entirely declined to leave his wife and children alone for
+three or four weeks in a strange land, where they could not make
+themselves understood by the people about them. In vain Lady Hester
+tried to frighten Mrs. Meryon into consenting to her husband's departure
+by assuring her that there were Dervishes who could inflict all sorts of
+evil on her by means of charms, if she persisted in her refusal. Mrs.
+Meryon quietly replied that her husband could go if he chose, but that
+it would not be with her goodwill. From that hour was begun a system of
+hostility towards the doctor's wife, which never ceased until her
+departure from the country.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Hester was not above taking a leaf out of the book of her own
+enemy, the Emir Beshyr, for she used her influence to prevent the
+villagers from supplying the wants of the recalcitrant family, who now
+began to make preparations for their departure. They were obliged,
+however, to wait for remittances from England, and also for Lady
+Hester's consent to their leaving J&ocirc;on, since none of the natives
+would have dared lend their camels or mules for such a purpose, and even
+the consular agents at Sayda would have declined to mix themselves up in
+any business which might bring upon them the vengeance of the Queen of
+the Desert. Meanwhile, a truce seems to have been concluded between the
+principals, and Lady Hester again invited the doctor's visits,
+contenting herself with sarcastic remarks about henpecked husbands, and
+the caprices of foolish women. She graciously consented to dispense with
+his services about the beginning of April, and promised to engage a
+vessel at Sayda to convey him and his family to Cyprus. Before his
+departure she produced a list of her debts, which then amounted to
+&pound;14,000. The greater part of this sum, which had been borrowed at
+a high rate of interest from native usurers, had been spent in assisting
+Abdallah Pasha, the family of the Sheikh Beshyr, and many other victims
+of political malignity.</p>
+
+<p>The unwonted luxury of an admiring and submissive listener led the
+lonely woman to discourse of the glories of her youth, and the virtues
+of her hero-in-chief, William Pitt. She spoke of his passion for Miss
+Eden, daughter of Lord Auckland, who, she said, was the only woman she
+could have wished him to marry. 'Poor Mr. Pitt almost broke his heart,
+when he gave her up,' she declared. 'But he considered that she was not
+a woman to be left at will when business might require it, and he
+sacrificed his feelings to his sense of public duty.... "There were also
+other reasons," Mr. Pitt would say; "there is her mother, such a
+chatterer!--and then the family intrigues. I can't keep them out of my
+house; and, for my king and country's sake, I must remain a free man."
+Yet Mr. Pitt was a man just made for domestic life, who would have
+enjoyed retirement, digging his own garden, and doing it cleverly
+too.... He had so much urbanity too! I recollect returning late from a
+ball, when he was gone to bed fatigued; there were others besides
+myself, and we made a good deal of noise. I said to him next morning, "I
+am afraid we disturbed you last night." "Not at all," he replied; "I was
+dreaming of the masque of <i>Comus</i>, and when I heard you all so
+gay, it seemed a pleasant reality...." Nobody would have suspected how
+much feeling he had for people's comforts, who came to see him.
+Sometimes he would say to me, "Hester, you know we have got such a one
+coming down. I believe his wound is hardly well yet, and I heard him say
+that he felt much relieved by fomentations of such an herb; perhaps you
+will see that he finds in his chamber all that he wants." Of another he
+would say, "I think he drinks asses' milk; I should like him to have his
+morning draught." And I, who was born with such sensibility that I must
+fidget myself about everybody, was sure to exceed his wishes.'</p>
+
+<p>After describing Mr. Pitt's kindness and consideration towards his
+household, Lady Hester related a pathetic history of a faithful servant,
+who, in the pecuniary distress of his master, had served him for several
+years with the purest disinterestedness. 'I was so touched by her
+eloquent and forcible manner of recounting the story,' writes the
+soft-hearted doctor, 'and with the application I made of it to my own
+tardiness in going to her in her distress, together with my present
+intention of leaving her, that I burst into tears, and wept bitterly.
+She soothed my feelings, endeavoured to calm my emotions, and disclaimed
+all intention of conveying any allusion to me. This led her to say how
+little malice she ever entertained towards any one, even those who had
+done her injury, much less towards me, who had always shown my
+attachment to her; and she added that, even now, although she was going
+to lose me, her thoughts did not run so much on her own situation as on
+what would become of me; and I firmly believed her.'</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Meryon sailed from Sayda on April 7, 1831, and for the next six
+years we only hear of the strange household on Mount Lebanon through the
+reports of chance visitors. After the siege of Acre by Ibrahim Pasha in
+the winter of 1831-32, the remnant of the population fled to the
+mountains, and Lady Hester, whose hospitality was always open to the
+distressed, declares that for three years her house was like the Tower
+of Babel. In 1832 Lamartine paid a visit to J&ocirc;on, which he has
+described in his <i>Voyage en Orient</i>. He seems to have been
+graciously received, though his hostess candidly informed him that she
+had never heard his name before. He explained, rather to her amusement,
+that he had written verses which were in the mouths of thousands of his
+countrymen, and she having read his character and destiny, assured him
+that his Arabian descent was proved by the high arch of his instep, and
+that, like every Arab, he was a poet by nature. Lamartine, in return,
+represents himself as profoundly impressed by his interview with this
+'Circe of the East,' denies that he perceived in her any traces of
+insanity, and declares that he should not be surprised if a part of the
+destiny she prophesied for herself were realised--at least to the extent
+of an empire in Arabia, or a throne in Jerusalem.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Hester formed a less favourable opinion of M. Lamartine than
+she allowed him to perceive, and she was greatly annoyed at the passages
+referring to herself that appeared in his book. Speaking of him and his
+visit some years later, she observed: 'The people of Europe are all, or
+at least the greater part of them, fools, with their ridiculous grins,
+their affected ways, and their senseless habits.... Look at M. Lamartine
+getting off his horse half-a-dozen times to kiss his dog, and take him
+out of his bandbox to feed him, on the route from Beyrout; the very
+muleteers thought him a fool. And then that way of thrusting his hands
+into his pockets, and sticking out his legs as far as he could--what is
+that like? M. Lamartine is no poet, in my estimation, though he may be
+an elegant versifier; he has no sublime ideas. Compare his ideas with
+Shakespeare's--that was indeed a real poet.... M. Lamartine, with his
+straight body and straight fingers, pointed his toes in my face, and
+then turned to his dog, and held long conversations with him. He thought
+to make a great effect when he was here, but he was grievously
+mistaken.' It may be noted that all Lady Hester's male visitors 'pointed
+their toes in her face,' in the hope of being accredited with the arched
+instep that she held to be the most striking proof of long descent. Her
+own instep, she was accustomed to boast, was so high that a little
+kitten could run underneath it.</p>
+
+<p>A far more lifelike and picturesque portrait of Lady Hester than
+that by Lamartine has been sketched for us by Kinglake in his <i>Eothen</i>.
+In a charming passage which will be familiar to most readers, he
+relates how the name of Lady Hester Stanhope was as delightful to his
+childish ears as that of Robinson Crusoe. Chief among the excitements of
+his early days were the letters and presents of the Queen of the Desert,
+who as a girl had been much with her grandmother, Lady Chatham, at
+Burton Pynsent, and there had made the acquaintance of Miss Woodforde of
+Taunton, afterwards Mrs. Kinglake. The tradition of her high spirit and
+fine horsemanship still lingered in Somersetshire memories, but Kinglake
+had heard nothing of her for many years, when, on arriving at Beyrout in
+1835, he found that her name was in every mouth. Anxious to see this
+romantic vision of his childhood, he wrote to Lady Hester, and asked if
+she would receive his mother's son. A few days later, in response to a
+gracious letter of invitation, Kinglake made his pilgrimage to
+J&ocirc;on.</p>
+
+<p>The house at this time, after the storm and stress of the Egyptian
+invasion, had the appearance of a deserted fortress, and fierce-looking
+Albanian soldiers were hanging about the gates. Kinglake was conducted
+to an inner apartment where, in the dim light, he perceived an Oriental
+figure, clad in masculine costume, which advanced to meet him with many
+and profound bows. The visitor began a polite speech which he had
+prepared for his hostess, but presently discovered that the stranger was
+only her Italian attendant, Lunardi, who had conferred on himself a
+medical title and degree. Lady Hester had given orders that her guest
+should rest and dine before being introduced to her, and he tells us
+that, in spite of the homeliness of her domestic arrangements, he found
+both the wine and the cuisine very good. After dinner he was ushered
+into the presence of his hostess, who welcomed him cordially, and had
+exactly the appearance of a prophetess, 'not the divine Sibyl of
+Domenichino, but a good, business-like, practical prophetess.' Her face
+was of astonishing whiteness, her dress a mass of white linen loosely
+folded round her like a surplice. As he gazed upon her, he recalled the
+stories that he had heard of her early days, of the capable manner in
+which she had arranged the political banquets and receptions of Pitt,
+and the awe with which the Tory country gentlemen had regarded her. That
+awe had been transferred to the sheikhs and pashas of the East, but now
+that, with age and poverty, her earthly power was fading away, she had
+created for herself a spiritual kingdom.</p>
+
+<p>After a few inquiries about her Somersetshire friends, the
+prophetess soared into loftier spheres, and discoursed of astrology and
+other occult sciences. 'For hours and hours this wonderful white woman
+poured forth her speech, for the most part concerning sacred and profane
+mysteries.' From time to time she would swoop down to worldly topics,
+'and then,' as her auditor frankly observes, 'I was interested.' She
+described her life in the Arab camps, and explained that her influence
+over the tribes was partly due to her long sight, a quality held in high
+esteem in the desert, and partly to a brusque, downright manner, which
+is always effective with Orientals. She professed to have fasted
+physically and mentally for years, living only on milk, and reading
+neither books nor newspapers. Her unholy claim to supremacy in the
+spiritual kingdom was based, in Kinglake's opinion, on her fierce,
+inordinate pride, perilously akin to madness, though her mind was too
+strong to be entirely overcome. As a proof of Lady Hester's high
+courage, he notes the fact that, after the fall of Acre, her house was
+the only spot in Syria and Palestine where the will of Mehemet Ali and
+his fierce lieutenant was not law. Ibrahim Pasha had demanded that the
+Albanian soldiers should be given up, and their protectress had
+challenged him to come and take them. This hillock of Dar J&ocirc;on
+always kept its freedom as long as Chatham's granddaughter lived, and
+Mehemet Ali confessed that the Englishwoman had given him more trouble
+than all the insurgents of Syria. Kinglake did not see the famous sacred
+mares, but before his departure he was shown the gardens by the Italian
+secretary, who was in great distress of mind because he could not bring
+himself to believe implicitly in his employer's divine attributes. He
+said that Lady Hester was regarded with mingled respect and dislike by
+the neighbours, whom she oppressed by her exactions. The few 'respected'
+inhabitants of Mount Lebanon apparently claimed the right to avail
+themselves of their neighbours' goods; and the White Queen's
+establishment was supported by contributions from the surrounding
+villages. This is quite a different account from that given by Dr.
+Meryon, who always represents Lady Hester as a generous benefactress,
+admired and adored in all the country-side.</p>
+
+<p>In 1836 Lady Hester discovered another mare's nest in the shape of a
+legacy which she chose to believe was being kept from her by her
+enemies. In August of this year she wrote to Dr. Meryon, who was then
+living at Nice, and invited him to come and assist her in settling her
+debts, and getting possession of this supposititious property. 'A woman
+of high rank and good fortune,' she continues, 'who has built herself a <i>palais</i>
+in a remote part of America, has announced her intention of passing the
+rest of her life with me, so much has she been struck with my situation
+and conduct. [Footnote: This was the Baroness de Feriat, who did not
+carry out her intention.] She is nearly of my age, and thirty-seven
+years ago--I being personally unknown to her--was so taken with my
+general appearance, that she never could divest herself of the thoughts
+of me, which have ever since pursued her. At last, informed by M.
+Lamartine's book where I was to be found, she took this extraordinary
+determination, and in the spring I expect her. She is now selling her
+large landed estate, preparatory to her coming. She, as well as Leila
+the mare, is in the prophecy. The beautiful boy has also written, and is
+wandering over the face of the globe till destiny marks the period of
+our meeting.... I am reckoned here the first politician in the world,
+and by some a sort of prophet. Even the Emir wonders, and is astonished,
+for he was not aware of this extraordinary gift; but yet all say--I mean
+enemies--that I am worse than a lion when in a passion, and that they
+cannot deny I have justice on my side.'</p>
+
+<p>After his former experience of Lady Hester's hospitality it is
+surprising that the doctor should have been willing to accept this
+invitation, and still more surprising that his wife should have
+consented to accompany him to Syria. But the East was still 'a-calling,'
+and the almost hypnotic influence which her ladyship exercised over her
+dependants seems to have lost none of its efficacy. Accordingly, as soon
+as the Meryons could arrange their affairs, they embarked at Marseilles,
+landing at Beyrout on July 1, 1837. Here the doctor received a letter
+from Lady Hester, recommending him to leave his family at Beyrout till
+he could find a house for them at Sayda. 'For your sake,' she continued,
+'I should ever wish to show civility to all who belong to you, but
+caprice I will never interfere with, for from my early youth I have been
+taught to despise it.' Here was signal proof that the past had not been
+forgotten, and that war was still to be waged against the unfortunate
+Mrs. Meryon. In defiance of Lady Hester's orders, the whole family
+proceeded to Sayda, whence Dr. Meryon rode over to Dar J&ocirc;on. He
+received a warm personal welcome, but his hostess persisted in her
+statement that there was no house in the village fit for the reception
+of his womenkind, as nearly all had been damaged by recent earthquakes.
+It was finally arranged that Mrs. Meryon and her children should go for
+the present to Mar Elias, which was then only occupied by the Prophet
+Loustaunau.</p>
+
+<p>At this time Lady Hester's financial affairs were becoming
+desperate, and she had even been reduced to selling some of her handsome
+pelisses. Yet she still maintained between thirty and forty servants,
+and when it was suggested to her that she might reduce her
+establishment, she was accustomed to reply, 'But my rank!' Her
+live-stock included the two sacred mares, three 'amblers,' five asses, a
+flock of sheep, and a few cows. A herd of a hundred goats had recently
+been slaughtered in one day, because their owner fancied that she was
+being cheated by her goatherd. Now she decided to have the three
+'amblers' shot, because the grooms treated them improperly. The
+under-bailiff received orders to whisper into the ear of each horse
+before his execution, 'You have worked enough upon the earth; your
+mistress fears you might fall, in your old age, into the hands of cruel
+men, and she therefore dismisses you from her service.' This order was
+carried out to the letter, with imperturbable gravity.</p>
+
+<p>After a short experience of the inconvenience of riding to and fro
+between J&ocirc;on and Mar Elias, Dr. Meryon persuaded his employer to
+allow him to bring his family to a cottage in the village; but the
+nearer the time approached for their arrival, the more she seemed to
+regret having assented to the arrangement. Frequent and scathing were
+her lectures upon the exigent ways of women, who, she argued, should be
+simple automata, moved only by the will and guidance of their masters.
+She lost no opportunity of throwing ridicule on Dr. Meryon's desire to
+have his family near him, in order that he might pass his evenings with
+them, pointing out that 'all sensible men take their meals with their
+wives, and then retire to their own rooms to read, write, or do what
+best pleases them. Nobody is such a fool as to moider away his time in
+the slipslop conversation of a pack of women.' Petty jealousies, quite
+inconsistent with her boasted philosophy, were perpetually tormenting
+her. One of the many monopolies claimed by her was that of the privilege
+of bell-ringing. The Mahometans, as is well known, never use bells in
+private houses, the usual summons for servants being three claps of the
+hands. But Lady Hester was a constant and vehement bell-ringer, and as
+no one else in the country-side possessed house-bells, it was generally
+believed that the use of them was a special privilege granted her by the
+Porte. She was therefore secretly much annoyed when the Meryons presumed
+to hang up bells in their new home. She made no sign of displeasure, but
+one morning it was discovered that the ropes had been cut and the bells
+carried off. Cross-examination of the servants elicited the fact that
+one of Lady Hester's emissaries had arrived late at night, wrenched off
+the bells, and taken them away. Some weeks later the Lady of J&ocirc;on
+confessed that she had instigated the act, and declared that if the
+Meryons' bells had hung much longer her own would not have been attended
+to.</p>
+
+<p>Soon after the doctor's arrival, Lady Hester had dictated a letter
+to Sir Francis Burdett, in whom she placed great confidence, informing
+him of the property that she believed was being withheld from her, and
+requesting him to make inquiries into the matter. When not engaged in
+correspondence, discussing her debts, and scolding her servants, she was
+pouring out floods of conversation, chiefly reminiscences of her youth
+and diatribes against the men and manners of the present day, into the
+ears of the long-suffering doctor. 'From her manner towards other
+people,' he observes, 'it would have seemed that she was the only person
+in creation privileged to abuse and to command; others had nothing to do
+but to obey. She was haughty and overbearing, born to rule, impatient of
+control, and more at her ease when she had a hundred persons to govern
+than when she had only ten. Had she been a man and a soldier, she would
+have been what the French call a <i>beau sabreur</i>, for never was any
+one so fond of wielding weapons, and boasting of her capacity for using
+them, as she was. In her bedroom she always had a mace, which was spiked
+round the head, a steel battle-axe, and a dagger, but her favourite
+weapon was the mace.' Absurd as it may sound, it was probably her
+military vanity that led her to belittle the Duke of Wellington, of
+whose reputation she seems to have felt some personal jealousy. Yet she
+bears testimony to the esteem in which 'Arthur Wellesley' was held by
+William Pitt.</p>
+
+<p>'I recollect, one day,' she told the doctor, 'Mr. Pitt came into the
+drawing-room to me, and said, "Oh, how I have been bored by Sir Sydney
+Smith coming with his box full of papers, and keeping me for a couple of
+hours, when I had so much to do." I observed to him that heroes were
+generally vain, and that Lord Nelson was so. "So he is," replied Mr.
+Pitt, "but not like Sir Sydney. And how different is Arthur Wellesley,
+who has just quitted me! He has given me such clear details upon affairs
+in India; and he talked of them, too, as if he had been a surgeon of a
+regiment, and had nothing to do with them; so that I know not which to
+admire most, his modesty or his talents, and yet the fate of India
+depends upon them." Then, doctor, when I recollect the letter he wrote
+to Edward Bouverie, in which he said he could not come down to a ball
+because his only corbeau coat was so bad he was ashamed to appear in it,
+I reflect what a rise he has had in the world. He was at first nothing
+but what hundreds of others are in a country town--he danced hard and
+drank hard. His star has done everything for him, for he is not a great
+general. He is no tactician, nor has he any of those great qualities
+that make a Caesar, a Pompey, or even a Bonaparte. As for the battle of
+Waterloo, both French and English have told me that it was a lucky
+battle for him, but nothing more. I don't think he acted well at Paris,
+nor did the soldiers like him.'</p>
+
+<p>About the end of October Lady Hester took to her bed, and did not
+leave it till the following March. She had suffered from pulmonary
+catarrh for several years, which disappeared in the summer, but returned
+every winter with increased violence. Her practice of frequent bleeding
+had brought on a state of complete emaciation, and left very little
+blood in her body. If she had lived like other people, and trusted to
+the balmy air of Syria, Dr. Meryon was of opinion that nothing serious
+need have been apprehended from her illness. But she seldom breathed the
+outer air, and took no exercise except an occasional turn in the garden.
+She was always complaining that she could get nothing to eat; yet, in
+spite of her profession (to Kinglake) that she lived entirely on milk,
+we are told that her diet consisted of forcemeat balls, meat-pies, and
+other heavy viands, and that she seldom remained half an hour without
+taking nourishment of some kind. 'I never knew a human being who took
+nourishment so frequently,' writes Dr. Meryon, 'and may not this in some
+measure account for her frequent ill-humour?'</p>
+
+<p>During her illness the doctor read aloud Sir Nathaniel Wraxall's <i>Memoirs</i>
+and the <i>Memoirs of a Peeress</i>, edited by Lady Charlotte Bury,
+both of which books dealt with persons whom Lady Hester had known in her
+youth. In return she regaled him with stories of her own glory, of Mr.
+Pitt's virtues, of the objectionable habits of the Princess of Wales,
+and of the meanness of the Regent in inviting himself to dinner with
+gentlemen who could not afford to entertain him, the whole pleasantly
+flavoured by animadversions on the social presumption of medical men,
+and descriptions of the methods by which formerly they were kept in
+their proper place by aristocratic patients. At this time, the beginning
+of 1838, Lady Hester was anxiously expecting an answer from Sir Francis
+Burdett about her property, and, hearing from the English consul at
+Sayda that a packet had arrived for her from Beyrout, which was to be
+delivered into her own hands, her sanguine mind was filled with the hope
+of coming prosperity. But when the packet was opened, instead of the
+long-expected missive from Sir Francis, it proved to be an official
+statement from Colonel Campbell, Consul-General for Egypt, that in
+consequence of an application made to the British Government by one of
+Lady Hester's chief creditors, an order had come from Lord Palmerston
+that her pension was to be stopped unless the debt was paid. When she
+read the letter Dr. Meryon feared an outburst of fury, but Lady Hester,
+who, for once, was beyond violence, began calmly to discuss the enormity
+of the conduct both of Queen and Minister.</p>
+
+<p>'My grandfather and Mr. Pitt,' she said, 'did something to keep the
+Brunswick family on the throne, and yet the granddaughter of the old
+king, without hearing the circumstances of my getting into debt, or
+whether the story is true, sends to deprive me of my pension in a
+strange land, where I may remain and starve.... I should like to ask for
+a public inquiry into my debts, and for what I have contracted them. Let
+them compare the good I have done in the cause of humanity and science
+with the Duke of Kent's debts. I wonder if Lord Palmerston is the man I
+recollect--a young man from college, who was always hanging about
+waiting to be introduced to Mr. Pitt. Mr. Pitt used to say, "Ah, very
+well; we will ask him to dinner some day." Perhaps it is an old grudge
+that makes him vent his spite.' Colonel Campbell's letter had given the
+poor lady's heart, or rather her pride, a fatal stab, and the indignity
+with which she had been treated preyed upon her health and spirits. She
+now determined to send an ultimatum to the Queen, which was to be
+published in the newspapers if ministers refused to lay it before her
+Majesty. This document, which was dated February 12, 1838, ran as
+follows:--</p>
+
+<p>'Your Majesty will allow me to say that few things are more
+disgraceful and inimical to royalty than giving commands without
+examining all their different bearings, and casting, without reason, an
+aspersion upon the integrity of any branch of a family that had
+faithfully served their country and the House of Hanover. As no
+inquiries have been made of me of what circumstances induced me to incur
+the debts alluded to, I deem it unnecessary to enter into any details on
+the subject. I shall not allow the pension given by your royal
+grandfather to be stopped by force; but I shall resign it for the
+payment of my debts, and with it the name of British subject, and the
+slavery that is at present annexed to it; and as your Majesty has given
+publicity to the business by your orders to your consular agents, I
+surely cannot be blamed for following your royal example.</p>
+
+<p>'HESTER LUCY STANHOPE.'</p>
+
+<p>This was accompanied by a long letter to the Duke of Wellington, in
+which Lady Hester detailed her services in the East, and expressed her
+indignation at the treatment she had received. She was now left with
+only a few pounds upon which to maintain her house-hold until March,
+when she could draw for &pound;300, apparently the quarter's income from
+a legacy left her by her brother, but of this sum &pound;200 was due to
+a Greek merchant at Beyrout. The faithful doctor collected all the money
+he had in his house, about eleven pounds, and brought it to her for her
+current expenses, but with her usual impracticability she gave most of
+it away in charity. Still no letter came from Sir Francis Burdett, and
+the unfortunate lady, old, sick, and wasted to a skeleton, lay on her
+sofa and lamented over her troubles in a fierce, inhuman fashion, like a
+wounded animal at bay. In the course of time a reply came from Lord
+Palmerston, in which he stated that he had laid Lady Hester's letter
+before the Queen, and explained to her Majesty the circumstances that
+might be supposed to have led to her writing it. The communications to
+which she referred were, he continued, suggested by nothing but a desire
+to save her from the embarrassments that might arise if her creditors
+were to call upon the Consul-General to act according to the strict line
+of his duty. This letter did nothing towards assuaging Lady Hester's
+wrath. In her reply she sarcastically observed:--</p>
+
+<p>'If your diplomatic despatches are all as obscure as the one that
+now lies before me, it is no wonder that England should cease to have
+that proud preponderance in her foreign relations which she once could
+boast of.... It is but fair to make your lordship aware that, if by the
+next packet there is nothing definitely settled respecting my affairs,
+and I am not cleared in the eyes of the world of aspersions,
+intentionally or unintentionally thrown upon me, I shall break up my
+household, and build up the entrance-gate to my premises; there
+remaining as if I was in a tomb till my character has been done justice
+to, and a public acknowledgment put in the papers, signed and sealed by
+those who have aspersed me. There is no trifling with those who have
+Pitt blood in their veins upon the subject of integrity, nor expecting
+that their spirit would ever yield to the impertinent interference of
+consular authority, etc., etc.' It must be owned that there is a touch
+of unconscious humour in Lady Hester's terrible threat of walling
+herself up, a proceeding which would only make herself uncomfortable and
+leave her enemies at peace. For the present matters went on much as
+usual at Dar J&ocirc;on. No household expenses were curtailed, and
+thirty native servants continued to cheat their mistress and idle over
+their work. In March, that perambulating princeling, his Highness of
+P&uuml;ckler-Muskau, arrived at Sayda, whence he wrote a letter to Lady
+Hester, begging to be allowed to pay his homage to the Queen of Palmyra
+and the niece of the great Pitt. 'I have the presumption to believe,
+madam,' he continued, 'that there must be some affinity of character
+between us. For, like you, my lady, I look for our future salvation from
+the East, where nations still nearer to God and to nature can alone,
+some day, purify the rotten civilisation of decrepid Europe, in which
+everything is artificial, and where we are menaced with a new kind of
+barbarism--not that with which states begin, but with which they end.
+Like you, madam, I believe that astrology is not an empty science, but a
+lost one. Like you, I am an aristocrat by birth and by principle;
+because I find a marked aristocracy in nature. In a word, madam, like
+you, I love to sleep by day and be stirring by night. There I stop; for
+in mind, energy of character, and in the mode of life, so singular and
+so dignified, which you lead, not every one who would can resemble Lady
+Hester Stanhope.'</p>
+
+<p>Lady Hester was flattered by this letter, and told the doctor that
+he must ride into Sayda to see the prince, and tell him that she was too
+ill to receive him at present, but would endeavour to do so a few weeks
+later. The prince was established with his numerous suite in the house
+of a merchant of Sayda. Mehemet Ali had given him a special firman,
+requiring all official persons to treat him in a manner suitable to his
+rank, his whole expenditure being defrayed by cheques on the Viceroy's
+treasury. The prince, unlike most other distinguished travellers who
+were treated with the same honour, took the firman strictly according to
+the letter, and could boast of having traversed the whole of Egypt and
+Syria with all the pomp of royalty, and without having expended a single
+farthing. Dr. Meryon describes his Highness as a tall man of about fifty
+years of age, distinguished by an unmistakable air of birth and
+breeding. He wore a curious mixture of Eastern and Western costume, and
+had a tame chameleon crawling about his pipe, with which he was almost
+as much occupied as M. Lamartine with his lapdog. The prince stated that
+he had almost made up his mind to settle in the East, since Europe was
+no longer the land of liberty. 'I will build myself a house,' he said,
+'get what I want from Europe, make arrangements for newspapers, books,
+etc., and choose some delightful situation; but I think it will be on
+Mount Lebanon.'</p>
+
+<p>In his volume of travels in the East called <i>Die R&uuml;ckkehr</i>,
+Prince P&uuml;ckler-Muksau has given an amusing account of the
+negotiations that passed between himself and Lady Hester on the subject
+of his visit. For once the niece of Pitt had found her match in vanity
+and arrogance; and if the prince's book had appeared in her lifetime, it
+is certain that she would not long have survived it. His Highness
+describes how he bided his time, as though he were laying siege to a
+courted beauty, and almost daily bombarded the Lady of J&ocirc;on with
+letters calculated to pique her curiosity by their frank and original
+style. At last, 'in order to be rid of him,' as she jokingly said, Lady
+Hester consented to receive him on a certain day, which, from his star,
+she deemed propitious to their meeting. Thereupon the prince, who
+intended that his visit should be desired, not suffered, wrote to say
+that he was setting out for an expedition into the desert, but that on
+his return he would come to J&ocirc;on, not for one day, but for a week.
+This impertinence was rewarded by permission to come at his own time.</p>
+
+<p>Great preparations were made for the entertainment of this
+distinguished visitor. The scanty contents of the store and china
+cupboards were spread out before the lady of the house, who infused
+activity into the most sluggish by smart strokes from her stick. The
+epithets of beast, rascal, and the like, were dealt out with such
+freedom and readiness, as to make the European part of her audience
+sensible of the richness and variety of the Arabian language. On Easter
+Monday, April 15, the prince, followed by a part of his suite, and five
+mule-loads of baggage, rode into the courtyard. He wore an immense
+Leghorn hat lined with green taffetas, a Turkish scarf over his
+shoulders, and blue pantaloons of ample dimensions. From the excellent
+fit of his Parisian boots, it was evident that he felt his pretensions
+to a thoroughbred foot were now to be magisterially decided. The prince
+has given his own impression of his hostess, whom he describes as a
+thorough woman of the world, with manners of Oriental dignity and calm.
+With her pale, regular features, dark, fiery eyes, great height, and
+sonorous voice, she had the appearance of an ancient Sibyl; yet no one,
+he declares, could have been more natural and unaffected in manner. She
+told him that since she had lost her money, she had lived like a
+dervish, and assimilated herself to the ways of nature. 'My roses are my
+jewels,' she said, 'the sun and moon my clocks, fruit and water my food
+and drink. I see in your face that you are a thorough epicure; how will
+you endure to spend a week with me?' The prince, who had already dined,
+replied that he found she did not keep her guests on fruit and water,
+and assured her that English poverty was equivalent to German riches. He
+spent six or seven hours <i>t&ecirc;te-a-t&ecirc;te</i> with his hostess
+each evening of his stay, and declares that he was astonished at the
+originality and variety of her conversation. He had the audacity to ask
+her if the Arab chief who accompanied her to Palmyra had been her lover,
+but she, not ill-pleased, assured him that there was no truth in the
+report, which at one time had been generally believed. She said that the
+Arabs regarded her neither as man or woman, but as a being apart.</p>
+
+<p>Before leaving, the prince introduced his 'harem,' consisting of two
+Abyssinian slaves, to Lady Hester, and was presented, in his turn, to
+the sacred mares, which had lost their beauty, and grown gross and
+unwieldy under their <i>r&eacute;gime</i> of gentle exercise and
+unlimited food. Leila licked the prince's hand when he caressed her, and
+Leila's mistress was thereby convinced that her guest was a 'chosen
+vessel.' She confided to him all her woes, the neglect of her relations
+and the ill-treatment of the Government, and gave him copies of the
+correspondence about her pension, which he promised to publish in a
+German newspaper. To Dr. Meryon she waxed quite enthusiastic over his
+Highness's personal attractions, the excellent cut of his coat, and the
+handiness with which he performed small services. 'I could observe,'
+writes the doctor, towards the end of the visit, 'that she had already
+begun to obtain an ascendency over the prince, such as she never failed
+to do over those who came within the sphere of her attraction; for he
+was less lofty in his manner than he had been at first, and she seemed
+to have gained in height, and to be more disposed to play the queen than
+ever.'</p>
+
+<p>This, alas, was the last time that Lady Hester had the opportunity
+of playing the queen, or entertaining a distinguished guest at Dar
+J&ocirc;on. In June, when the packet brought no news of her imaginary
+property, and no apology from Queen or Premier, she began at last to
+despair. 'The die is cast,' she told Dr. Meryon, 'and the sooner you
+take yourself off the better. I have no money; you can be of no use to
+me--I shall write no more letters, and shall break up my establishment,
+wall up my gate, and, with a boy and girl to wait upon me, resign myself
+to my fate. Tell your family they may make their preparations, and be
+gone in a month's time.' Early in July Sir Francis Burdett's
+long-expected letter arrived, but brought with it no consolation. He
+could tell nothing of the legacy, but wrote in the soothing, evasive
+terms that might be supposed suitable to an elderly lady who was not
+quite accountable for her ideas or actions. As there was now no hope of
+any improvement in her affairs, Lady Hester decided to execute her
+threat of walling up her gateway, a proceeding which, she was unable to
+perceive, injured nobody but herself. She directed the doctor to pay and
+dismiss her servants, with the exception of two maids and two men, and
+then sent him to Beyrout to inform the French consul of her intention.
+On his return to J&ocirc;on he found that Lady Hester had already hired
+a vessel to take himself and his family from Sayda to Cyprus. He was
+reluctant to leave her in solitude and wretchedness, but knowing that
+when once her mind was made up, nothing could shake her resolution, he
+employed the time that remained to him in writing her letters, setting
+her house in order, and taking her instructions for commissions in
+Europe. He also begged to be allowed to lend her as much money as he
+could spare, and she consented to borrow a sum of 2000 piastres (about
+&pound;80), which she afterwards repaid.</p>
+
+<p>On July 30, 1838, the masons arrived, and the entrance-gate was
+walled up with a kind of stone screen, leaving, however, a side-opening
+just large enough for an ass or cow to enter, so that this
+much-talked-of act of self-immurement was more an appearance than a
+reality. On August 6, the faithful doctor took an affectionate leave of
+the employer, who, as Prince P&uuml;ckler-Muskau bears witness, was
+accustomed to treat him with icy coldness, and sailed for western
+climes. To the last, he tells us, Lady Hester dwelt with apparent
+confidence on the approaching advent of the Mahedi, and still regarded
+her mare Leila as destined to bear him into Jerusalem, with herself upon
+Lulu at his side. It is to be hoped that the poor lady was able to buoy
+herself up with this belief during the last and most solitary year of
+her disappointed life. About once a month, up to the date of her death,
+she corresponded with Dr. Meryon, who was again settled at Nice. Her
+letters were chiefly taken up with commissions, and with shrewd comments
+upon the new books that were sent out to her.</p>
+
+<p>'I should like to have Miss Pardoe's book on Constantinople,' she
+writes in October, 1838, 'if it is come out for strangers (<i>i.e.</i> in
+a French translation); for I fear I should never get through with it
+myself. This just puts me in mind that one of the books I should like to
+have would be Graham's <i>Domestic Medicine</i>; a good Red Book (<i>Peerage</i>,
+I mean); and the book about the Prince of Wales. I have found out a
+person who can occasionally read French to me; so if there was any very
+pleasing French book, you might send it--but no Bonapartes or "present
+times"--and a little <i>brochure</i> or two upon baking, pastry,
+gardening, etc....</p>
+
+<p>'<i>Feb.</i> 9, 1839.--The book you sent me (<i>Diary of the Times of
+George IV</i>., by Lady Charlotte Bury) is interesting only to those who
+were acquainted with the persons named: all mock taste, mock feeling,
+etc., but that is the fashion. "I am this, I am that"; who ever talked
+such empty stuff formerly? I was never named by a well-bred person....
+Miss Pardoe is very excellent upon many subjects; only there is too much
+of what the English like--stars, winds, black shades, soft sounds,
+etc....</p>
+
+<p>'<i>May</i> 6.--Some one--I suppose you--sent me the <i>Life of Lord
+Edward Fitzgerald</i>. It is <i>I</i> who could give a true and most
+extraordinary history of all those transactions. The book is all stuff.
+The duchess (Lord Edward's mother) was my particular friend, as was also
+his aunt; I was intimate with all the family, and knew that noted
+Pamela. All the books I see make me sick--only catchpenny nonsense. A
+thousand thanks for the promise of my grandfather's letters; but the
+book will be all spoilt by being edited by young men. First, they are
+totally ignorant of the politics of my grandfather's age; secondly, of
+the style of the language used at that period; and absolutely ignorant
+of his secret reasons and intentions, and the <i>real</i> or apparent
+footing he was upon with many people, friends or foes. I know all that
+from my grandmother, who was his secretary, and, Coutts used to say, the
+cleverest <i>man</i> of her time in politics and business.'</p>
+
+<p>This was the last letter that Dr. Meryon received from his old
+friend and patroness. She slowly wasted away, and died in June 1839, no
+one being aware of her approaching end except the servants about her.
+The news of her death reached Beyrout in a few hours, and the English
+consul, Mr. Moore, and an American missionary (Mr. Thomson, author of <i>The
+Land and the Book</i>) rode over to J&ocirc;on to bury her. By her own
+desire she was interred in a grave in her garden, where a son of the
+Prophet Loustaunau had been buried some years before. Mr. Thomson has
+described how he performed the last rites at midnight by the light of
+lanterns and torches, and notes the curious resemblance between Lady
+Hester's funeral service and that of the man she loved, Sir John Moore.
+Together with the consul, he examined the contents of thirty-five rooms,
+but found nothing but old saddles, pipes, and empty oil-jars, everything
+of value having been long since plundered by the servants. The sacred
+mares, now grown old and almost useless, were sold for a small sum by
+public auction, and only survived for a short time their return to an
+active life.</p>
+
+<p>In 1845 Dr. Meryon published his so-called <i>Memoirs of Lady
+Hester Stanhope</i>, which are merely an account of her later years, and
+a report of her table-talk at Dar J&ocirc;on. In 1846 he brought out her <i>Travels</i>,
+which were advertised as the supplement and completion of the <i>Memoirs</i>.
+From these works, and from passing notices of our heroine, we gain a
+general impression of wasted talents and a disappointed life. That she
+was more unhappy in her solitude than, in her unbending nature, she
+would avow, observes her faithful friend and chronicler, the record of
+the last years of her existence too plainly demonstrates. Although she
+derived consolation in retirement from the retrospect of the part she
+had played in her prosperity, still there were moments of poignant grief
+when her very soul groaned within her. She was ambitious, and her
+ambition had been foiled; she loved irresponsible command, but the time
+had come when those over whom she ruled defied her; she was dictatorial
+and exacting, but she had lost the influence which alone makes people
+tolerate control. She incurred debts, and was doomed to feel the
+degradation consequent upon them. She thought to defy her own nation,
+and they hurled the defiance back upon her. She entertained visionary
+projects of aggrandisement, and was met by the derision of the world. In
+a word, Lady Hester died as she had lived, alone and miserable in a
+strange land, bankrupt in affection and credit, because, in spite of her
+great gifts and innate benevolence, her overbearing temper had alienated
+friends and kinsfolk alike, and her pride could endure neither the
+society of equals, nor the restraints and conventions of civilised life.<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
+
+<p style="text-align: center;"><big><span style="font-weight: bold;"><a
+ name="MUSKAU"></a> <big>PRINCE P&Uuml;CKLER-MUSKAU IN ENGLAND</big></span></big><br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<div style="text-align: center;"> </div>
+
+<p style="font-weight: bold; text-align: center;"><img
+ src="images/Muskau.jpg" title="PRINCE P&Uuml;CKLER-MUSKAU"
+ alt="PRINCE P&Uuml;CKLER-MUSKAU" style="width: 394px; height: 624px;"><br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<div style="text-align: center;"> </div>
+<div style="text-align: center;">
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 20%;"><br>
+<span style="font-weight: bold;">PART I</span><br>
+</div>
+
+<p>During the early and middle decades of the nineteenth century there
+was no more original and picturesque figure among the minor celebrities
+of Germany--one might almost say of Europe--than that of his Highness,
+Hermann Ludwig Heinrich, Prince P&uuml;ckler-Muskau. Throughout his long
+career we find this princeling playing many parts--at once an imitation
+Werter, a sentimental Don Juan, a dandy who out-dressed D'Orsay, a
+sportsman and traveller of M&uuml;nchhausen type, a fashionable author
+who wrote German with a French accent and a warrior who seems to have
+wandered out of the pages of medi&aelig;val romance. Yet with all his
+mock-heroic notoriety, the <i>toller P&uuml;ckler</i> was by no means
+destitute of those practical qualities which tempered the Teutonic
+Romanticism, even in its earliest and most extravagant developments. He
+was skilled in all manly exercises, a brave soldier, an intelligent
+observer, and--his most substantial claim to remembrance--the father of
+landscape-gardening in Germany, a veritable magician who transformed
+level wastes into wooded landscapes and made the sandy wildernesses
+blossom like the rose.</p>
+
+<p>To English readers the prince's name was once familiar as the author
+of <i>Briefe eines Verstorbenen</i> (Letters of a Dead Man), which
+contain a lively account of his Highness' sojourn in England and Ireland
+between the years 1826 and 1828. These letters, which were translated
+into English under the title of <i>The Tour of a German Prince</i>,
+made a sensation, favourable and otherwise, in the early 'thirties,'
+owing to the candid fashion in which they dealt with our customs and our
+countrymen. The book received the high honour of a complimentary review
+from the pen of the aged Goethe. 'The writer appears to be a perfect and
+experienced man of the world,' observes this distinguished critic;
+'endowed with talents and a quick apprehension; formed by a varied
+social existence, by travel and extensive connections. His journey was
+undertaken very recently, and brings us the latest intelligence from the
+countries which he has viewed with an acute, clear, and comprehensive
+eye. We see before us a finely-constituted being, born to great external
+advantages and felicities, but in whom a lively spirit of enterprise is
+not united to constancy and perseverance; whence he experiences frequent
+failure and disappointment.... The peculiarities of English manners and
+habits are drawn vividly and distinctly, and without exaggeration. We
+acquire a lively idea of that wonderful combination, that luxuriant
+growth--of that insular life which is based in boundless wealth and
+civil freedom, in universal monotony and manifold diversity; formal and
+capricious, active and torpid, energetic and dull, comfortable and
+tedious, the envy and derision of the world. Like other unprejudiced
+travellers of modern times, our author is not very much enchanted with
+the English form of existence: his cordial and sincere admiration is
+often accompanied by unsparing censure. He is by no means inclined to
+favour the faults and weaknesses of the English; and in this he has the
+greatest and best among themselves upon his side.'</p>
+
+<p>As these Letters were not written until the prince had passed his
+fortieth year, it will be necessary, before considering them in detail,
+to give a brief sketch of his previous career. Hermann Ludwig was the
+only son of Graf von P&uuml;ckler of Schloss Branitz, and of his wife,
+Clementine, born a Gr&auml;fin von Gallenberg, and heiress to the vast
+estate of Muskau in Silesia. Both families were of immense antiquity,
+the P&uuml;cklers claiming to trace their descent from R&uuml;diger von
+Bechlarn, who figures in the <i>Nibelungenlied</i>. Our hero was born
+at Muskau in October 1785, and spent, according to his own account, a
+wretched and neglected childhood. His father was harsh, miserly, and
+suspicious; his mother, who was only fifteen when her son was born, is
+described as a frivolous little flirt. The couple, after perpetually
+quarrelling for ten or twelve years, were divorced, by mutual consent,
+in 1797, and the Gr&auml;fin shortly afterwards married one of her
+numerous admirers, Graf von Seydewitz, with whom she lived as unhappily
+as with her first husband. Her little son was educated at a Moravian
+school, and in the holidays was left entirely to the care of the
+servants. After a couple of years at the university of Leipzig, he
+entered the Saxon army, and soon became notorious for his good looks,
+his fine horsemanship, his extravagance, and his mischievous pranks.
+Military discipline in time of peace proved too burdensome for the young
+lieutenant, who, after quarrelling with his father, getting deeply into
+debt, and embroiling himself with the authorities, threw up his
+commission in 1804. Muskau having become much too hot to hold him, he
+spent the next years in travelling about the Continent, always in
+pecuniary difficulties, and seldom free from some sentimental
+entanglement.</p>
+
+<p>In 1810 Graf P&uuml;ckler died, and his son stepped into a splendid
+inheritance. Like Prince Hal, the young Graf seems to have taken his new
+responsibilities seriously, and to have devoted himself, with only too
+much enthusiasm, to the development and improvement of his estates. In
+the intervals of business he amused himself with an endless series of
+love-affairs, his achievements in this respect, if his biographer may be
+believed, more than equalling those of Jupiter and Don Giovanni put
+together. Old and young, pretty and plain, noble and humble, native and
+foreign, all were fish that came to the net of this lady-killer, who not
+only vowed allegiance to nearly every petticoat that crossed his path,
+but--a much more remarkable feat--kept up an impassioned correspondence
+with a large selection of his charmers. After his death, a whole library
+of love-letters was discovered among his papers, all breathing forth
+adoration, ecstasy or despair, and addressed to the Julies, Jeannettes,
+or Amalies who succeeded one another so rapidly in his facile
+affections. These documents, for the most part carefully-corrected
+drafts of the originals, were indorsed, 'Old love-letters, to be used
+again if required!'</p>
+
+<p>In 1813 the trumpet of war sounded the call to arms, and the young
+Graf entered the military service of Prussia, and was appointed
+aide-de-camp to the Duke of Saxe-Weimar. He distinguished himself in the
+Netherlands, was present at the taking of Cassel, and in the course of
+the campaign played a part in a new species of duel. A French colonel of
+Hussars, so the story goes, rode out of the enemy's lines, and
+challenged any officer in the opposing army to single combat.
+P&uuml;ckler accepted the challenge, and the duel was fought on
+horseback--presumably with sabres--between the ranks of the two armies,
+the soldiers on either side applauding their chosen champion. At length,
+after a fierce struggle, Germany triumphed, and the brave Frenchman bit
+the dust. Whether the tale be true or apocryphal, it is certain that
+numerous decorations were conferred upon the young officer for his
+brilliant services, that he was promoted to the rank of colonel, and
+appointed civil and military governor of Br&uuml;ges. P&uuml;ckler took
+part in the triumphal entry of the Allies into Paris, and afterwards
+accompanied the Duke of Saxe-Weimar to London, where he shared in all
+the festivities of the wonderful season of 1815, studied the English
+methods of landscape-gardening, and made an unsuccessful attempt to
+marry a lady of rank and fortune.</p>
+
+<p>After his return to Muskau the Graf continued his work on his
+estate, which, in spite of a sandy soil and other disadvantages, soon
+became one of the show-places of Germany. Having discovered a spring of
+mineral water, he built a pump-room, a theatre, and a gaming-saloon, and
+named the establishment Hermannsbad. The invalids who frequented the
+Baths must have enjoyed a lively 'cure,' for besides theatrical
+performances, illuminations, fireworks and steeplechases, the Graf was
+always ready to oblige with some sensational achievement. On one
+occasion he leapt his horse over the parapet of a bridge into the river,
+and swam triumphantly ashore; while on another he galloped up the steps
+of the Casino, played and won a <i>coup</i> at the tables without
+dismounting, and then galloped down again, arriving at the bottom with a
+whole neck, but considerable damage to his horse's legs.</p>
+
+<p>In 1816 P&uuml;ckler became acquainted with Lucie, Gr&auml;fin von
+Pappenheim, a daughter of Prince Hardenberg, Chancellor of Prussia. The
+Gr&auml;fin, a well-preserved woman of forty, having parted from her
+husband, was living at Berlin with her daughter, Adelheid, afterwards
+Princess Carolath, and her adopted daughter, Herminie Lanzendorf. The
+Graf divided his attentions equally between the three ladies for some
+time, but on inquiring of a friend which would make the greatest
+sensation in Berlin, his marriage to the mother or to one of the
+daughters, and being told his marriage to the mother, at once proposed
+to the middle-aged Gr&auml;fin, and was joyfully accepted. The reason
+for this inappropriate match probably lay deeper than the desire to
+astonish the people of Berlin, for P&uuml;ckler, with all his surface
+romanticism, had a keen eye to the main chance. His Lucie had only a
+moderate dower, but the advantage of being son-in-law to the Chancellor
+of Prussia could hardly be overestimated. Again, the Graf seems to have
+imagined that in a marriage of convenience with a woman nine years older
+than himself, he would be able to preserve the liberty of his bachelor
+days, while presenting the appearance of domestic respectability.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as the trifling formality of a divorce from Count Pappenheim
+had been gone through, the marriage took place at Muskau, to the
+accompaniment of the most splendid festivities. As may be supposed, the
+early married life of the ill-assorted couple was a period of anything
+but unbroken calm. Scarcely had the Graf surrendered his liberty than he
+fell passionately in love with his wife's adopted daughter, Helmine, a
+beautiful girl of eighteen, the child, it was believed, of humble
+parents. Frederick William III. of Prussia was one of her admirers, and
+had offered to marry her morganatically, and create her Herzogin von
+Breslau. But Helmine gave her royal suitor no encouragement, and he soon
+consoled himself with the Princess Liegnitz. Lucie spared no pains to
+marry off the inconvenient beauty, but P&uuml;ckler frustrated all her
+efforts, implored her not to separate him from Helmine, and suggested an
+arrangement based upon the domestic policy of Goethe's <i>Wahlverwandschaften</i>.
+But Lucie was unreasonable enough to object to a <i>m&eacute;nage
+&agrave; trois</i>, and at length succeeded in marrying Helmine to a
+Lieutenant von Blucher.</p>
+
+<p>In 1822 the Graf accompanied his father-in-law to the Congress of
+Aix-la-Chapelle, and shortly afterwards was raised to princely rank, in
+compensation for the losses he had sustained through the annexation of
+Silesia by Prussia. By this time the prince's financial affairs were in
+so desperate a condition, thanks to the follies of his youth and the
+building mania of his manhood, that a desperate remedy was required to
+put them straight again. Only one expedient presented itself, and this
+Lucie, with a woman's self-sacrifice, was the first to propose. During a
+short absence from Muskau she wrote to her husband to offer him his
+freedom, in order that he might be enabled to marry a rich heiress,
+whose fortune could be used to clear off the liabilities that pressed so
+heavily on the estate. The prince at first refused to take advantage of
+this generous offer. He had become accustomed to his elderly wife, who
+acted as his colleague and helper in all that concerned his idolised
+Muskau, and upon whose sympathy and advice he had learned to depend. But
+as time went on he grew accustomed to the idea of an amicable divorce,
+and at length persuaded himself that such a proceeding need make no real
+difference to Lucie's position; in fact, that it would be an advantage
+to her as well as to himself. For years past he had regarded her rather
+in the light of a maternal friend than of a wife, and the close <i>camaraderie</i>
+that existed between them would remain unbroken by the advent of a young
+bride whom Lucie would love as her own child. A divorce, it must be
+remembered, was a common incident of everyday life in the Germany of
+that epoch. As we have seen, P&uuml;ckler's father and mother had
+dissolved their marriage, and Lucie had been divorced from her first
+husband, while her father had been married three times, and had
+separated from each of his wives.</p>
+
+<p>The matter remained in abeyance for a year or two, and it was not
+until 1826, when the prince probably felt that he had no time to lose,
+that the long-talked-of divorce actually took place. This curious
+couple, who appeared to be more tenderly attached to each other now than
+they had ever been before, took a touching farewell in Berlin. The
+princess then returned to Muskau, where she remained during her
+ex-husband's absence as his agent and representative, while the prince
+set out for England, which country was supposed to offer the best
+hunting-ground for heiresses. Week by week during his tour, P&uuml;ckler
+addressed to his faithful Lucie long, confidential letters, filled with
+observations of the manners and customs of the British barbarians,
+together with minute descriptions of his adventures in love and
+landscape-gardening.</p>
+
+<p>The prince, though at this time in his forty-first year, was still,
+to all appearance, in the prime of life, still an adept in feats of
+skill and strength, and not less romantic and susceptible than in the
+days of his youth. With his high rank, his vast though encumbered
+estates, his picturesque appearance, and his wide experience in affairs
+of the heart, he anticipated little difficulty in carrying off one of
+the most eligible of British heiresses; but he quite forgot to include
+the hard-hearted, level-headed British parent in his reckoning. The
+prince's first letter to Lucie, who figures in the published version as
+Julie, is dated Dresden, September 7, 1826, and begins in right
+Werterian strain:--</p>
+
+<p>'My dear friend--The love you showed me at our parting made me so
+happy and so miserable that I cannot yet recover from it. Your sad image
+is ever before me; I still read deep sorrow in your looks and in your
+tears, and my own heart tells me too well what yours suffered. May God
+grant us a meeting as joyful as our parting was sorrowful! I can only
+repeat what I have so often told you, that if I felt myself without you,
+my dearest friend, in the world, I could enjoy none of its pleasures
+without an alloy of sadness; that if you love me, you will above all
+things watch over your health, and amuse yourself as much as you can by
+varied occupation.' There are protestations of this kind in nearly every
+letter, for the prince's pen was always tipped with fine sentiment and
+vows of eternal devotion came more easily to him than the ordinary
+civilities of everyday life to the average man.</p>
+
+<p>A visit to Goethe at Weimar, on the traveller's leisurely journey
+towards England, furnished his notebook with some interesting specimens
+of the old poet's conversation. 'He received me,' writes the prince, 'in
+a dimly-lighted room, whose <i>clair obscure</i> was arranged with some <i>coquetterie</i>;
+and truly the aspect of the beautiful old man, with his Jovelike
+countenance, was most stately.... In the course of conversation we came
+to Walter Scott. Goethe was not very enthusiastic about the Great
+Unknown. He said he doubted not that he wrote his novels in the same
+sort of partnership as existed between the old painters and their
+pupils; that he furnished the plot, the leading thoughts, the skeleton
+of the scenes, that he then let his pupils fill them up, and retouched
+them at the last. It seemed almost to be his opinion that it was not
+worth the while of a man of Scott's eminence to give himself up to such
+a number of minute and tedious details. "Had I," he said, "been able to
+lend myself to the idea of mere gain, I could formerly have sent such
+things anonymously into the world, with the aid of Lenz and others--nay,
+I could still, as would astonish people not a little, and make them
+puzzle their brains to find out the author; but after all, they would be
+but manufactured wares...."</p>
+
+<p>'He afterwards spoke of Lord Byron with great affection, almost as a
+father would of a son, which was extremely grateful to my enthusiastic
+feelings for this great poet. He contradicted the silly assertion that <i>Manfred</i>
+was only an echo of his <i>Faust</i>. He extremely regretted that he
+had never become personally acquainted with Lord Byron, and severely and
+justly reproached the English nation for having judged their illustrious
+countryman so pettily, and understood him so ill.' The conversation next
+turned on politics, and Goethe reverted to his favourite theory that if
+every man laboured faithfully, honestly, and lovingly in this sphere,
+were it great or small, universal well-being and happiness would not
+long be wanting, whatever the form of government. The prince urged in
+reply that a constitutional government was first necessary to call such
+a principle into life, and adduced the example of England in support of
+his argument. 'Goethe immediately replied that the choice of the example
+was not happy, for that in no country was selfishness more omnipotent;
+that no people were perhaps essentially less humane in their political
+or their private relations; that salvation came, not from without, by
+means of forms of government, but from within, by the wise moderation
+and humble activity of each man in his own circle; and that this must
+ever be the chief source of human felicity, while it was the easiest and
+the simplest to attain.'</p>
+
+<p>The prince seems always to have played the part of Jonah on board
+ship, and on the occasion of his journey to England, he had a terrible
+passage of forty hours, from Rotterdam to the London Docks. As soon as
+he could get his carriage, horses, and luggage clear of the customs, he
+hastened to the Clarendon Hotel, where he had stayed during his first
+visit to London. Unlike the American, N. P. Willis, he had come armed
+with many prejudices against England and the English, few of which he
+succeeded in losing during the two years of his sojourn among us. In his
+first letter from London, dated October 5, 1826, he writes: 'London is
+now so utterly dead to elegance and fashion that one hardly meets a
+single equipage, and nothing remains of the <i>beau monde</i> but a few
+ambassadors. The huge city is at the same time full of fog and dirt, and
+the macadamised streets are like well-worn roads. The old pavement has
+been torn up, and replaced by small pieces of granite, the interstices
+between which are filled up with gravel; this renders the riding more
+easy, and diminishes the noise, but on the other hand changes the town
+into a sort of quagmire.' The prince comments favourably on the
+improvements that had recently been carried out by Nash the architect,
+more especially as regards Regent Street and Portland Place, and
+declares that the laying out of the Regent's Park is 'faultless,'
+particularly in the disposition of the water.</p>
+
+<p>The comfort and luxury of English hotels, as well as of private
+houses, is a subject on which the traveller frequently enlarges, and in
+this first letter he assures his Lucie that she would be delighted with
+the extreme cleanliness of the interiors, the great convenience of the
+furniture, and the good manners of the serving-people, though he admits
+that, for all that pertains to luxury, the tourist pays about six times
+as much as in Germany. 'The comfort of the inns,' he continues, 'is
+unknown on the Continent; on your washing-table you find, not one
+miserable water-bottle with a single earthenware jug and basin, and a
+long strip of towel, but positive tubs of porcelain in which you may
+plunge half your body; taps which instantly supply you with streams of
+water at pleasure; half-a-dozen wide towels, a large standing mirror,
+foot-baths and other conveniences of the toilet, all of equal elegance.'</p>
+
+<p>The prince took advantage of the dead season to explore the city and
+other unfashionable quarters of the town. He was delighted with the
+excellent side-pavements, the splendid shops, the brilliant gas-lamps,
+and above all (like Miss Edgeworth's Rosamund) with 'the great glass
+globes in the chemists' windows, filled with liquid of a deep red, blue
+or green, the light of which is visible for miles(!)' Visits to the
+Exchange, the Bank, and the Guildhall were followed by a call on
+Rothschild, 'the Grand Ally of the Grand Alliance,' at his house of
+business. 'On my presenting my card,' says our hero, 'he remarked
+ironically that we were lucky people who could afford to travel about,
+and take our pleasure, while he, poor man, had such a heavy burden to
+bear. He then broke out into bitter complaints that every poor devil who
+came to England had something to ask of him.... After this the
+conversation took a political turn, and we of course agreed that Europe
+could not subsist without him; he modestly declined our compliments, and
+said, smiling, 'Oh no, you are only jesting; I am but a servant, with
+whom people are pleased because he manages their affairs well, and to
+whom they allow some crumbs to fall as an acknowledgment.'</p>
+
+<p>On October 19 the prince went to Newmarket for the races. During his
+stay he was introduced to a rich merchant of the neighbourhood, who
+invited him to spend a couple of days at his country-house. He gives
+Lucie a minute account of the manners and customs of an English <i>m&eacute;nage</i>,
+but these are only interesting to the modern reader in so far as they
+have become obsolete. For example: 'When you enter the dining-room, you
+find the whole of the first course on the table, as in France. After the
+soup is removed, and the covers are taken off, every man helps the dish
+before him, and offers some to his neighbour; if he wishes for anything
+else, he must ask across the table, or send a servant for it, a very
+troublesome custom.... It is not usual to take wine without drinking to
+another person. If the company is small, and a man has drunk with
+everybody, but happens to wish for more wine, he must wait for the
+dessert, if he does not find in himself courage to brave custom.'</p>
+
+<p>On his return to town the prince, who had been elected a member of
+the Travellers' Club, gives a long dissertation on English club life,
+not forgetting to dwell on the luxury of all the arrangements, the
+excellent service, and the methodical fashion in which the gaming-tables
+were conducted. 'In no other country,' he declares, 'are what are here
+emphatically called "business habits" carried so extensively into social
+and domestic life; the value of time, of order, of despatch, of routine,
+are nowhere so well understood. This is the great key to the most
+striking, national characteristics. The quantity of material objects
+produced and accomplished--<i>the work done</i>--in England exceeds all
+that man ever effected. The causes that have produced these results have
+as certainly given birth to the dulness, the contracted views, the
+inveterate prejudices, the unbounded desire for, and deference to wealth
+which characterise the great mass of Englishmen.'</p>
+
+<p>During this first winter in London the prince was a regular
+attendant at the theatres, and many were the dramatic criticisms that he
+sent to his 'friend' at Muskau. He saw Liston in the hundred and second
+representation of Paul Pry, and at Drury Lane found, to his amazement
+that Braham, whom he remembered as an elderly man in 1814, was still
+first favourite. 'He is the genuine representative of the English style
+of singing,' writes our critic, 'and in popular songs is the adored idol
+of the public. One cannot deny him great power of voice and rapidity of
+execution, but a more abominable style it is difficult to conceive....
+The most striking feature to a foreigner in English theatres is the
+natural coarseness and brutality of the audiences. The consequence is
+that the higher and more civilised classes go only to the Italian Opera,
+and very rarely visit their national theatre. English freedom has
+degenerated into the rudest licence, and it is not uncommon in the midst
+of the most affecting part of a tragedy, or the most charming cadenza of
+a singer, to hear some coarse expression shouted from the gallery in a
+stentor voice. This is followed, either by loud laughter and applause,
+or by the castigation and expulsion of the offender.'</p>
+
+<p>The poor prince saw Mozart's <i>Figaro</i> announced for performance
+at Drury Lane, and looked forward to hearing once more the sweet
+harmonies of his Vaterland. 'What, then, was my astonishment,' he
+exclaims, in justifiable indignation, 'at the unheard-of treatment which
+the masterpiece of the immortal composer has received at English hands!
+You will hardly believe me when I tell you that neither the count, the
+countess, nor Figaro sang; these parts were given to mere actors, and
+their principal airs were sung by other singers. To add to this the
+gardener roared out some interpolated English popular songs, which
+suited Mozart's music just as a pitch-plaster would suit the face of the
+Venus de' Medici. The whole opera was, moreover, arranged by a certain
+Mr. Bishop; that is, adapted to English ears by means of the most
+tasteless and shocking alterations. The English national music, the
+coarse, heavy melodies of which can never be mistaken for an instant,
+has to me, at least, something singularly offensive, an expression of
+brutal feeling both in pain and pleasure that smacks of "roast-beef,
+plum-pudding, and porter."'</p>
+
+<p>Another entertainment attended by our hero about this time was the
+opening of Parliament by George IV., who had not performed this ceremony
+for several years. 'The king,' we are told, 'looked pale and bloated,
+and was obliged to sit on the throne for a considerable time before he
+could get breath enough to read his speech. During this time he turned
+friendly glances and condescending bows towards some favoured ladies. On
+his right stood Lord Liverpool, with the sword of state and the speech
+in his hand, and the Duke of Wellington on his left. All three looked so
+miserable, so ashy-grey and worn out, that never did human greatness
+appear to me so little worth.... In spite of his feebleness, George IV.
+read his <i>banale</i> speech with great dignity and a fine voice, but
+with that royal nonchalance which does not concern itself with what his
+Majesty promises, or whether he is sometimes unable to decipher a word.
+It was very evident that the monarch was heartily glad when the <i>corv&eacute;e</i>
+was over.'</p>
+
+<p>In one of his early letters the traveller gives his friend the
+following account of the manner in which he passes his day: 'I rise
+late, read three or four newspapers at breakfast, look in my
+visiting-book to see what visits I have to pay, and either drive to pay
+them in my cabriolet, or ride. In the course of these excursions, I
+sometimes catch the enjoyment of the picturesque; the struggle of the
+blood-red sun with the winter fogs often produces wild and singular
+effects of light. After my visits I ride for several hours about the
+beautiful environs of London, return when it grows dark, dress for
+dinner, which is at seven or eight, and spend the evening either at the
+theatre or some small party. The ludicrous routs--at which one hardly
+finds standing-room on the staircase--have not yet commenced. In
+England, however, except in a few diplomatic houses, you can go nowhere
+in the evening without a special invitation.' The prince seems to have
+been bored at most of the parties he attended; partly, perhaps, out of
+pique at finding himself, so long accustomed to be the principal
+personage in his little kingdom of Muskau, eclipsed in influence and
+wealth by many a British commoner. Few persons that he met in the London
+of that day amused him more than the great Rothschild, with whom he
+dined more than once at the banker's suburban villa. Of one of these
+entertainments he writes: 'Mr. Rothschild was in high good-humour,
+amusing and talkative. It was diverting to hear him explain to us the
+pictures round his room (all portraits of the sovereigns of Europe,
+presented through their ambassadors), and talk of the originals as his
+very good friends, and in a certain sense his equals. "Yes," said he,
+"the Prince of ----- once pressed me for a loan, and in the same week on
+which I received his autograph letter, his father wrote to me also from
+Rome, to beg me, for Heaven's sake, not to have any concern in it, for
+that I could not have to do with a more dishonest man than his son...."
+He concluded by modestly calling himself the dutiful and generously paid
+agent and servant of these high potentates, all of whom he honoured
+equally, let the state of politics be what it might; for, said he,
+laughing, "I never like to quarrel with my bread and butter." It shows
+great prudence in Mr. Rothschild to have accepted neither title nor
+order, and thus to have preserved a far more respectable independence.
+He doubtless owes much to the good advice of his extremely amiable and
+judicious wife, who excels him in tact and knowledge of the world,
+though not, perhaps, in acuteness and talents for business.'</p>
+
+<p>Although the prince had not as yet entered the ranks of authors, he
+was always interested in meeting literary people, such as Mr. Hope,
+author of <i>Anastasius</i>, Mr. Morier of <i>Hadji Baba</i> fame, and
+Lady Charlotte Bury, who had exchanged the celebrity of a beauty for
+that of a fashionable novelist. 'I called on Lady Charlotte,' he says,
+'the morning after meeting her, and found everything in her house brown,
+in every possible shade; furniture, curtains, carpets, her own and her
+children's dresses, presented no other colour. The room was without
+looking-glasses or pictures, and its only ornaments were casts from the
+antique.... After I had been there some time, the celebrated publisher,
+Constable, entered. This man has made a fortune by Walter Scott's
+novels, though, as I was told, he refused his first and best, <i>Waverley</i>,
+and at last gave but a small sum for it. I hope the charming Lady
+Charlotte had better cause to be satisfied with him.' Towards the end of
+December, his Highness's head-gardener, Rehde, a very important
+functionary at Muskau, arrived in London to be initiated into the
+mysteries of English landscape-gardening. Together the two enthusiasts,
+master and man, made a tour of some of the principal show-places of
+England, including Stanmore Priory, Woburn Abbey, Cashiobury, Blenheim,
+Stowe, Eaton, Warwick, and Kenilworth, besides many of lesser note. At
+the end of the excursion, which lasted three weeks, the prince declared
+that even he was beginning to feel satiated with the charms of English
+parks. On his return to London he was invited to spend a few days with
+Lord Darnley at Cobham, and writes thence some further impressions of
+English country-house life. He was a little perturbed at being publicly
+reminded by his elderly host that they had made each other's
+acquaintance thirty years before.</p>
+
+<p>'Now, as I was in frocks at the time he spoke of,' observes the
+prince, 'I was obliged to beg for a further explanation, though I cannot
+say I was much delighted at having my age so fully discussed before all
+the company, for you know I claim to look not more than thirty. However,
+I could not but admire Lord Darnley's memory. He recollected every
+circumstance of his visit to my parents with the Duke of Portland, and
+recalled to me many a little forgotten incident.'</p>
+
+<p>The <i>vie de ch&acirc;teau</i> the traveller considered the most
+agreeable side of English life, by reason of its freedom, and the
+absence of those wearisome ceremonies which in Germany oppressed both
+host and guests. The English custom of being always <i>en
+&eacute;vidence</i>, however, occasioned him considerable surprise.
+'Strangers,' he observes, 'have generally only one room allotted to
+them, and Englishmen seldom go into this room except to sleep, and to
+dress twice a day, which, even without company, is always <i>de rigueur</i>;
+for all meals are usually taken in public, and any one who wants to
+write does it in the library. There, also, those who wish to converse,
+give each other <i>rendezvous</i>, to avoid the rest of the society.
+Here you have an opportunity of gossiping for hours with the young
+ladies, who are always very literarily inclined. Many a marriage is thus
+concocted or destroyed between the <i>corpus juris</i> on the one side,
+and Bouffler's works on the other, while fashionable novels, as a sort
+of intermediate link, lie on the tables in the middle.</p>
+
+<p>Early in February the prince paid a visit to Brighton, where he made
+the acquaintance of Count D'Orsay, and was entertained by Mrs.
+Fitzherbert. He gives a jaundiced account of two entertainments, a
+public ball and a musical <i>soir&eacute;e</i>, which he attended while
+at Brighton, declaring--probably with some truth--that the latter is one
+of the greatest trials to which a foreigner can be exposed in England.
+'Every mother,' he explains, 'who has grown-up daughters, for whom she
+has had to pay large sums to the music-master, chooses to enjoy the
+satisfaction of having the youthful talent admired. There is nothing,
+therefore, but quavering and strumming right and left, so that one is
+really overpowered and unhappy; and even if an Englishwoman has a
+natural capacity for singing, she seldom acquires either style or
+science. The men are much more agreeable <i>dilettanti</i>, for they at
+least give one the diversion of a comical farce. That a man should
+advance to the piano with far greater confidence than a David, strike
+with his forefinger the note which he thinks his song should begin with,
+and then <i>entonner</i> like a thunder-clap (generally a tone or two
+lower than the pitch), and sing through a long aria without an
+accompaniment of any kind, except the most wonderful distortions of
+face, is a thing one must have seen to believe it possible, especially
+in the presence of at least fifty people.'</p>
+
+<p>By the middle of April the season had begun in town, and the prince
+soon found himself up to the eyes in invitations for balls, dinners,
+breakfasts, and <i>soir&eacute;es</i>. We hear of him dining with the
+Duke of Clarence, to meet the Duchess of Kent and her daughter;
+assisting at the Lord Mayor's banquet, which lasted six hours, and at
+which the chief magistrate made six-and-twenty speeches, long and short;
+breakfasting with the Duke of Devonshire at Chiswick, being nearly
+suffocated at the routs of Lady Cowper and Lady Jersey, and attending
+his first ball at Almack's, in which famous assemblage his expectations
+were woefully disappointed. 'A large, bare room,' so runs his
+description, 'with a bad floor, and ropes round it, like the space in an
+Arab camp parted off for horses; two or three badly-furnished rooms at
+the side, in which the most wretched refreshments are served, and a
+company into which, in spite of all the immense difficulty of getting
+tickets, a great many nobodies had wriggled; in which the dress was as
+tasteless as the <i>tournure</i> was bad--this was all. In a word, a
+sort of inn-entertainment--the music and lighting the only good things.
+And yet Almack's is the culminating point of the English world of
+fashion.'</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately for his readers, the prince was rather an observer
+than an auditor; for he describes what he sees vividly enough, but
+seldom takes the trouble to set down the conversation that he hears.
+Perhaps he thought it hardly worth recording, for he complains that in
+England politics had become the main ingredient in social intercourse,
+that the lighter and more frivolous pleasures suffered by the change,
+and that the art of conversation would soon be entirely lost. 'In this
+country,' he unkindly adds, 'I should think it [the art of conversation]
+never existed, unless, perhaps, in Charles II.'s time. And, indeed,
+people here are too slavishly subject to established usages, too
+systematic in all their enjoyments, too incredibly kneaded up with
+prejudices; in a word, too little vivacious to attain to that unfettered
+spring and freedom of spirit, which must ever be the sole basis of
+agreeable society. I must confess that I know none more monotonous, nor
+more persuaded of its own pre-eminence than the highest society of this
+country. A stony, marble-cold spirit of caste and fashion rules all
+classes, and makes the highest tedious, the lowest ridiculous.'</p>
+
+<p>In spite of his dislike to politics as a subject of conversation,
+his Highness attended debates at the House of Lords and the House of
+Commons, and was so keenly interested in what he heard that he declared
+the hours passed like minutes. Canning had just been intrusted by George
+IV. with the task of forming a government, but had promptly been
+deserted by six members of the former Ministry, including Wellington,
+Lord Eldon, and Peel, who were now accused of having resigned in
+consequence of a cabal or conspiracy against the constitutional
+prerogative of the king to change his ministers at his own pleasure. In
+the House of Commons the prince heard Peel's attack on Canning and the
+new government, which was parried by Brougham. 'In a magnificent speech,
+which flowed on like a clear stream, Brougham,' we are told, 'tried to
+disarm his opponent; now tortured him with sarcasms; now wrought upon
+the sensibility, or convinced the reason, of his hearers. The orator
+closed with the solemn declaration that he was perfectly impartial; that
+he <i>could</i> be impartial, because it was his fixed determination
+never, and on no terms, to accept a place in the administration of the
+kingdom.... [Footnote: In 1831 Brougham accepted office as Lord
+Chancellor.] Canning, the hero of the day, now rose. If his predecessor
+might be compared to a dexterous and elegant boxer, Canning presented
+the image of a finished antique gladiator. All was noble, simple,
+refined; then suddenly his eloquence burst forth like lightning-grand
+and all-subduing. His speech was, from every point of view, the most
+complete, as well as the most irresistibly persuasive--the crown and
+glory of the debate.'</p>
+
+<p>On the following day the prince heard some of the late ministers on
+their defence in the House of Lords. 'Here,' he observes, 'I saw the
+great Wellington in terrible straits. He is no orator, and was obliged
+to enter upon his defence like an accused person. He was considerably
+agitated; and this senate of his country, though composed of men whom
+individually, perhaps, he did not care for, appeared more imposing to
+him <i>en masse</i> than Napoleon and his hundred thousands. He
+stammered much, interrupted and involved himself, but at length he
+brought the matter tolerably to this conclusion, that there was no
+"conspiracy." He occasionally said strong things--probably stronger than
+he meant, for he was evidently not master of his material. Among other
+things, the following words pleased me extremely: "I am a soldier and no
+orator. I am utterly deficient in the talents requisite to play a part
+in this great assembly. I must be more than insane if I ever entertained
+the thought, of which I am accused, of becoming Prime Minister."...
+[Footnote: In January 1828 the duke became Prime Minister.] When I
+question myself as to the total impression of this day, I must confess
+that it was at once elevating and melancholy--the former when I fancied
+myself an Englishman, the latter when I felt myself a German. This
+twofold senate of the people of England, in spite of all the defects and
+blemishes common to human institutions, is yet grand in the highest
+degree; and in contemplating its power and operation thus near at hand,
+one begins to understand why it is that the English nation is, as yet,
+the first on the face of the earth.'</p>
+
+<p>The traveller was by no means exclusively occupied in hearing and
+seeing new things. With that strain of practicality which contrasted so
+oddly with his sentimental and romantic temperament, he kept firmly
+before his eyes the main object of his visit to England. He had
+determined at the outset not to sell himself and his title for less than
+&pound;50,000, but he confesses that, as time passed on, his demands
+became much more modest. His matrimonial ventures were all faithfully
+detailed to the presumably sympathising Lucie, for whose sake, the
+prince persuaded himself, he was far more anxious for success than for
+his own. But he had not counted on the many obstacles with which he
+found himself confronted, chief among them being his relations with his
+former wife. It was known that the ex-princess was still living at
+Muskau with all the rights and privileges of a <i>ch&aacute;telaine</i>,
+while the prince never disguised his attachment to her, and openly kept
+her portrait on his table. English mothers who would have welcomed him
+as a son-in-law were led to believe that the divorce was only a blind,
+and that the prince's marriage would be actually, if not legally, a
+bigamous union. The satirical papers represented him as a
+fortune-hunter, a Bluebeard who had ill-treated his first wife, and
+declared that he had proposed for the hand of the dusky Empress of
+Hayti, then on a visit to Europe.</p>
+
+<p>Still our hero obstinately pursued his quest, laying siege to the
+heart of every presentable-looking heiress to whom he was introduced,
+and if attention to the art of the toilet could have gained him a rich
+bride, he would not long have been unsuccessful. In dress he took the
+genuine interest and delight of the dandy of the period, and marvellous
+are the descriptions of his costume that he sends to Lucie. For morning
+visits, of which he sometimes paid fifty in one day, he wore his hair
+dyed a beautiful black, a new hat, a green neckerchief with gaily
+coloured stripes, a yellow cashmere waistcoat with metal buttons, an
+olive-green frock-coat and iron-grey pantaloons. On other occasions he
+is attired in a dark-brown coat, with a velvet collar, a white
+neckerchief, in which a thin gold watch-chain is entwined, a waistcoat
+with a collar of <i>cramoisie</i> and gold stars, an under-waistcoat of
+white satin, embroidered with gold flowers, full black pantaloons, spun
+silk stockings, and short square shoes. Style such as this could only be
+maintained at a vast outlay, from the German point of view, the week's
+washing-bill alone amounting to an important sum. According to the
+prince's calculation, a London exquisite, during the season of 1827,
+required every week twenty shirts, twenty-four pocket-handkerchiefs,
+nine or ten pairs of summer trousers, thirty neckerchiefs, a dozen
+waistcoats and stockings <i>&agrave; disc&eacute;rtion</i>. 'I see your
+housewifely ears aghast, my good Lucie,' he writes, 'but as a dandy
+cannot get on without dressing three or four times a day, the affair is
+quite simple.'</p>
+
+<p>However much the prince may have enjoyed the ceremony of the toilet,
+he strongly objected to the process of hair-dyeing, and his letters are
+full of complaints of his sufferings and humiliation while undergoing
+the operation, which, he declares, is a form of slow poison, and also an
+unpleasant reminder that he is really old, but obliged to play the part
+of youth in order to attain an object that may bring him more misery
+than happiness. As soon as he is safely married to his heiress, he
+expresses his determination of looking his full age, so that people
+might say 'What a well-preserved old man!' instead of '<i>Voil&agrave;,
+le ci-devant jeune homme</i>!' Still, with all this care and thought,
+heiresses remained coy, or more probably their parents were 'difficult.'
+The prince's highly-developed personal vanity was wounded by many a
+refusal, and so weary did he become of this woman-hunt, that in one
+letter to Lucie, dated March 5, 1827, he exclaims, 'Ah, my dearest, if
+you only had 150,000 thalers, I would marry you again to-morrow!'<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 20%;">
+
+<p style="font-weight: bold; text-align: center;"> PART II</p>
+
+<p> The summer months were spent in visits to Windsor and other parks
+near London, and in a tour through Yorkshire. In October his Highness
+was back in town, and engaged in a new matrimonial venture. He writes to
+Lucie that 'the fortune in question is immense, and if I obtain it, I
+shall end gloriously.' In the correspondence published after the
+prince's death is the draft of a letter to Mr. Bonham of Titness Park,
+containing a formal proposal for the hand of his daughter, 'Miss
+Harriet,' and detailing (with considerable reservations) the position of
+his financial affairs. Muskau, he explains, is worth &pound;4,000 a
+year, an income which in Germany is equivalent to three times as much in
+England. 'Everything belonging to me,' he continues, 'is in the best
+possible order; a noble residence at Muskau, and two smaller chateaux,
+surrounded with large parks and gardens, in fact, all that make enjoy
+life (sic) in the country is amply provided for, and a numerous train of
+officious (sic) of my household are always ready to receive their young
+princess at her own seat, or if she should prefer town, the court of
+Prussia will offer her every satisfaction.' Owing to the fact that
+Muskau was mortgaged for &pound;50,000, he was forced, he confesses, to
+expect an adequate fortune with his wife, a circumstance to which, if he
+had been otherwise situated, he should have paid little attention.</p>
+
+<p>This missive was accompanied by a long letter, dated Nov. 1, 1827,
+to 'Miss Harriet,' in which the suitor explains the circumstances of his
+former marriage, and of his divorce, the knowledge of which has rendered
+her uneasy. 'It is rather singular,' he proceeds, 'that in the very
+first days after my arrival, you, Miss Harriet, were named to me,
+together with some other young ladies, as heiresses. Now I must confess,
+at the risk of the fact being doubted in our industrious times, that I
+myself had a prejudice against, and even some dread of heiresses. I may
+say that I proved in some way these feelings to exist by marrying a lady
+with a very small fortune, and afterwards in England by never courting
+any heiresses further as common civility required. My reasons for so
+doing are not without foundation. In the first instance, I am a little
+proud; in the second, I don't want any more than I possess, though I
+should not reject it, finding it in my way, and besides all this, rich
+young maidens are not always very amiable.' The prince continues that he
+had gone, out of principle, into all kinds of society, and seen many
+charming and handsome girls, but had not been able to discover his
+affinity. At last, after renouncing the idea of marriage, he heard again
+of Miss Harriet Bonham, not of her fortune this time, but of her many
+excellent qualities, and the fact that she had refused several splendid
+offers. His curiosity was now at last aroused; he sought an opportunity
+of being introduced to her, and--'Dearest Miss Harriet, you know the
+rest. I thought--and I protest it by all that is sacred--I thought when
+I left you again, that here at last I had found united all and
+everything I could wish in a future companion through life. An exterior
+the most pleasing, a mind and person equally fit for the representation
+of a court and the delight of a cottage, and above all, that
+sensibility, that goodness of heart, and that perfect absence of
+conceitedness which I value more than every other accomplishment.... I
+beheld you, besides all your more essential qualities, so quick as
+lively, so playful as whitty (<i>sic</i>), and nothing really seemed
+more bewitching to me as when a hearty, joyful laugh changed your
+thoughtful, noble features to the cheerful appearance of a happy child!
+And still through every change your and your friends' conversation and
+behaviour always remained distinguished by that perfect breeding and
+fine tact which, indeed, is to private life what a clear sky is to a
+landscape....'</p>
+
+<p>There is a great deal mere to the same effect, and it is sad to
+think that all this trouble, all this expenditure of ink and English
+grammar, was thrown away. Papa Bonham could not pay down the fortune
+demanded by the prince without injuring the other members of his family;
+[Footnote: Mr. Bonham's eldest daughter was the second wife of the first
+Lord Garvagh.] and although Miss Harriet deplores 'the cruel end of all
+our hopes,' the negotiations fell through.</p>
+
+<p>The prince consoled himself for his disappointment with a fresh
+round of sight-seeing. He became deeply enamoured of a steam-engine, of
+which newly-invented animal he sends the following picturesque
+description to Lucie: 'We must now be living in the days of the <i>Arabian
+Nights</i>, for I have seen a creature to-day far surpassing all the
+fantastic beings of that time. Listen to the monster's characteristics.
+In the first place, its food is the cheapest possible, for it eats
+nothing but wood or coals, and when not actually at work, it requires
+none. It never sleeps, nor is weary; it is subject to no diseases, if
+well organised at first; and never refuses its work till worn out by
+great length of service. It is equally active in all climates, and
+undertakes all kinds of labour without a murmur. Here it is a miner,
+there a sailor, a cotton-spinner, a weaver, or a miller; and though a
+small creature, it draws ninety tons of goods, or a whole regiment of
+soldiers, with a swiftness exceeding that of the fleetest mail-coaches.
+At the same time, it marks its own measured steps on a tablet fixed in
+front of it. It regulates, too, the degree of warmth necessary to its
+well-being; it has a strange power of oiling its inmost joints when they
+are stiff, and of removing at pleasure all injurious air that might find
+the way into its system; but should anything become deranged in it, it
+warns its master by the loud ringing of a bell. Lastly, it is so docile,
+in spite of its enormous strength (nearly equal to that of six hundred
+horses), that a child of four years old is able in a moment to arrest
+its mighty labours by the pressure of his little finger. Did ever a
+witch burnt for sorcery produce its equal?'</p>
+
+<p>A few weeks later we hear of one manifestation of the new power,
+which did not quite come up to the expectations of its admirers. On
+January 16, 1828, the prince writes: 'The new steam-carriage is
+completed, and goes five miles in half an hour on trial in the Regent's
+Park. But there was something to repair every moment. I was one of the
+first of the curious who tried it; but found the smell of oiled iron,
+which makes steamboats so unpleasant, far more insufferable here.
+Stranger still is another vehicle to which I yesterday intrusted my
+person. It is nothing less than a carriage drawn by a paper kite, very
+like those the children fly. This is the invention of a schoolmaster,
+who is so skilful in the guidance of his vehicle, that he can get on
+very fairly with half a wind, but with a completely fair one, and good
+roads, he goes a mile in three-quarters of a minute. The inventor
+proposes to traverse the African deserts in this manner, and has
+contrived a place behind, in which a pony stands like a footman, and in
+case of a calm, can he harnessed to the carriage.'</p>
+
+<p>In the early part of 1828 Henriette Sontag arrived in London, and
+the prince at once fell a victim to her charms. The fascinating singer,
+then barely three-and-twenty, was already the idol of the public, at the
+very summit of her renown. Amazing prices were paid for seats when she
+was announced to appear. Among his Highness's papers was found a ticket
+for a box at the opera on 'Madame Sontag's night,' on which he notes
+that he had sold a diamond clasp to pay the eighty guineas demanded for
+the bit of cardboard. He was in love once again with all the ardour of
+youth, and for the moment all thoughts of a marriage of convenience were
+dismissed from his mind. He was now eager for a love-match with the fair
+Henriette, whose attractions had rendered him temporarily forgetful of
+those of Muskau. But Mademoiselle Sontag, though carried away by the
+passionate wooing of the prince, actually remembered that she had other
+ties, probably her engagement to Rossi, to which it was her duty to
+remain true. She told her lover that he must learn to forget her, and
+that when they parted at the conclusion of the London season, they must
+never meet again. The prince was heart-broken at the necessity for
+separation, and we are assured that he never forgot Henriette Sontag
+(though she had many successors in his affections), and that after his
+return to Germany he placed a gilded bust of the singer in his park, in
+order that he might have her image ever before his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>In the hope of distracting his thoughts from his disappointment,
+Prince P&uuml;ckler decided to make a lengthened tour through Wales and
+Ireland, and with this object in view he set out in July 1828. Before
+his departure, however, he had an interesting rencontre at a
+dinner-party given by the Duchess of St. Albans-the <i>ci-devant</i>
+Harriet Melton. 'I arrived late,' says the prince, in his account of the
+incident, 'and was placed between my hostess and a tall, very simple,
+but benevolent-looking man of middle age, who spoke broad Scotch--a
+dialect anything but agreeable; and would probably have struck me by
+nothing else, if I had not discovered that I was sitting next to ----,
+the Great Unknown! It was not long ere many a sally of dry, poignant wit
+fell from his lips, and many an anecdote told in the most unpretending
+manner. His eye, too, glanced whenever he was animated, with such a
+clear, good-natured lustre, and such an expression of true-hearted
+kindness, that it was impossible not to conceive a sort of affection for
+him. Towards the end of the dinner he and Sir Francis Burdett told
+ghost-stories, half terrible, half humorous, one against the other.... A
+little concert concluded the evening, in which the very pretty daughter
+of the great bard--a healthy-looking Highland beauty--took part, and
+Miss Stephens sang nothing but Scottish ballads.'</p>
+
+<p>Before entering upon a new field of observation, the prince summed
+up his general impressions of London society with a candour that cannot
+have been very agreeable to his English readers. The goddess of Fashion,
+he observes, reigns in England alone with a despotic and inexorable
+sway; while the spirit of caste here receives a power, consistency, and
+completeness of development unexampled in any other country. 'Every
+class of society in England, as well as every field, is separated from
+every other by a hedge of thorns. Each has its own manners and turns of
+expression, and, above all, a supreme and absolute contempt for all
+below it.... Now although the aristocracy does not stand <i>as such</i>
+upon the pinnacle of this strange social edifice, it yet exercises great
+influence over it. It is, indeed, difficult to become fashionable
+without being of good descent; but it by no means follows that a man is
+so in virtue of being well-born--still less of being rich. Ludicrous as
+it may sound, it is a fact that while the present king is a very
+fashionable man, his father was not so in the smallest degree, and that
+none of his brothers have any pretensions to fashion; which
+unquestionably is highly to their honour.' The truth of this observation
+is borne out by the story of Beau Brummell, who, when offended by some
+action of the Regent's, exclaimed, 'If this sort of thing goes on, I
+shall cut Wales, and bring old George into fashion!'</p>
+
+<p>'A London exclusive of the present day,' continues our censor, 'is
+nothing more than a bad, flat, dull imitation of a French <i>rou&eacute;</i>
+of the Regency, Both have in common selfishness, levity, boundless
+vanity, and an utter want of heart. But what a contrast if we look
+further! In France the absence of all morality and honesty was in some
+degree atoned for by the most refined courtesy, the poverty of soul by
+agreeableness and wit. What of all this has the English dandy to offer?
+His highest triumph is to appear with the most wooden manners, as little
+polished as will suffice to avoid castigation; nay, to contrive even his
+civilities so that they are as near as may be to affronts--this is the
+style of deportment that confers on him the greatest celebrity. Instead
+of a noble, high-bred ease, to have the courage to offend against every
+restraint of decorum; to invert the relation in which his sex stands to
+women, so that they appear the attacking, and he the passive or
+defensive party; to cut his best friends if they cease to have the
+strength and authority of fashion; to delight in the ineffably <i>fade</i>
+jargon and affectations of his set, and always to know what is "the
+thing"--these are the accomplishments that distinguish a young "lion" of
+fashion. Whoever reads the best of the recent English novels--those by
+the author of <i>Pelham</i>--may be able to abstract from them a
+tolerably just idea of English fashionable society, provided he does not
+forget to deduct qualities which the national self-love has erroneously
+claimed --namely, grace for its <i>rou&eacute;s</i>, seductive manners
+and witty conversation for its dandies.'</p>
+
+<p>The foregoing is a summary of the prince's lengthy indictment
+against London society. 'I saw in the fashionable world,' he observes in
+conclusion, 'only too frequently, and with few exceptions, a profound
+vulgarity of thought; an immorality little veiled or adorned; the most
+undisguised arrogance; and the coarsest neglect of all kindly feelings
+and attentions haughtily assumed for the sake of shining in a false and
+despicable refinement; even more inane and intolerable to a healthy mind
+than the awkward stiffness of the declared Nobodies. It has been said
+that vice and poverty form the most revolting combination; since I have
+been in England, vice and boorish rudeness seem to me to form a still
+more disgusting union.'</p>
+
+<p>The prince's adventures in Wales and Ireland, with the recital of
+which he has filled up the best part of two volumes, must here be
+dismissed in as many paragraphs. On his tour through Wales, he left his
+card on the Ladies of Llangollen, who promptly invited him to lunch.
+Fortunately, he had previously been warned of his hostesses'
+peculiarities of dress and appearance. 'Imagine,' he writes, 'two
+ladies, the elder of whom, Lady Eleanor Butler, a short, robust woman,
+begins to feel her years a little, being nearly eighty-three; the other,
+a tall and imposing person, esteems herself still youthful, being only
+seventy-four. Both wore their still abundant hair combed straight back
+and powdered, a round man's hat, a man's cravat and waistcoat, but in
+the place of "inexpressibles," a short petticoat and boots: the whole
+covered by a coat of blue cloth, of quite a peculiar cut. Over this Lady
+Eleanor wore, first the grand cordon of the order of St. Louis across
+her shoulders; secondly, the same order round her neck; thirdly, the
+small cross of the same in her buttonhole; and, <i>pour comble de gloire</i>,
+a golden lily of nearly the natural size as a star. So far the effect
+was somewhat ludicrous. But now you must imagine both ladies with that
+agreeable <i>aisance</i>, that air of the world of the <i>ancien
+r&eacute;gime</i>, courteous, entertaining, without the slightest
+affectation, speaking French as well as any Englishwoman of my
+acquaintance; and, above all, with that essentially polite,
+unconstrained, simply cheerful manner of the good society of that day,
+which in our hard-working, business age appears to be going to utter
+decay.'</p>
+
+<p>Thanks to his letters of introduction and the friendships that he
+struck up on the road, the prince was able occasionally to step out of
+the beaten tourist tracks, and to see something of the more intimate
+side of Irish social life. He has given a lively and picturesque account
+of his experiences, which included an introduction to Lady Morgan,
+[Footnote: See page 142.] and to her charming nieces, the Miss Clarkes
+(who made a profound impression on his susceptible heart), a sentimental
+journey through Wicklow, a glance at the humours of Donnybrook Fair, a
+visit to O'Connell at Derrinane Abbey, a peep into the wilds of
+Connaught, an Emancipation dinner at Cashel, where he made his <i>d&eacute;but</i>
+as an English orator, and an expedition to the lakes of Killarney. All
+this, which was probably novel and interesting to the German public,
+contains little that is not familiar to the modern English reader. The
+sketch of O'Connell is sufficiently vivid to bear quotation.</p>
+
+<p>'Daniel O'Connell,' observes the prince, after his visit to
+Derrinane, 'is no common man--though the man of the commonalty. His
+power is so great that at this moment it only depends on him to raise
+the standard of rebellion from one end of the island to the other. He
+is, however, too sharp-sighted, and much too sure of attaining his ends
+by safer means, to wish to bring on any such violent crisis. He has
+certainly shown great dexterity in availing himself of the temper of the
+country at this moment, legally, openly, and in the face of Government,
+to acquire a power scarcely inferior to that of the sovereign; indeed,
+though without arms or armies, in some instances far surpassing it. For
+how would it have been possible for his Majesty George IV. to withhold
+40,000 of his faithful Irishmen for three days from whisky drinking?
+which O'Connell actually accomplished in the memorable Clare election.
+The enthusiasm of the people rose to such a height that they themselves
+decreed and inflicted a punishment for drunkenness. The delinquent was
+thrown into the river, and held there for two hours, during which time
+he was made to undergo frequent submersions.... On the whole, O'Connell
+exceeded my expectations. His exterior is attractive, and the expression
+of intelligent good-humour, united with determination and prudence,
+which marks his countenance, is extremely winning. He has perhaps more
+of persuasiveness than of large and lofty eloquence; and one frequently
+perceives too much design and manner in his words. Nevertheless, it is
+impossible not to follow his powerful arguments with interest, to view
+the martial dignity of his carriage without pleasure, or to refrain from
+laughing at his wit.... He has received from Nature an invaluable gift
+for a party-leader, a magnificent voice, united to good lungs and a
+strong constitution. His understanding is sharp and quick, and his
+acquirements out of his profession not inconsiderable. With all this his
+manners are, as I have said, winning and popular, though somewhat of the
+actor is noticeable in them; they do not conceal his very high opinion
+of himself, and are occasionally tinged by what an Englishman would call <i>vulgarity</i>.
+But where is there a picture without shade?'</p>
+
+<p>The prince's matrimonial projects had been pursued only in
+half-hearted fashion during this year, and on his return to England in
+December, he seems to have thrown up the game in despair. On January 2,
+1829, he turned his back on our perfidious shores, and made a short tour
+in France before proceeding to Muskau. In one of his letters to Lucie he
+admits that on his return journey he had plenty of material for
+reflection. Two precious years had been wasted, absence from his dearest
+friend had been endured, a large sum of money had been spent in keeping
+up a dashing appearance--and all in vain. He consoles himself with the
+amazing reflection that Parry had failed in three attempts to reach the
+North Pole, and Bonaparte, after heaping victory on victory for twenty
+years, had perished miserably in St. Helena!</p>
+
+<p>But if the prince had not accomplished his design of carrying off a
+British heiress, his sojourn in England brought him a prize of a
+different kind--namely, the laurel crown of fame. His <i>Briefe eines
+Verstorbenen</i>, the first volumes of which were published anonymously
+in 1830, was greeted with an almost unanimous outburst of admiration and
+applause. The critics vied with each other in praising a work in which,
+according to their verdict, the grace and piquancy of France were
+combined with the analytical methods and the profound philosophy of
+Germany. In England, as was only to be expected, the chorus of applause
+was not unmixed with hisses and catcalls. The author had, however, been
+exceptionally fortunate in his translator, Sarah Austin, whose version
+of the Letters, entitled <i>The Tour of a German Prince</i>, was
+described by the <i>Westminster Review</i> as 'the best modern
+translation of a prose work that has ever appeared, and perhaps our only
+translation from the German. As an original work, the ease and facility
+of the style would be admired; as a translation, it is unrivalled.'
+Croker reviewed the book in the <i>Quarterly</i> in his accustomed
+strain of playful brutality, rejoiced savagely over the numerous
+blunders, [Footnote: The most amusing of these is the derivation of the
+Prince of Wales' motto 'Ich dien' from two Welsh words, 'Eich deyn,'
+said to signify 'This is your man!'] and credited the author with almost
+as many blasphemies as Lady Morgan herself. The <i>Edinburgh</i>, in a
+more impartial notice, observed that a great part of the work had no
+other merit than that of being an act of individual treachery against
+the hospitalities of private life, and commented on the fact that while
+the masterpieces of Goethe and Schiller were still untranslated, the <i>Tour
+of Prince P&uuml;ckler-Muskau</i> had been bought up in a month.</p>
+
+<p>The prince was far too vain of his unexpected literary success to
+preserve his anonymity, and the ink-craving having laid hold upon him,
+he lost no time in setting to work upon another book. The semblance of a
+separation between himself and Lucie had now been thrown aside. During
+the summer months they lived at Muskau, where they laboured together
+over plans for the embellishment of the gardens, while in the winter
+they kept up a splendid establishment in Berlin. The sight of a divorced
+couple living together seems to have shocked the Berliners far more than
+that of a married couple living apart, but to P&uuml;ckler, as a
+chartered 'original,' much was forgiven. At this time he went a good
+deal into literary society, and became intimate with several
+women-writers, among them the Gr&auml;fin Hahn-Hahn, Rahel, and that
+amazing lady, Bettine von Arnim. With the last-named he struck up an
+intellectual friendship which roused the jealousy of Lucie, and was
+finally wrecked by Bettine's attempts to obtain a spiritual empire over
+the lord of Muskau.</p>
+
+<p>In 1832 the prince's debts amounted to 500,000 thalers, and he was
+obliged once again to face the fact that he could only save himself from
+ruin by a wealthy marriage, or by the sale of his estate. In a long
+letter he laid the state of the case before his faithful companion,
+pointing out that even at forty-seven, he, with his title and his
+youthful appearance, might hope to secure a bride worth 300,000 thalers,
+but that as long as his ex-wife remained at Muskau he was hardly likely
+to be successful in his matrimonial speculations. Lucie again consented
+to sacrifice herself in the good cause; but the prince, a man of
+innumerable <i>bonnes fortunes</i> according to his own account, was
+curiously unfortunate as a would-be Benedick. The German heiresses were
+no more propitious to his suit than the English ones had been; and
+though, as he plaintively observes, he would have liked nothing better
+than to be a Turkish pasha with a hundred and fifty sultanas, he was
+unable to obtain a single Christian wife.</p>
+
+<p>In 1834 the prince published two books, <i>Tutti Frutti</i>, a
+collection of stories and sketches, and <i>Observations on
+Landscape-Gardening</i>. <i>Tutti Frutti</i> was by no means so popular
+as the <i>Briefe eines Verstorbenen</i>, but the <i>Observations</i>
+took rank as a standard work. The project of a journey to America having
+been abandoned, the prince now determined to spend the winter in
+Algiers, leaving Lucie in charge at Muskau. This modest programme
+enlarged itself into a tour in the East, which lasted for more than five
+years. The travellers adventures during this period have been described
+in his <i>Semilasso in Africa, Aus Mehemet's Reich, Die R&uuml;ckkehr</i>,
+and other works, which added to their author's fame, and nearly
+sufficed to pay his expenses. We hear of him breaking hearts at Tunis
+and Athens, shooting big game in the Soudan, astonishing the Arabs by
+his horsemanship, and meddling in Egyptian politics. It was not until
+1838 that, moved by Lucie's complaints of her loneliness, he reluctantly
+abandoned his plan of settling in the East, and turned his face towards
+Europe. On the homeward journey he made a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and
+turned out of his course for the visit to Lady Hester Stanhope that has
+already been described.</p>
+
+<p>His Highness arrived at Vienna in the autumn of 1839, bringing in
+his suite an Abyssinian slave-girl, Machbuba, whom he had bought a
+couple of years before, and who had developed such wonderful qualities
+of head and heart, that he could not bring himself to part from her. But
+Lucie obstinately refused to receive Machbuba at Muskau, and declared
+that the prince's reputation would be destroyed for ever, if he brought
+a favourite slave under the same roof as his 'wife,' and thus sinned
+against the laws of outward seemliness. So Machbuba and the master who,
+like another Pygmalion, seems to have endowed this dusky Galatea with a
+mind and soul, remained at Vienna, where the Abyssinian, clad in a
+picturesque Mameluke's costume, accompanied the prince to all the public
+spectacles, and became a nine days' wonder to the novelty-loving
+Viennese. But the severity of a European winter proved fatal to poor
+Machbuba, consumption laid its grip upon her, and it was as a dying girl
+that at last she was taken to the Baths of Muskau. Lucie received this
+once-dreaded rival kindly, but at once carried off the prince for a
+visit to Berlin, and in the absence of the master whom she worshipped
+with a spaniel-like devotion, Machbuba breathed her last. The slave-girl
+was laid to rest amid all the pomp and ceremony of a state funeral, the
+principal inhabitants of Muskau and the neighbourhood followed her to
+her grave, and on the Sunday following her death the chaplain delivered
+a eulogy on Machbuba's virtues, and the fatherly benevolence of her
+master.</p>
+
+<p>The prince was temporarily broken-hearted at the death of his
+favourite, but his mercurial spirits soon reasserted themselves, and a
+round of visits to the various German courts restored him to his
+accustomed self-complacency. The idea of selling Muskau, and thus
+ridding himself of the burden of his debts, once more occupied his mind.
+A handsome offer for the estate had been refused a few years before, in
+compliance with the wishes of Lucie, who loved Muskau even better than
+its master, and had appealed to the king to prevent the sale. But in
+1845 came another offer from Count Hatzfeld of 1,700,000 thalers, which,
+in spite of Lucie's tears and entreaties, the prince decided to accept.
+Although it cost him a sharp pang to give up to another the spot of
+earth on which he had lavished so much time, so much labour, and so much
+money, he fully appreciated the advantage of an unembarrassed income and
+complete freedom of movement.</p>
+
+<p>For a year or two after the sale, he led a wandering life, with
+Berlin or Weimar for his headquarters. In 1846, shortly before his
+sixtieth birthday, he met, so he confided to the long-suffering Lucie,
+the only woman he had ever loved, or at least the only woman he had ever
+desired to marry. Unfortunately, the lady, who was young, beautiful,
+clever, of high rank, large fortune, and angelic disposition, had been
+married for some years to a husband who is described as ugly,
+ill-tempered, jealous, and incredibly selfish. The prince's letters at
+this period are filled with raptures over the virtues of his new <i>inamorata</i>,
+and lamentations that he had met her too late. For though his passion
+was returned the lady was a strict Catholic, for whom a divorce was out
+of the question, and for once this hardened Lothario shrank from an
+elopement, with the resultant stain upon the reputation of the woman he
+loved. In 1846 he parted from his affinity, who survived the separation
+little more than a year, and retired with a heavy heart to his paternal
+castle of Branitz, near Kottbus, where he occupied himself in planting a
+park and laying out gardens. Branitz was only about a tenth part the
+size of Muskau, and stood in the midst of a sandy waste, but at more
+than sixty years of age the prince set himself, with all the ardour of
+youth, to conjure a paradise out of the wilderness. Forest trees were
+transplanted, lakes and canals dug, hills appeared out of the level
+fields, and, in short, this 'earth-tamer,' as Rahel called him, created
+not only a park, but a complete landscape.</p>
+
+<p>The remainder of our hero's eventful career must be briefly
+summarised. In 1851 he made a flight to England to see the Great
+Exhibition. Here he renewed his acquaintance with many old friends,
+among them the Duchess of Somerset, who told him that she had known his
+father well twenty-five years before. The prince, who has been described
+as a male Ninon de L'Enclos, was naturally delighted at being mistaken
+for his own son. In 1852 the work at Branitz was so far advanced that
+its lord invited Lucie to come and take up her abode at the Schloss. But
+the poor lady's troubled life was nearing its close. She had a paralytic
+stroke in the autumn of this year, and remained an invalid until her
+death, which took place at Branitz in May, 1854.</p>
+
+<p>In the loneliness that followed, the prince amused himself by
+keeping up a lively correspondence with his feminine acquaintance, for
+whom, even at seventy, he had not lost his fascinations. His celebrity
+as an author and a traveller brought him many anonymous correspondents,
+and he never wearied of reading and answering the sentimental effusions
+of his unknown admirers. In 1863 he paid a visit incognito to Muskau,
+the first since he had left it eighteen years before, though Branitz was
+but a few leagues away. He was recognised at once, and great was the joy
+in the little town over the return of its old ruler, who was honoured
+with illuminations, the discharge of cannon, and torchlight processions.
+The estate had passed into the hands of Prince Frederick of the
+Netherlands, who had carried out all its former master's plans, and
+added many improvements of his own. P&uuml;ckler generously admired the
+splendour that he had had so large a share in creating, and then went
+contentedly back to his <i>kleine Branitz</i>, his only regret being
+that he could not live to see it, like Muskau, in the fulness of its
+matured beauty. In 1866, when war broke out between Prussia and Austria,
+this grand old man of eighty-one volunteered for active service, and
+begged to be attached to the headquarters' staff. His request was
+granted, and he went gallantly through the brief campaign, but was
+bitterly disappointed because he was not able to be present at the
+battle of Koniggr&auml;tz, owing to the indisposition of the king, upon
+whom he was in attendance.</p>
+
+<p>In 1870, when France declared war against Prussia, he again
+volunteered, and was deeply mortified when the king declined his
+services on account of his advanced age. For the first time he seems to
+have realised that he was old, and it is probable that the
+disappointment preyed upon his spirits, for his strength rapidly
+declined, his memory failed, and on February 4,1871, after a brief
+illness, he sank peacefully to rest. He was buried in a tomb that he had
+built for himself many years before, a pyramid sixty feet high, which
+stood upon an acre of ground in the centre of an artificial lake. The
+two inscriptions that the prince chose for his sepulchre illustrate,
+appropriately enough, the sharply contrasting qualities of his strange
+individuality--his romantic sentimentality, and his callous cynicism.
+The first inscription was a line from the Koran: </p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp; 'Graves are the mountain summits of a far-off, fairer
+world.'</p>
+
+<p>The second, chosen presumably for the sake of the paradox, was the
+French apothegm: </p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'Allons<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Chez<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Pluto plut&ocirc;t plus tard.'<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;">
+
+<p style="text-align: center;"><big><span style="font-weight: bold;"><a
+ name="HOWITT"></a> <big>WILLIAM AND MARY HOWITT</big></span></big><br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<div style="text-align: center;"> </div>
+<div style="text-align: center;"><img src="images/Howitt.jpg"
+ title="Mary Howitt From a portrait by Margaret Gillies"
+ alt="Mary Howitt From a portrait by Margaret Gillies"
+ style="width: 394px; height: 534px;"><br>
+</div>
+<div style="text-align: center;"> <br>
+</div>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 20%;">
+
+<p style="font-weight: bold; text-align: center;"> PART I</p>
+
+<p>The names of William and Mary Howitt are inextricably associated
+with the England of the early nineteenth century, with the re-discovery
+of the beauty and interest of their native land, with the renaissance of
+the national passion for country pleasures and country pursuits, and
+with the slow, painful struggle for a wider freedom, a truer humanity, a
+fuller, more gracious life. The Howitts had no genius, nor were they
+pioneers, but, where the unfamiliar was concerned, they were open-minded
+and receptive to a degree that is unfortunately rare in persons of their
+perfect uprightness and strong natural piety. If they flashed no new
+radiance upon the world, they were always among the first to kindle
+their little torches at the new lamps; and they did good service in
+handing back the light to those who, but for them, would have had sat in
+the shadow, and flung stones at the incomprehensible illuminations.</p>
+
+<p>Of the two minds, Mary's was the finer and the more original. It was
+one of those everyday miracles--the miracles that do happen--that in
+spite of the severity, the narrowness, the repression of her early
+training, she should have forced her way through the shell of rigid
+sectarianism, repudiated her heritage of drab denials, and opened both
+heart and mind to the new poetry, the new art, and the new knowledge. In
+her husband she found a kindred spirit, and during the more than fifty
+years of their pilgrimage together their eyes were ever turned towards
+the same goal. Though not equally gifted, they were equally
+disinterested, equally enlightened, and equally anxious for the
+advancement of humanity. They took themselves and their vocation
+seriously, and produced an immense quantity of careful, conscientious
+work, the work of honest craftsmen rather than artists, with the quality
+of a finished piece of cabinet-making, or a strip of fine embroidery.</p>
+
+<p>Mary Howitt was the daughter of Samuel Botham, a land-surveyor at
+Uttoxeter. His father, the descendant of a long line of Staffordshire
+yeomen, Quakers by persuasion, loved a roaming life, and having married
+a maltster's widow with a talent for business management, was left free
+to indulge his own propensities. He seems to have had a talent for
+medical science of an empirical kind, for he dabbled in magnetism and
+electricity, and wandered about the country collecting herbs for
+headache--snuffs, and healing ointments. Samuel, as soon as he had
+served his apprenticeship, found plenty of employment in the
+neighbourhood, the country gentlemen, who had taken alarm at the
+revolutionary ideas newly introduced from France, being anxious to have
+their acres measured, and their boundaries accurately defined. While at
+work upon Lord Talbot's Welsh estates in 1795, he became attracted by a
+'convinced' Friend, named Ann Wood. The interesting discovery that both
+had a passion for nuts, together with the gentle match-making of a
+Quaker patriarch, led to an engagement, and the couple were married in
+December, 1796.</p>
+
+<p>Ann Wood was the granddaughter of William Wood, whose contract for
+supplying Ireland with copper coin (obtained by bribing the Duchess of
+Kendal) was turned into a national grievance by Swift, and led to the
+publication of the <i>Drapier Letters</i>. Although Wood's half-pence
+were admitted to be excellent coin, and Ireland was short of copper, the
+feeling against their circulation was so intense, that Ministers were
+obliged to withdraw the patent, Wood being compensated for his losses
+with a grant of &pound;3000 a year for a term of years, and 'places' for
+some of his fifteen children. Ann's father, Charles, when very young,
+was appointed assay-master to Jamaica. After his return to England in
+middle life he married a lively widow, went into business as an
+iron-master near Merthyr Tydvil, and distinguished himself by
+introducing platinum into Europe, having first met with the semi-metal
+in Jamaica, whither it had been brought from Carthagena in New Spain.
+After his death, Ann, the only serious member of a 'worldly' family,
+found it impossible to remain in the frivolous atmosphere of her home,
+and determined, in modern fashion, to 'live her own life.' After
+spending some years as governess or companion in various families, she
+became converted to Quaker doctrines, and was received into the Society
+of Friends.</p>
+
+<p>Samuel Botham took his bride to live in the paternal home at
+Uttoxeter, where the preparation of the old quack doctor's herbal
+medicines caused her a great deal of discomfort. In the course of the
+next three years two daughters were born to the couple; Anna in 1797,
+and Mary on March 12, 1799. At the time of Mary's birth her parents were
+passing through a period of pecuniary distress, owing to a disastrous
+speculation; but with the opening of the new century a piece of great
+good fortune befell Samuel Botham. He was one of the two surveyors
+chosen to enclose and divide the Chase of Needwood in the county of
+Stafford. In the early years of the nineteenth century there was,
+unfortunately for England, a mania for enclosing commons, and felling
+ancient forests. Needwood, which extended for many miles, contained
+great numbers of magnificent old oaks, limes, and hollies, and no less
+than twenty thousand head of deer. In after years, Mary Howitt often
+regretted that her family should have had a hand in the destruction of
+so vast an extent of solitude and beauty, in a country that was already
+thickly populated and trimly cultivated. Still, for the nine years that
+the work of 'disafforesting' lasted, the two little girls got a great
+deal of enjoyment out of the ruined Chase, spending long summer days in
+its grassy glades, while their father parcelled out the land and marked
+trees for the axe.</p>
+
+<p>In her <i>Autobiography</i> [Footnote: Edited by her daughter
+Margaret, and published by Messrs. Isbister in 1889.] Mary declares that
+it is impossible for her to give an adequate idea of the stillness and
+isolation of her childish life. So intense was the silence of the Quaker
+household, that, at four years old, Anna had to be sent to a dame's
+school in order that she might learn to talk; while even after both
+children had attained the use of speech, their ignorance of the right
+names for the most ordinary feelings and actions obliged them to coin
+words of their own. 'My childhood was happy in many respects,' she
+writes. 'It was so, as far as physical health, the enjoyment of a
+beautiful country, and the companionship of a dearly loved sister could
+make it--but oh, there was such a cloud over all from the extreme
+severity of a so-called religious education, it almost made cowards and
+hypocrites of us, and made us feel that, if this were religion, it was a
+thing to be feared and hated.' The family reading consisted chiefly of
+the writings of Madame Guyon, Thomas &agrave; Kempis, and St. Francis de
+Sales, while for light literature there were Telemachus, Fox's <i>Book
+of Martyrs</i>, and a work on the <i>Persecution of the Friends</i>.
+But it is impossible for even the most pious of Quakers to guard against
+all the stratagems by which the spirit of evil--or human
+nature--contrives to gain an entrance into a godly household. In the
+case of the Botham children an early knowledge of good and evil was
+learnt from an apparently respectable nurse, who made her little charges
+acquainted with most of the scandals of the neighbourhood, accustomed
+their infant ears to oaths, and--most terrible of all--taught them to
+play whist, she herself taking dummy, and transforming the nursery
+tea-tray into a card-table. In that silent household it was easy to keep
+a secret, and though the little girls often trembled at their nurse's
+language, they never betrayed her confidence.</p>
+
+<p>In 1806 another daughter, Emma, was born to the Bothams, and in 1808
+a son, Charles. In the midst of their joy and amazement at the news that
+they had a brother, the little girls asked each other anxiously: 'Will
+our parents like it?' Only a short time before a stranger had inquired
+if they had any brothers, and they had replied in all seriousness: 'Oh
+no, our parents do not approve of boys.' Now, much to their relief, they
+found that their father and mother highly approved of their own boy, who
+became the spoilt darling of the austere household. A new nurse was
+engaged for the son and heir, a lady of many love-affairs, who made Mary
+her confidante, and induced the child, then nine years old, to write an
+imaginary love-letter. The unlucky letter was laid between the pages of
+the worthy Madame Guyon, and there discovered by Mr. Botham. Not much
+was said on the subject of the document, which seems to have been
+considered too awful to bear discussion; but the children were removed
+from the influence of the nurse, and allowed to attend a day-school in
+the neighbourhood, though only on condition that they sat apart from the
+other children in order to avoid contamination with possible worldlings.</p>
+
+<p>In 1809 the two elder sisters were sent to a Quaker school at
+Croydon, where they found themselves the youngest, the most provincial,
+and the worst dressed of the little community. Even in advanced old age,
+Mary had a keen memory for the costumes of her childhood, and the
+mortification that these had caused her. On their arrival at school the
+little girls were attired in brown pelisses, cut plain and straight,
+without plait or fold, and hooked down the front to obviate the
+necessity for buttons, which, being in the nature of trimmings, were
+regarded as an indulgence of the lust of the eye. On their heads they
+wore little drab beaver bonnets, also destitute of trimmings, and so
+plain in shape that even the Quaker hatter had to order special blocks
+for their manufacture. The other girls were busy over various kinds of
+fashionable fancy-work, but the little Bothams were expected, in their
+leisure moments, to make half-a-dozen linen shirts for their father,
+button-holes and all. They had never learnt to net, to weave coloured
+paper into baskets, to plait split straw into patterns, nor any of the
+other amateur handicrafts of the day. But they were clever with their
+fingers, and could copy almost anything that they had seen done. 'We
+could buckle flax or spin a rope,' writes Mary. 'We could drive a nail,
+put in a screw or draw it out. We knew the use of a glue-pot, and how to
+paper a room. We soon furnished ourselves with coloured paper for
+plaiting, and straw to split and weave into net; and I shall never
+forget my admiration of a pattern of diamonds woven with strips of gold
+paper on a black ground. It was my first attempt at artistic handiwork.'</p>
+
+<p>After a few months at Croydon the girls were recalled to Uttoxeter
+on account of their mother's illness; and as soon as she recovered they
+were despatched to another Friends' school at Sheffield. In 1812, when
+Mary was only thirteen and Anna fifteen, their education was supposed to
+be completed, and they returned home for good. But Mr. Botham was
+dissatisfied with his daughters' attainments, and engaged the master of
+the boys' school to teach them Latin, mathematics, and the use of the
+globes. The death of this instructor obliged them thenceforward to rely
+on a system of self-education. 'We retained and perfected our
+rudimentary knowledge,' Mary writes, 'by instructing others. Our father
+fitted up a school-room for us in the stable-loft, where, twice a week,
+we were allowed to teach poor children. In this room, also, we
+instructed our dear little brother and sister. Our father, in his
+beautiful handwriting, used to set them copies, texts of Scripture, such
+as he no doubt had found of a consolatory nature. On one occasion,
+however, I set the copies, and well remember the tribulation I
+experienced in consequence. I always warred in my mind against the
+enforced gloom of our home, and having for my private reading at that
+time Young's <i>Night Thoughts</i>, came upon what seemed to me the
+very spirit of true religion, a cheerful heart gathering up the
+joyfulness of surrounding nature; on which the poet says: "'Tis impious
+in a good man to be sad." How I rejoiced in this!--and thinking it a
+great fact which ought to be noised abroad, wrote it down in my best
+hand as a copy. It fell under our father's eye, and sorely grieved he
+was at such a sentiment, and extremely angry with me as its promulgator.'</p>
+
+<p>The sisters can never have found the time hang heavy on their hands,
+for in addition to their educational duties, their mother required them
+to be expert in all household matters; while, in their scanty hours of
+leisure, they attempted, in the face of every kind of discouragement, to
+satisfy their strong natural craving for beauty and knowledge. 'We
+studied poetry, botany, and flower-painting,' Mary writes. 'These
+pursuits were almost out of the pale of permitted Quaker pleasures, but
+we pursued them with a perfect passion, doing in secret that which we
+dared not do openly, such as reading Shakespeare, the elder novelists,
+and translations of the classics. We studied French and chemistry, and
+enabled ourselves to read Latin, storing our minds with a whole mass of
+heterogeneous knowledge. This was good as far as it went, but I now
+deplore the secrecy, the subterfuge, and the fear under which this
+ill-digested, ill-arranged knowledge was obtained.'</p>
+
+<p>The young Quakeresses picked up ideas and models for their artistic
+handicraft from the most unlikely sources. A shop-window, full of dusty
+plaster medallions for mantelpiece decorations, gave them their first
+notions of classic design. The black Wedgwood ware was to be seen in
+nearly every house in Uttoxeter, while a few of the more prosperous
+inhabitants possessed vases and jugs in the pale blue ware, ornamented
+with graceful figures. These precious specimens the Botham sisters used
+to borrow, and contrived to reproduce the figures by means of moulds
+made of paper pulp. They also etched flowers and landscapes on panes of
+glass, and manufactured 'transparencies' out of different thicknesses of
+cap-paper. 'I feel a sort of tender pity for Anna and myself,' wrote
+Mary long afterwards, 'when I remember how we were always seeking and
+struggling after the beautiful, and after artistic production, though we
+knew nothing of art. I am thankful that we made no alms-baskets, or
+hideous abortions of that kind. What we did was from the innate
+yearnings of our souls for perfection in form and colour; and our
+accomplished work, though crude and poor, was the genuine outcome of our
+own individuality.'</p>
+
+<p>It was one of the heaviest crosses of Mary's girlish days that she
+and Anna were not permitted to exercise their clever fingers, and
+indulge their taste for the beautiful, in their own dress. But they
+found a faint vicarious pleasure in making pretty summer gowns, and
+embroidering elaborate muslin collars for a girl-friend who was allowed
+to wear fashionable clothes, and even to go to balls. Even their
+ultra-plain costumes, however, could not disguise the fact that Anna and
+Mary Botham were comely damsels, and they had several suitors among the
+young men-Friends of Uttoxeter. But the sisters held a low opinion of
+the mental endowments of the average Quaker, an opinion that was only
+shaken by a report of the marvellous attainments of young William Howitt
+of Heanor, who was said to be not only a scholar, but a born genius.
+William's mother, Phoebe, herself a noted amateur healer, was an old
+friend of Mary's grandfather, the herbal doctor, but the young people
+had never met. However, in the autumn of 1818, William paid a visit to
+some relations at Uttoxeter, and there made the acquaintance of the
+Botham girls, who discovered that this young man-Friend shared nearly
+all their interests, and was full of sympathy with their studies and
+pursuits.</p>
+
+<p>Before the end of the year Mary Botham was engaged to William
+Howitt, he being then six-and-twenty and she nineteen. 'The tastes of my
+future husband and my own were strongly similar,' she observes, 'so also
+was our mental culture; but he was in every direction so far in advance
+of me as to become my teacher and guide. Knowledge in the broadest sense
+was the aim of our intellectual efforts; poetry and nature were the
+paths that led to it. Of ballad poetry I was already enamoured, William
+made me acquainted with the realistic life-pictures of Crabbe; the bits
+of nature and poetry in the vignettes of Bewick; with the earliest works
+of Wordsworth, Coleridge, and Shelley, and the first marvellous prose
+productions of the author of <i>Waverley</i>.'</p>
+
+<p>After an engagement lasting a little more than two years, William
+and Mary were married on April 16, 1821, the bride wearing her first
+silk gown--a pretty dove-colour--and a white silk shawl, finery which
+filled her soul with rapture. The couple spent the honeymoon in the
+bridegroom's native Derbyshire, visiting every spot of beauty or haunt
+of old tradition in that country of the romantic and the picturesque.
+Incorporated in his wife's <i>Autobiography </i>is William Howitt's
+narrative of his parentage and youthful days, which is supplemented by
+his <i>Boys' Country Book</i>, the true story of his early adventures
+and experiences. The Howitts, he tells us, were descended from a family
+named Hewitt, the younger branch of which obtained Wansley Hall, near
+Nottingham, through marriage with an heiress, and changed the spelling
+of their name. His ancestors had been, for generations, a rollicking
+set, all wofully lacking in prudence and sobriety. About the end of the
+seventeenth century, one Thomas Howitt, great-great-grandfather of
+William, married Catherine, heiress of the Charltons of Chilwell. But
+Thomas so disgusted his father-in-law by his drunken habits that Mr.
+Charlton disinherited his daughter, who loyally refused to leave her
+husband, and left his property to a stranger who chanced to bear his
+name. After this misfortune the Howitts descended somewhat in the social
+scale, and, having no more substance to waste, reformed their ways and
+forsook all riotous living. William's father, who held a post as manager
+of a Derbyshire colliery, married a Quaker lady, Phoebe Tantum of the
+Fall, Heanor, and was himself received into the Society of Friends in
+1783.</p>
+
+<p>William received a good plain education at a Quaker school at
+Ackworth, and grew up a genuine country lad, scouring the lanes on his
+famous grey pony, Peter Scroggins, the acknowledged leader of the
+village lads in bird-nesting and rat-hunting expeditions, and taking his
+full share of the work on his father's little farm. Long afterwards he
+used to say that every scene in and about Heanor was photographed with
+absolute distinctness on his brain, and he loved to recall the long days
+that he had spent in following the plough, chopping turnips for the
+cattle, tramping over the snow-covered fields after red-wing and
+fieldfare, collecting acorns for the swine, or hunting through the barns
+for eggs. The Howitt family was much less strict than that of the
+Bothams, for in the winter evenings the boys were allowed to play
+draughts and dominoes, while at Christmas there were games of forfeits,
+blind-man's buff, and fishing for the ring in the great posset-pot.</p>
+
+<p>On leaving school at fifteen, William amused himself for a couple of
+years on the farm, though, curiously enough, he never thought of
+becoming a farmer in good earnest; indeed, at this time he seems to have
+had no distinct bias towards any profession. Mr. Howitt had somehow
+become imbued with Rousseau's doctrine that every boy, whatever his
+position in life, should learn a mechanical handicraft, in order that,
+if all else failed, he might be able to earn his own living by the
+labour of his hands. Having decided that William should learn
+carpentering, the boy was apprenticed for four years to a carpenter and
+builder at Mansfield, on the outskirts of Sherwood Forest. The four
+precious years were practically thrown away, except for the enjoyment
+obtained from long solitary rambles amid the picturesque associations of
+the Forest, and the knowledge of natural history gained from close
+observation of the wild life of that romantic district.</p>
+
+<p>It was not until his twenty-first birthday that William's indentures
+were out, and as he was still unable to make up his mind about a
+profession--it must be remembered that the law, the church, the army and
+navy were all closed to a Quaker--he spent the next seven years at home,
+angling in the streams like his favourite hero, Isaac Walton, and
+striving, by dint of hard study, to make up the many deficiencies in his
+education. He taught himself Latin, French, and Italian, besides working
+at botany, chemistry, and the dispensing of medicines. It was during
+these seven years of uncertainty and experiment that William read
+Washington Irving's <i>Sketches of Geoffrey Crayon</i>, which produced
+a strong impression on his mind. With the inspiration of this book hot
+upon him, he made a tour on foot through the Peak country, and
+afterwards wrote an account of his adventures in what he fondly believed
+to be the style of Geoffrey Crayon. The paper was printed in a local
+journal under the title of <i>A Pedestrian Pilgrimage through the Peak</i>,
+by Wilfrid Wendle. This was not William Howitt's first literary essay,
+some stanzas of his on Spring, written when he was only thirteen, having
+been printed in the <i>Monthly Magazine</i>, with his name and age
+attached.</p>
+
+<p>With the prospect of marriage it was thought desirable that William
+should have some regular calling. Without, so far as appears, passing
+any examinations or obtaining any certificates, he bought the business
+of a chemist and druggist in Hanley, and thither, though with no
+intention of settling permanently in the Potteries, he took his bride as
+soon as the honeymoon was over. Only seven months were spent at Hanley,
+and in December, 1821, the couple were preparing to move to Nottingham,
+where William had bought the good-will of another chemist's business.
+But before settling down in their new home, the Howitts undertook a long
+pedestrian tour through Scotland and the north of England, in the course
+of which they explored the Rob Roy country, rambled through Fife, made
+acquaintance with the beauties of Edinburgh, looked in upon Robert
+Owen's model factories at New Lanark, got a glimpse of Walter Scott at
+Melrose, were mistaken for a runaway couple at Gretna Green, gazed
+reverently on Rydal Mount, and tramped in all no less than five hundred
+miles. An account of the tour was contributed to a Staffordshire paper
+under the title of <i>A Scottish Ramble in the Spring of 1822</i>, by
+Wilfrid and Wilfreda Wendle.</p>
+
+<p>It was not until August, 1822, that the pair established themselves
+in a little house at Nottingham. Of the chemist's business we hear
+practically nothing in Mary's narrative, but a great deal about the
+literary enterprises in which husband and wife collaborated. They began
+by collecting the poems, of which each had a large number ready written,
+and, in fear and trembling, prepared to submit them to the verdict of
+critics and public. 'It seems strange to me,' wrote Mary, when she
+informed her sister of this modest venture, 'and I cannot reconcile
+myself to the thought of seeing my own name staring me in the face in
+every bookseller's window, or being pointed at and peeped after as a
+writer of verses.' In April, 1823, <i>The Forest Minstrel and other
+Poems</i>, by William and Mary Howitt, made its appearance in a not
+particularly appreciative world. The verses were chiefly descriptive of
+country sights and sounds, and had been produced, as stated in the
+Preface, 'not for the sake of writing, but for the indulgence of our own
+overflowing feelings.' The little book created no sensation, but it was
+kindly noticed, and seems to have attracted a few quiet readers who,
+like the writers, were lovers of nature and simplicity.</p>
+
+<p>During these early years at Nottingham the Howitts kept up, as far
+as their opportunities allowed, with the thought and literature of their
+day, and never relaxed their anxious efforts after 'mental improvement.'
+William's brother, Richard, himself a budding poet, was at this time an
+inmate of the little household, which was increased in 1824 by the birth
+of a daughter, Anna Mary. Although the couple still remained in the
+Quaker fold, they were gradually discarding the peculiar dress and
+speech of the 'plain' Friends. They were evidently regarded as terribly
+'advanced' young people in their own circle, and shocked many of their
+old acquaintances by the catholicity of their views, by their admiration
+of Byron and Shelley, and by the liberal tone of their own productions.
+Like most of the lesser writers of that day, they found their way into
+the popular Keepsakes and Annuals, which Mary accurately describes as 'a
+chaffy, frivolous, and unsatisfactory style of publication, that only
+serves to keep a young author in the mind of the public, and to bring in
+a little cash.' In 1826 Mrs. Howitt was preparing for the press a new
+volume of poems by herself and her husband, <i>The Desolation of Eyam</i>,
+and in a letter to her sister, now transformed into Mrs. Daniel Wilson,
+she describes her sensations while awaiting the ordeal of critical
+judgment, and expresses her not very flattering opinion of the
+contemporary reviewer.</p>
+
+<p>'Nobody that has not published,' she observes, 'can tell the almost
+painful excitement which the first opinions occasion. Really, for some
+days I was quite nervous. William boasted of possessing his mind in wise
+passivity, and truly his imperturbable patience was quite an annoyance;
+I therefore got Rogers's beautiful poem on Italy to read, and so
+diverted my thoughts. Everything in the literary world is done by favour
+and connections. It is a miracle to me how our former volume, when we
+were quite unknown, got favourably noticed. In many cases a book is
+reviewed which has never been read, or even seen externally.'</p>
+
+<p>By this time the young authors who, to use Mary's own phrase,
+hungered and thirsted after acquaintances who were highly gifted in mind
+or profound in knowledge, had acquired one or two literary friends and
+correspondents, among them Mrs. Hemans, Bernard Barton, the Quaker poet,
+and the Alaric Watts's of Keepsake fame. An occasional notice of the
+Howitts and their little household may be found in contemporary works by
+forgotten writers. For example, Sir Richard Phillips, in the section
+devoted to Nottingham of his quaintly-worded <i>Personal Tour through
+the United Kingdom </i>(1828), observes: 'Of Messrs. Howitt, husband
+and wife, conjugal in love and poetry, it would be vain for me to speak.
+Their tasteful productions belong to the nation as well as to
+Nottingham. As a man of taste Mr. Howitt married a lady of taste; and
+with rare amiability they have jointly cultivated the Muses, and
+produced some volumes of poetry, consisting of pieces under their
+separate names. The circumstance afforded a topic for ridicule to some
+of those anonymous critics who abuse the press and disgrace literature;
+but no one ventured to assail their productions.' Spencer Hall, a
+fellow-townsman, became acquainted with the Howitts in 1829, and in his <i>Reminiscences</i>
+describes William as a bright, neat, quick, dapper man of medium height,
+with a light complexion, blue eyes, and brisk, cheery speech. Mary, he
+tells us; was always neatly dressed, but with nothing prim or sectarian
+in her style. 'Her expression was frank and free, yet very modest, and
+she was blessed with an affectionate, sociable spirit.'</p>
+
+<p>A presentation copy of <i>The Desolation of Eyam</i> was sent to the
+Howitts' favourite poet, Wordsworth, who, in acknowledging their
+'elegant volume,' declared that, though he had only had time to turn
+over the leaves, he had found several poems which had already afforded
+him no small gratification. The harmless little book was denounced by
+the <i>Eclectic Review</i> as 'anti-Quakerish, atheistical, and
+licentious in style and sentiment, 'but the authors were consoled by a
+charming little notice of their contributions to the Annuals in the <i>Noctes
+Ambrosianae</i> for November, 1828. 'Who are these three brothers and
+sisters, the Howitts, sir?' asks the Shepherd of Christopher North, in
+the course of a discussion of the Christmas gift-books, 'whose names I
+see in the adverteesements?'</p>
+
+<p><i>North</i>. I don't know, James. It runs in my head that they are
+Quakers. Richard and William seem amiable and ingenious men, and Sister
+Mary writes beautifully.</p>
+
+<p><i>Shepherd</i>. What do you mean by beautifully? That's vague.</p>
+
+<p><i>North</i>. Her language is chaste and simple, her feelings tender
+and pure, and her observation of nature accurate and intense. Her
+'Sketches from Natural History' in the <i>Christmas Box</i> have much of
+the moral--nay, rather the religious spirit--that permeates all
+Wordsworth's smaller poems, however light and slight the subject, and
+show that Mary Howitt is not only well-read in the book of Bewick, but
+also in the book from which Bewick has borrowed all--glorious
+plagiarist--and every other inspired zoologist--</p>
+
+<p><i>Shepherd</i>. The Book o' Natur'.'</p>
+
+<p>The great event of 1829 for the Howitts was a visit to London, where
+they were the guests of Alaric and Zillah Watts, with whom they had long
+maintained a paper friendship. 'What wilt thou say, dear Anna,' writes
+Mary in December, 'when I tell thee that William and I set out for
+London the day after to-morrow. I half dread it. I shall wish twenty
+times for our quiet fireside, where day by day we read and talk by
+ourselves, and nobody looks in upon us. I keep reasoning with myself
+that the people we shall see in London are but men and women, and
+perhaps, after all, no better than ourselves. If we could but divest our
+minds of <i>self</i>, as our dear father used to say we should do, it
+would be better and more comfortable for us. Yet it is one of the faults
+peculiar to us Bothams that, with all the desire there was to make us
+regardless of self, we never had confidence and proper self-respect
+instilled into us, and the want of this gives us a depressing feeling,
+though I hope it is less seen by others than by ourselves.... We do not
+intend to stay more than a week, and thou may believe we shall have
+enough to do. We have to make special calls on the Carter Halls, Dr.
+Bowring, and the Pringles, and are to be introduced to their
+ramifications of acquaintance. Allan Cunningham, L. E. L., and Thomas
+Roscoe we are sure to see.'</p>
+
+<p>In Miss Landon's now forgotten novel, <i>Romance and Reality</i>,
+there is a little sketch of Mary Howitt as she appeared at a literary <i>soir&eacute;e</i>,
+during her brief visit to London. The heroine, Miss Arundel, is being
+initiated into the mysteries of the writing world by her friend, Mrs.
+Sullivan, when her attention is arrested by the sight of 'a female in a
+Quaker's dress--the quiet, dark silk dress--the hair simply parted on
+the forehead--the small, close cap--the placid, subdued expression of
+the face, were all in strong contrast to the crimsons, yellows, and
+blues around. The general character of the large, soft eyes seemed
+sweetness; but they were now lighted up with an expression of
+intelligent observation--that clear, animated, and comprehensive glance
+which shows it analyses what it observes. You looked at her with
+something of the sensation with which, while travelling along a dusty
+road, the eye fixes on some green field, where the hour flings its
+sunshine and the tree its shadow, as if its pure fresh beauty was a
+thing apart from the soil and tumult of the highway. "You see," said
+Mrs. Sullivan, "one who, in a brief interview, gave me more the idea of
+a poet than most of our modern votaries of the lute.... She is as
+creative in her imaginary poems as she is touching and true in her
+simpler ones."'</p>
+
+<p>Though there were still giants upon the earth in those far-off days,
+the general standard of literary taste was by no means exalted, a fact
+which Mary Howitt could hardly be expected to realise. She seems to have
+taken the praises lavished on her simple verses over-seriously, and to
+have imagined herself in very truth a poet. She was more clear-sighted
+where the work of her fellow-scribes was concerned, and in a letter
+written about this time, she descants upon the dearth of good literature
+in a somewhat disillusioned vein. After expressing her desire that some
+mighty spirit would rise up and give an impulse to poetry, she
+continues: 'I am tired of Sir Walter Scott and his imitators, and I am
+sickened of Mrs. Hemans's luscious poetry, and all her tribe of
+copyists. The libraries set in array one school against another, and
+hurry out the trashy volumes before the ink of the manuscript is fairly
+dry. Dost thou remember the days when Byron's poems first came out, now
+one and then another, at sufficient intervals to allow of digesting
+them? And dost thou remember our first reading of <i>Lalla Rookh</i>?
+It was on a washing-day. We read and clapped our clear-starching, read
+and clapped, and read again, and all the time our souls were not on this
+earth.'</p>
+
+<p>There was one book then in course of preparation which Mary thought
+worthy to have been read, even in those literary clear-starching days.
+'Thou hast no idea,' she assures her sister, 'how very interesting
+William's work, now called <i>A Book of the Seasons</i>, has become. It
+contains original sketches on every month, with every characteristic of
+the season, and a garden department which will fill thy heart brimful of
+all garden delights, greenness, and boweriness. Mountain scenery and
+lake scenery, meadows and woods, hamlets, farms, halls, storm and
+sunshine--all are in this most delicious book, grouped into a most
+harmonious whole.' Unfortunately, publishers were hard to convince of
+the merits of the new work, the first of William Howitt's rural series,
+and it was declined by four houses in turn. The author at last suggested
+that a stone should be tied to the unlucky manuscript, and that it
+should be flung over London Bridge; but his wife was not so easily
+disheartened. She was certain that the book was a worthy book, and only
+needed to be made a little more 'personable' to find favour in the eyes
+of a publisher. Accordingly, blotted sheets were hastily re-copied, new
+articles introduced, and passages of dubious interest omitted, husband
+and wife working together at this remodelling until their fingers ached
+and their eyes were as dim as an owl's in sunshine. Their labours were
+rewarded by the acceptance of the work by Bentley and Colburn, and its
+triumphant success with both critics and public, seven editions being
+called for in the first few months of its career.</p>
+
+<p>'Prig it and pocket it,' says Christopher North, alluding to the <i>Book
+of the Seasons</i> in the <i>Noctes</i> for April, 1831. ''Tis a jewel.'</p>
+
+<p>'Is Nottingham far intil England, sir?' asks the simple Shepherd, to
+whom the above advice is given. 'For I would really like to pay the
+Hooits a visit this simmer. Thae Quakers are what we micht scarcely
+opine frae first principles, a maist poetical Christian seck.... The twa
+married Hooits I love just excessively, sir. What they write canna fail
+o' being poetry, even the most middlin' o't, for it's aye wi' them the
+ebullition o' their ain feeling and their ain fancy, and whenever that's
+the case, a bonny word or twa will drap itself intil ilka stanzy, and a
+sweet stanzy or twa intil ilka pome, and sae they touch, and sae they
+win a body's heart.'</p>
+
+<p>The year 1831 was rendered memorable to the Howitts, not only by
+their first literary success, but also by an unexpected visit from their
+poetical idol, Mr. Wordsworth. The poet, his wife and daughter, were on
+their way home from London when Mrs. Wordsworth was suddenly taken ill,
+and was unable to proceed farther than Nottingham. Her husband, in great
+perplexity, came to ask advice of the Howitts, who insisted that the
+invalid should be removed to their house, where she remained for ten
+days before she was able to continue her journey. Wordsworth himself was
+only able to stay one night, but in that short time he made a very
+favourable impression upon his host and hostess. 'He is worthy of being
+the author of <i>The Excursion</i>, <i>Ruth</i>, and those sweet poems
+so full of human sympathy,' writes Mary. 'He is a kind man, full of
+strong feeling and sound judgment. My greatest delight was that he
+seemed so pleased with William's conversation. They seemed quite in
+their element, pouring out their eloquent sentiments on the future
+prospects of society, and on all subjects connected with poetry and the
+interests of man. Nor are we less pleased with Mrs. Wordsworth and her
+lovely daughter, Dora. They are the most grateful people; everything
+that we do for them is right, and the very best it can be.'</p>
+
+<p>During the next two or three years Mary produced a volume of
+dramatic sketches, called <i>The Seven Temptations</i>, which she
+always regarded as her best and most original work, but which was damned
+by the critics and neglected by the public; a little book of natural
+history for children; and a novel in three volumes, called <i>Wood
+Leighton</i>, which seems to have had some success. <i>The Seven
+Temptations</i>, it must be owned, is a rather lugubrious production,
+probably inspired by Joanna Baillie's <i>Plays on the Passions</i>. The
+scene of <i>Wood Leighton</i> is laid at Uttoxeter, and the book is not
+so much a connected tale as a series of sketches descriptive of scenes
+and characters in and about the author's early home. It is evident that
+Mrs. Botham and Sister Anna looked somewhat disapprovingly upon so much
+literary work for the mistress of a household, since we find Mary
+writing in eager defence of her chosen calling.</p>
+
+<p>'I want to make thee, and more particularly dear mother, see,' she
+explains, 'that I am not out of my line of duty in devoting myself so
+much to literary occupation. Just lately things were sadly against us.
+Dear William could not sleep at night, and the days were dark and
+gloomy. Altogether, I was at my wits' end. I turned over in my mind what
+I could do next, for till William's <i>Rural Life</i> was finished we
+had nothing available. Then I bethought myself of all those little
+verses and prose tales that for years I had written for the juvenile
+Annuals. It seemed probable I might turn them to some account. In about
+a week I had nearly all the poetry copied; and then who should come to
+Nottingham but John Darton [a Quaker publisher]. He fell into the idea
+immediately, took what I had copied up to London with him, and I am to
+have a hundred and fifty guineas for them. Have I not reason to feel
+that in thus writing I was fulfilling a duty?'</p>
+
+<p>In 1833 William Hewitt's <i>History of Priestcraft</i> appeared, a
+work which was publicly denounced at the Friends' yearly meeting, all
+good Quakers being cautioned not to read it. William hitherto had lived
+in great retirement at Nottingham, but he was now claimed by the Radical
+and Nonconformist members of the community as their spokesman and
+champion. In January, 1834, he and Joseph Gilbert (husband of Ann
+Gilbert of <i>Original Poems</i> fame) were deputed to present to the
+Prime Minister, Lord Grey, a petition from Nottingham for the
+disestablishment of the Church of England. The Premier regretted that he
+could not give his support to such a sweeping measure, which would
+embarrass the Ministry, alarm both Houses of Parliament, and startle the
+nation. He declared his intention of standing by the Church to the best
+of his ability, believing it to be the sacred duty of Government to
+maintain an establishment of religion. To which sturdy William Howitt
+replied that to establish one sect in preference to another was to
+establish a party and not a religion.</p>
+
+<p>Civic duties, together with the excitements of local politics,
+proved a sad hindrance to literary work, and in 1836 the Howitts, who
+had long been yearning for a wider intellectual sphere, decided to give
+up the chemist's business, and settle in the neighbourhood of London.
+Their friends, the Alaric Watts's, who were living at Thames Ditton,
+found them a pretty little house at Esher, where they would be able to
+enjoy the woods and heaths of rural Surrey, and yet be within easy reach
+of publishers and editors in town. Before settling down in their new
+home, the Howitts made a three months' tour in the north, with a view to
+gathering materials for William's book on <i>Rural England</i>. They
+explored the Yorkshire dales, stayed with the Wordsworths at Rydal, and
+made a pilgrimage to the haunts of their favourite, Thomas Bewick, in
+Northumberland. Crossing the Border they paid a delightful visit to
+Edinburgh, where they were made much of by the three literary cliques of
+the city, the Blackwood and Wilson set, the Tait set, and the Chambers
+set.</p>
+
+<p>'Immediately after our arrival,' relates Mary, 'a public dinner was
+given to Campbell the poet, at which the committee requested my
+husband's attendance, and that he would take a share in the proceedings
+of the evening by proposing as a toast, "Wordsworth, Southey, and
+Moore." This was our first introduction to Professor Wilson (Christopher
+North) and his family. I sat in the gallery with Mrs. Wilson and her
+daughters, one of whom was engaged to Professor Ferrier. We could not
+but remark the wonderful difference, not only in the outer man, but in
+the whole character of mind and manner, between Professor Wilson and
+Campbell--the one so hearty, outspoken, and joyous, the other so petty
+and trivial.'</p>
+
+<p>Robert Chambers constituted himself the Hewitts' cicerone in
+Edinburgh, showing them every place of interest, and presenting them to
+every person of note, including Mrs. Maclehose (the Clarinda of Burns),
+and William Miller, the Quaker artist and engraver, as intense a
+nature-worshipper as themselves. From Edinburgh they went to Glasgow,
+where they took ship for the Western Isles. Their adventures at Staffa
+and Iona, their voyage up the Caledonian Canal, and the remainder of
+their experiences on this tour, were afterwards described by William
+Howitt in his <i>Visits to Remarkable Places</i>.<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 20%;">
+
+<p style="font-weight: bold; text-align: center;"> PART II</p>
+
+<p> In September, 1836, the Howitts took possession of their Surrey
+home, West End Cottage, an old-fashioned dwelling, with a large garden,
+an orchard, a meadow by the river Mole, and the right of boating and
+fishing to the extent of seven miles. The new life opened with good
+prospects of literary and journalistic employment, William Howitt's
+political writings having already attracted attention from several
+persons of power and influence in the newspaper world. On December 3 of
+this year, Mary wrote to inform her sister that, 'In consequence of an
+article that William wrote on Dymond's <i>Christian Morality</i>,
+Joseph Hume, the member for Middlesex, wrote to him, and has opened a
+most promising connection for him with a new Radical newspaper, <i>The
+Constitutional</i>. O'Connell seems determined to make him the editor
+of the <i>Dublin Review</i>, and wrote him a most kind letter, which
+has naturally promoted his interest with the party. I cannot but see the
+hand of Providence in our leaving Nottingham. All has turned out
+admirably.'</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately for these sanguine anticipations, the newspaper
+connections on which the Howitts depended for a livelihood, now that the
+despised chemist's business had been given up, proved but hollow
+supports. O'Connell had overlooked the trifling fact that a Quaker
+editor was hardly fitted to conduct a journal that was emphatically and
+polemically Catholic; and though he considered that William Howitt was
+admirably adapted to deal with literary and political topics, he was
+obliged to withdraw his offer of the editorship. A more crushing
+disappointment arose out of the engagement on <i>The Constitutional</i>.
+Mr. Howitt, according to his wife, did more for the paper than any
+other member of the staff. 'He worked and wrote like any slave,' she
+tells her sister. 'In the end, after a series of the most harassing and
+vexatious conduct on the part of the newspaper company, he was swindled
+out of every farthing. Oh, it was a most mortifying and humiliating
+thing to see men professing liberal and honest principles act so badly.
+A month ago, when in the very depths of discouragement and low spirits,
+I set about a little volume for Darton, to be called <i>Birds and
+Flowers</i>, and have pretty nearly finished it. William, in the mean
+time, has finished his <i>Rural Life</i>, and sold the first edition to
+Longman's.'</p>
+
+<p>The manager of the unlucky paper was Major Carmichael Smith, who,
+when matters grew desperate, sent for his step-son, Thackeray, then
+acting as Paris correspondent for a London daily. 'Just as I was going
+out of the office one day,' writes William, 'I met on the stairs a tall,
+thin young man, in a dark blue coat, and with a nose that seemed to have
+had a blow that had flattened the bridge. I turned back, and had some
+conversation with him, being anxious to know how he proposed to carry on
+a paper which was without any funds, and already deeply in debt. He did
+not seem to know any more than I did. I thought to myself that his
+step-father had not done him much service in taking him from a
+profitable post for the vain business of endeavouring to buoy up a
+desperate speculation. How much longer <i>The Constitutional</i>
+struggled on, I know not. That was the first time I ever saw or heard of
+William Makepeace Thackeray.'</p>
+
+<p>The Howitts were somewhat consoled for their journalistic losses by
+the triumphant success of <i>Rural Life in England</i>. The reading
+public which, during the previous century, had swallowed mock pastorals,
+made in Fleet Street, with perfect serenity, was now, thanks to the
+slowly-working influence of Wordsworth and the other Lake poets,
+prepared for a renaissance of nature and simplicity in prose. Miss
+Mitford's exquisite work had given them a distaste for the 'jewelled
+turf,' the 'silver streams,' and 'smiling valleys' which constituted the
+rustic stock-in-trade of the average novelist; and they eagerly welcomed
+a book that treated with accuracy and observation of the real country.
+William Howitt's straightforward, undistinguished style was acceptable
+enough in an age when even men of genius seem to have written fine prose
+without knowing it, and tripped up not infrequently over the subtleties
+of English grammar. His lack of imagination and humour was more than
+atoned for, in the uncritical eyes of the 'thirties,' by the easy
+loquacity of his rural gossip, and the varied information with which he
+crammed his pages. The Nature of those days was a simple, transparent
+creature, with but small resemblance to the lady of moods, mystery, and
+passion who is so overworked in our modern literature. No one dreamt of
+going into hysterics over the veining of a leaf, or penning a rhapsody
+on the outline of a rain-cloud; nor could it yet be said that, 'if
+everybody must needs blab of the favours that have been done him by
+roadside, and river-brink, and woodland walk, as if to kiss and tell
+were no longer treachery, it will soon be a positive refreshment to meet
+a man who is as superbly indifferent to Nature as she is to him.'
+[Footnote: Lowell]</p>
+
+<p>The Howitts took great delight in the pleasant Surrey country, so
+different from the dreary scenery around Nottingham, and Mary's letters
+contain many descriptions of the woods and commons and shady lanes
+through which the family made long expeditions in a little carriage
+drawn by Peg, their venerable pony. Driving one day to Hook, they met
+Charles Dickens, then best known as 'Boz,' in one of his long tramps,
+with Harrison Ainsworth as his companion. When Dickens's next work, <i>Master
+Humphrey's Clock</i>, appeared, the Howitts were amused to see that
+their stout and wilful Peg had not escaped the novelist's keen eye, but
+had been pressed into service for Mr. Garland's chaise.</p>
+
+<p>On another occasion, in July 1841, William, while driving with a
+friend, was attacked by two handsome, dark-eyed girls, dressed in gipsy
+costume, who ran one on each side of the carriage, begging that the kind
+gentleman would give them sixpence, as they were poor strangers who had
+taken nothing all day. Mr. Howitt, who had made a special study of the
+gipsy tribe, perceived in an instant that these were only sham Romanys.
+He paid no attention to their pleading, but observed that he hoped they
+would enjoy their frolic, and only wished that he were as rich as they.
+Subsequently, he discovered that the mock-gipsies, who had been unable
+to coax a sixpence out of him, were none other than the beautiful
+Sheridan sisters, the Duchess of Somerset, and Mrs. Blackwood
+(afterwards Lady Dufferin), whose husband had lately taken Bookham Lodge.</p>
+
+<p>During the four years spent at Esher, Mary seems to have been too
+much occupied with the cares of a young family to use her pen to much
+purpose. She produced little, except a volume of <i>Hymns and Fireside
+Verses</i>, but she frequently assisted her husband in his work.
+William, industrious as ever, published, besides a large number of
+newspaper articles, his <i>Boys' Country Book</i>, the best work of the
+kind ever written, according to the <i>Quarterly Review</i>; and his <i>History
+of Colonisation and Christianity</i>, in which he took a rapid survey
+of the behaviour of the Christian nations of Europe to the inhabitants
+of the countries they conquered in all parts of the world. It was the
+reading of this book that led Mr. Joseph Pease to establish the British
+India Society, which issued, in a separate form, the portion of the work
+that related to India. Mr. Howitt next set to work upon another
+topographical volume, his <i>Visits to Remarkable Places</i>, in which
+he turned to good account the materials collected in his pedestrian
+rambles about the country.</p>
+
+<p>In 1840 the question of education for the elder children became
+urgent, and the Howitts, who had heard much of the advantages of a
+residence in Germany from their friends, Mrs. Hemans, Mrs. Jameson, and
+Henry Chorley, decided to give up their cottage at Esher, and spend two
+or three years at Heidelberg. Letters of introduction from Mrs. Jameson
+gave them the <i>entr&eacute;e</i> into German society, which they found
+more to their taste than that of their native land. 'For the sake of our
+children,' writes Mary, 'we sought German acquaintances, we read German,
+we followed German customs. The life seemed to me easier, the customs
+simpler and less expensive than in England. There was not the same
+feverish thirst after wealth as with us; there was more calm
+appreciation of nature, of music, of social enjoyment.' In their home on
+the Neckar, the Howitts, most adaptable of couples, found new pleasures
+and new amusements with each season of the year. In the spring and
+summer they explored the surrounding country, wandered through the deep
+valleys and woods, where the grass was purple with bilberries, visited
+quaint, half-timbered homesteads, standing in the midst of ancient
+orchards, or followed the swift-flowing streams, on whose banks the
+peasant girls in their picturesque costumes were washing and drying
+linen. In the autumn the whole family turned out on the first day of the
+vintage, and worked like their neighbours. 'It was like something
+Arcadian,' wrote Mary when recalling the scene. 'The tubs and baskets
+piled up with enormous clusters, the men and women carrying them away on
+their heads to the place where they were being crushed; the laughter,
+the merriment, the feasting, the firing--for they make as much noise as
+they can--all was delightful, to say nothing of the masquerading and
+dancing in the evening, which we saw, though we did not take part in
+it.' In the winter the strangers were introduced to the Christmas Tree,
+which had not yet become a British institution: while with the first
+snow came the joys of sleighing, when wheel-barrows, tubs, baskets,
+everything that could be put on runners, were turned into sledges, and
+the boys were in their glory.</p>
+
+<p>During the three years that were spent at Heidelberg, William Howitt
+wrote his <i>Student Life in Germany</i>, <i>German Experiences</i>,
+and <i>Rural and Domestic Life in Germany</i>, works which contain a
+great deal of more or less valuable information about the country and
+the people, presented in a homely, unpretentious style. Mary was no less
+industrious, having struck a new literary vein, the success of which was
+far to surpass her modest anticipations. 'I have been very busy,' she
+writes in 1842, 'translating the first volume of a charming work by
+Frederica Bremer, a Swedish writer; and if any publisher will give me
+encouragement to go on with it, I will soon complete the work. It is one
+of a series of stories of everyday life in Sweden--a beautiful book,
+full of the noblest moral lessons for every man and woman.' In the
+summer of 1841 the Howitts, accompanied by their elder daughter, Anna,
+made a long tour through Germany and Austria, in the course of which
+they collected materials for fresh works, and visited the celebrities,
+literary and artistic, of the various cities that lay in their route. At
+Stuttgart they called on Gustav Schwab, the poet, and visited
+Dannecker's studio; at T&uuml;bingen they made the acquaintance of
+Uhland, and at Munich that of Kaulbach, then at the height of his fame.
+By way of Vienna and Prague they travelled to Dresden, where, through
+the good offices of Mrs. Jameson, they were received by Moritz Retzsch,
+whose <i>Outlines</i> they had long admired. At Berlin they made friends
+with Tieck, on whom the king had bestowed a pension and a house at
+Potsdam; while at Weimar they were entertained by Frau von Goethe, whose
+son, Wolfgang, had been one of their earliest acquaintances at
+Heidelberg. This interesting tour is described at length in the <i>Rural
+and Domestic Life of Germany</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Another year was spent at Heidelberg, but the difficulties of
+arranging the business details of their work at such a distance from
+publishers and editors, brought the industrious couple back to London in
+the spring of 1843. 'On our return to England,' writes Mary, 'I was full
+of energy and hope. Glowing with aspiration, and in enjoyment of great
+domestic happiness, I was anticipating a busy, perhaps overburdened,
+but, nevertheless, congenial life. It was to be one of darkness,
+perplexity, discouragement.' The Howitts had scarcely entered into
+possession of a new house that they had taken at Clapton, when news came
+from Heidelberg, where the elder children had been left at school, that
+their second son, Claude, had developed alarming symptoms of disease in
+the knee-joint. It was known that he had been slightly injured in play a
+few weeks before, but no danger had been anticipated. Mr. Howitt at once
+set out for Heidelberg, and returned with the invalid, on whose case
+Liston was consulted. The great surgeon counselled amputation, but to
+this the parents refused their consent, except as a last resource.
+Various less heroic modes of treatment were tried, but poor Claude faded
+away, and died in March, 1844, aged only ten years and a half. This was
+the heaviest trial that the husband and wife had yet experienced, for
+Claude had been a boy of brilliant promise, whom they regarded as the
+flower of their flock. Only a few months before his accident his mother
+had written in the pride of her heart: 'Claude is the naughtiest of all
+the children, and yet the most gifted. He learns anything at a glance.
+Claude is born to be fortunate; he is one that will make the family
+distinguished in the next generation. He has an extraordinary faculty
+for telling stories, either of his own invention or of what he reads.'</p>
+
+<p>A lesser cause of trouble and anxiety arose out of the translation
+of Miss Bremer's novels. 'When we first translated <i>The Neighbours</i>,'
+writes Mary, 'there was not a house in London that would undertake its
+publication. We published it and the other Bremer novels at our own
+risk, but such became the rage for them that our translations were
+seized by a publisher, altered, and reissued as new ones.' The success
+of these books was said to be greater than that of any series since the
+first appearance of the Waverley novels. Cheap editions were multiplied
+in the United States, and even the boys who hawked the books about the
+streets were to be seen deep in <i>The Home</i> or <i>The H. Family</i>.
+In a letter to her sister written about this time, Mary expatiates on
+the annoyance and loss caused by these piracies. 'It is very
+mortifying,' she observes, 'because no one knew of these Swedish novels
+till we introduced them. It obliges us to hurry in all we do, and we
+must work almost day and night to get ours out in order that we may have
+some little chance.... We have embarked a great deal of money in the
+publication, and the interference of the upstart London publisher is
+most annoying. Mlle. Bremer, however, has written a new novel, and sends
+it to us before publication. We began its translation this week, and
+hope to be able to publish it about the time it will appear in Sweden
+and Germany.'</p>
+
+<p>In addition to her translating work, Mrs. Howitt was engaged at this
+time upon a series of little books, called <i>Tales for the People and
+their Children</i>, which had been commissioned by a cheap publisher.
+These stories, each of which illustrated a domestic virtue, were
+punctually paid for: and though they were never advertised, they passed
+swiftly through innumerable editions, and have been popular with a
+certain public down to quite recent times. Perhaps the most attractive
+is the <i>Autobiography of a Child</i>, in which Mary told the story of
+her own early days in her pretty, simple style, with the many little
+quaint touches that gave all her juvenile stories an atmosphere of truth
+and reality. Her quick sympathy with young people, and her knowledge of
+what most appealed to the childish mind, was probably due to her vivid
+remembrance of her own youthful days, and to her affectionate study of
+the 'little ways' of her own children. Many are the original traits and
+sayings that she reports to her sister, more especially those of her
+youngest boy, Charlton, who had inherited his parents' naturalistic
+tastes in a pronounced form, and preferred the Quakers' meeting-house to
+any other church or chapel, because there was a dog-kennel on the
+premises!</p>
+
+<p>About a year after her return to England, Mrs. Howitt turned her
+attention to Danish literature, finding that, with her knowledge of
+Swedish and German, the language presented few difficulties. In 1845 she
+translated Hans Andersen's <i>Impromsatore</i>, greatly to the
+satisfaction of the author, who begged that she would continue to
+translate his works, till he was as well known and loved in England as
+he was on the Continent. Appreciation, fame, and joy, declared the
+complacent poet, followed his footsteps wherever he went, and his whole
+life was full of sunshine, like a beautiful fairy-tale. Mary translated
+his <i>Only a Fiddler</i>; <i>O. T., or Life in Denmark</i>; <i>The
+True Story of My Life</i>; and several of the <i>Wonderful Stories for
+Children</i>. The <i>Improvisatore</i> was the only one that went into
+a second edition, the other works scarcely paying the cost of
+publication. Hans Andersen, however, being assured that Mrs. Howitt was
+making a fortune of the translations, came to England in 1847 to arrange
+for a share of the profits. Though disappointed in his hope of gain, he
+begged Mrs. Howitt to translate the whole of his fairy-tales, which had
+just been brought out in a beautifully-illustrated German edition. Much
+to her after regret, she was then too much engrossed by other work to be
+able to accede to his proposal. The relations between Hans Andersen and
+his translator were marred, we are told, by the extreme sensitiveness
+and egoism of the Dane. Mrs. Howitt narrates, as an example of his
+childish vanity, the following little incident which occurred during his
+visit to England in the summer of 1847:--</p>
+
+<p>'We had taken him, as a pleasant rural experience, to the annual
+hay-making at Hillside, Highgate, thus introducing him to an English
+home, full of poetry and art, sincerity, and affection. The ladies of
+Hillside--Miss Mary and Margaret Gillies, the one an embodiment of peace
+and an admirable writer, whose talent, like the violet, kept in the
+shade; the other, the warm-hearted painter--made him welcome....
+Immediately after our arrival, the assembled children, loving his
+delightful fairy-tales, clustered round him in the hay-field, and
+watched him make them a pretty device of flowers; then, feeling somehow
+that the stiff, silent foreigner was not kindred to themselves, stole
+off to an American, Henry Clarke Wright, whose admirable little book, <i>A
+Kiss for a Blow</i>, some of them knew. He, without any suggestion of
+condescension or difference of age, entered heart and soul into their
+glee, laughed, shouted, and played with them, thus unconsciously
+evincing the gift which had made him earlier the exclusive pastor of six
+hundred children in Boston. Soon poor Andersen, perceiving himself
+neglected, complained of headache, and insisted on going indoors,
+whither Mary Gillies and I, both anxious to efface any disagreeable
+impression, accompanied him; but he remained irritable and out of sorts.'</p>
+
+<p>It was in 1845 or 1846 that the Howitts made the acquaintance of
+Tennyson, whose poetry they had long admired. 'The retiring and
+meditative young poet, Alfred Tennyson, visited us,' relates Mary, 'and
+cheered our seclusion by the recitation of his exquisite poetry. He
+spent a Sunday night at our house, when we sat talking together till
+three in the morning. All the next day he remained with us in constant
+converse. We seemed to have known him for years. So in fact we had, for
+his poetry was himself. He hailed all attempts at heralding a grander,
+more liberal state of public opinion, and consequently sweeter, nobler
+modes of living. He wished that we Englanders could dress up our
+affections in more poetical costume; real warmth of heart would gain
+rather than lose by it. As it was, our manners were as cold as the walls
+of our churches.' Another new friend was gained through William Howitt's
+book, <i>Visits to Remarkable Places</i>. When the work was announced
+as 'in preparation,' the author received a letter, signed E. C. Gaskell,
+drawing his attention to a beautiful old house, Clopton Hall, near
+Stratford-on-Avon. The letter described in such admirable style the
+writer's visit to the house as a schoolgirl, that William wrote to
+suggest that she ought to use her pen for the public benefit. This
+timely encouragement led to the production of <i>Mary Barton</i>, the
+first volume of which was sent in manuscript for Mr. Howitt's verdict. A
+few months later Mrs. Gaskell came as a guest to the little house at
+Clopton, bringing with her the completed work.</p>
+
+<p>In 1846 William Howitt took part in a new journalistic venture, his
+wife, as usual, sharing his labours and anxieties. He became first
+contributor, and afterwards editor and part-proprietor of the <i>People's
+Journal</i>, a cheap weekly, through the medium of which he hoped to
+improve the moral and intellectual condition of the working classes.
+'The bearing of its contents,' wrote Mary, in answer to some adverse
+criticism of the new paper, 'is love to God and man. There is no attempt
+to set the poor against the rich, but, on the contrary, to induce them
+to be careful, prudent, sober and independent; above all, to be
+satisfied to be workers, and to regard labour as a privilege rather than
+as a penalty, which is quite our view of the matter.' The combination of
+business and philanthropy seldom answers, and the Howitts, despite the
+excellence of their intentions, were unlucky in their newspaper
+speculations. At the end of a few months it was discovered that the
+manager of the <i>People's Journal</i> kept no books, and that the
+affairs of the paper were in hopeless confusion. William Howitt, finding
+himself responsible for the losses on the venture, tried to cure the
+evil by a hair of the dog that had bitten him. He withdrew from the <i>People's
+Journal</i>, and, with Samuel Smiles as his assistant, started a rival
+paper on the same lines, called <i>Howitts Journal</i>. But, as
+Ebenezer Elliott, the shrewd old Quaker, remarked, apropos of the apathy
+of the working-class public: 'Men engaged in a death struggle for bread
+will pay for amusement when they will not for instruction. They woo
+laughter to unscare them, that they may forget their perils, their
+wrongs, and their oppressors. If you were able and willing to fill the
+journal with fun, it would pay.' The failure of his paper spelt ruin to
+its promoter; his copyrights, as well as those of his wife, were
+sacrificed, and he was obliged to begin the world anew.</p>
+
+<p>The Howitts seem to have kept up their spirits bravely under this
+reverse, and never for a moment relaxed in their untiring industry. They
+moved into a small house in Avenue Road, St. John's Wood, and looked
+around them for new subjects upon which to exercise their well-worn
+pens. Mary hoped to get employment from the Religious Tract Society,
+which had invited her to send in a specimen story, but she feared that
+her work would hardly be considered sufficiently orthodox, though she
+had introduced one of the 'death-bed scenes,' which were then in so much
+request. As she anticipated, the story was returned as quite unsuitable,
+and thereupon she writes to her sister in some depression: 'Times are so
+bad that publishers will not speculate in books; and when I have
+finished the work I am now engaged on, I have nothing else certain to go
+on with.' However, writers so popular with the public as the Howitts
+were not likely to be left long without employment. Mary seems to have
+been the greater favourite of the two, and the vogue of her volume of
+collected <i>Poems and Ballads</i>, which appeared in 1847, strikes the
+modern reader with amazement. Some idea of the estimation in which she
+was then held is proved by Allan Cunningham's dictum that 'Mary Howitt
+has shown herself mistress of every string of the minstrel's lyre, save
+that which sounds of broil and bloodshed. There is more of the old
+ballad simplicity in her composition than can be found in the strains of
+any living poet besides.' Another critic compared Mrs. Hewitt's ballads
+to those of Lord Macaulay, while Mrs. Alaric Watts, in her capacity of
+Annual editor, wrote to assure her old friend and contributor that, 'In
+thy simplest poetry there are sometimes turns so exquisite as to bring
+the tears to my eyes. Thou hast as much poetry in thee as would set up
+half-a-dozen writers.' The one dissentient voice among admiring
+contemporaries is that of Miss Mitford, who writes in 1852: 'I am for my
+sins so fidgety respecting style that I have the bad habit of expecting
+a book that pretends to be written in our language to be English;
+therefore I cannot read Miss Strickland, or the Howitts, or Carlyle, or
+Emerson, or the serious parts of Dickens.' It must be owned that the
+Howitts are condemned in fairly good company.</p>
+
+<p>The work of both husband and wife suffered from the inevitable
+defects of self-education, and also from the narrowness and seclusion of
+their early lives. Mary possessed more imagination and a lighter touch
+than her husband, but her attempts at adult fiction were hampered by her
+ignorance of the world, while her technique, both in prose and verse,
+left something to be desired. It is evident that the publishers and
+editors of the period were less critical than Miss Mitford, for, in
+1848, we find that Mrs. Howitt was invited to write the opening volume
+of Bradshaw's series of Railway novels, while in February 1850, came a
+request from Charles Dickens for contributions to <i>Household Words</i>.
+'You may have seen,' he writes, 'the first dim announcements of the
+new, cheap literary journal I am about to start. Frankly, I want to say
+to you that if you would write for it, you would delight me, and I
+should consider myself very fortunate indeed in enlisting your
+services.... I hope any connection with the enterprise would be
+satisfactory and agreeable to you in all respects, as I should most
+earnestly endeavour to make it. If I wrote a book I could say no more
+than I mean to suggest to you in these few lines. All that I leave
+unsaid, I leave to your generous understanding.'</p>
+
+<p>The Howitts were keenly interested in the gradual awakening of the
+long-dormant, artistic instincts of the nation, the first signs of which
+became faintly visible about the end of the forties. 'Down to that
+time,' observes Mary, 'the taste of the English people had been for what
+appealed to the mind rather than to the eye, and the general public were
+almost wholly uneducated in art. By 1849 the improvement due to the
+exertions of the Prince Consort, the Society of Arts, and other powers
+began to be felt; while a wonderful impulse to human taste and ingenuity
+was being given in the preparation of exhibits for the World's Fair.'
+The gentle Quakeress who, in her youth, had modelled Wedgwood figures in
+paper pulp, and clapped her clear-starching to the rhythm of <i>Lalla
+Rookh</i>, was, in middle life, one of the staunchest supporters of the
+Pre-Raphaelite Brethren, and that at a time when the President of the
+Royal Academy had announced his intention of hanging no more of their
+'outrageous productions.' Through their friend, Edward La Trobe Bateman,
+the Howitts had been introduced into the Pre-Raphaelite circle, and
+familiarised with the then new and startling idea that artistic
+principles might be carried out in furniture and house-decoration. Less
+than three-quarters of a century before, Mary's father had been sternly
+rebuked by her grandfather for painting a series of lines in black and
+grey above the parlour fireplace to represent a cornice. This primitive
+attempt at decoration was regarded as a sinful indulgence of the lust of
+the eye! With the simple charity that was characteristic of them,
+William and Mary saw only the best side of their new friends, the
+shadows of Bohemian life being entirely hidden from them. 'Earnest and
+severe in their principles of art,' observes Mrs. Howitt naively, 'the
+young reformers indulged in much jocundity when the day's work was done.
+They were wont to meet at ten, cut jokes, talk slang, smoke, read
+poetry, and discuss art till three A.M.'</p>
+
+<p>The couple had by this time renounced their membership of the
+Society of Friends, but they had not joined any other religious sect,
+though they seem to have been attracted by Unitarian doctrines. 'Mere
+creeds,' wrote Mary to her sister, 'matter nothing to me. I could go one
+Sunday to the Church of England, another to a Catholic chapel, a third
+to the Unitarian, and so on; and in each of them find my heart warmed
+with Christian love to my fellow-creatures, and lifted up with gratitude
+and praise to God.' For many years the house in Avenue Road was, we are
+told, a meeting-place for all that was best and brightest in the world
+of modern thought and art. William Howitt was always ready to lend an
+attentive and unbiassed ear to the newest theory, or even the newest
+fad, while Mary possessed in the fullest degree the gift of
+companionableness, and her inexhaustible sympathy drew from others an
+instant confidence. Her arduous literary labours never impaired her
+vigorous powers of mind or body, and she often wrote till late into the
+night without appearing to suffer in either health or spirits. She is
+described as a careful and energetic housewife; indeed, her husband was
+accustomed to say that he would challenge any woman who never wrote a
+line, to match his own good woman in the management of a large household.</p>
+
+<p>In 1851 came the first tidings of the discovery of gold in
+Australia, and nothing was talked of but this new Eldorado and the
+wonderful inducements held out to emigrants. William Howitt, who felt
+that he needed a change from brain-work, suddenly resolved on a trip
+with his two sons to this new world, where he would see his youngest
+brother, Dr. Godfrey Howitt, who had settled at Melbourne. He was also
+anxious to ascertain what openings in the country there might be for his
+boys, both of whom had active, outdoor tastes, which there seemed little
+chance of their being able to gratify in England. In June, 1852, the
+three male members of the family, accompanied by La Trobe Bateman,
+sailed for Australia, while Mary and her two daughters, the elder of
+whom had just returned from a year in Kaulbach's studio at Munich, moved
+into a cottage called the Hermitage, at Highgate, which belonged to Mr.
+Bateman, and had formerly been occupied by Rossetti. Here they lived
+quietly for upwards of two years, working at their literary or artistic
+occupations, and seeing a few intimate friends. Mary kept her husband
+posted up in the events that were taking place in England, and we learn
+from her letters what were the chief topics of town talk in the early
+fifties.</p>
+
+<p>'Now, I must think over what news there is,' she writes in April,
+1853. 'In the political world, the proposed new scheme of Property and
+Income Tax, which would make everybody pay something; and the proposal
+for paying off a portion of the National Debt with Australian gold. In
+the literary world, the International Copyright, which some expect will
+be in force in three months. In society in general, the strange
+circumstantial rumour of the Queen's death, which, being set afloat on
+Easter Monday, when no business was doing, was not the offspring of the
+money market. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kean, who were here the other day,
+spoke of it, saying truly that for the moment it seemed to paralyse the
+very heart of England.... [May 4th.] The great talk now is Mrs. Beecher
+Stowe and spirit-rapping, both of which have arrived in England. The
+universality of the latter phenomena renders it a curious study. A
+feeling seems pervading all classes and all sects that the world stands
+on the brink of some great spiritual revelation. It meets one in books,
+in newspapers, on the lips of members of the Church of England,
+Unitarians, and even Freethinkers. Poor old Robert Owen, the
+philanthropist, has been converted, and made a confession of faith in
+public. One cannot but respect a man who, in his old age, has the
+boldness to declare himself as having been blinded and mistaken through
+life.'</p>
+
+<p>In December, 1854, William Howitt returned from his travels without
+any gold in his pockets, but with the materials for his <i>History of
+Discovery in Australia and New Zealand.</i> Thanks to what he used to
+call his four great doctors, Temperance, Exercise, Good Air, and Good
+Hours, he had displayed wonderful powers of activity and endurance
+during his exploration of some almost untracked regions of the new
+world. At sixty years of age he had marched twenty miles a day under a
+blazing sun for weeks at a time, worked at digging gold for twelve hours
+a day, waded through rivers, slept under trees, baked his own bread,
+washed his own clothes, and now returned in the pink of condition, with
+his passion for wandering only intensified by his three years of an
+adventurous life. The family experiences were diversified thenceforward
+by frequent change of scene, for William was always ready and willing to
+start off at a moment's notice to the mountains, the seaside, or the
+Continent. But whether the Howitts were at home or abroad, they
+continued their making of many books, so that it becomes difficult for
+the biographer to keep pace with their literary output. Together or
+separately they produced a <i>History of Scandinavian Literature, The
+Homes and Haunts of the Poets, a Popular History of England</i>, which
+was published in weekly parts, a <i>Year-Book of the Country</i>, a <i>Popular
+History of the United States</i>, a <i>History of the Supernatural</i>,
+the <i>Northern Heights of London</i>, and an abridged edition of <i>Sir
+Charles Grandison</i>, besides several tales for young people, and
+contributions to magazines and newspapers.</p>
+
+<p>Even increasing age had no power to narrow their point of view, or
+to blunt their sympathy with every movement that seemed to make for the
+relief of the oppressed, the welfare of the nation, or the advancement
+of the human race. Just as in youth they had championed the cause of
+Catholic Emancipation and of political Reform, so in later years we find
+them advocating the Repeal of the Corn Laws, taking part in the
+Anti-Slavery agitation, working for improvement in the laws that
+affected women and children, and supporting the Bill for the Prevention
+of Cruelty to Animals. A more debatable subject--that of
+spiritualism--was investigated by them in a friendly but impartial
+spirit. 'In the spring of 1856, 'writes Mrs. Howitt, 'we had become
+acquainted with several most ardent and honest spirit mediums. It seemed
+right to my husband and myself to try and understand the nature of these
+phenomena in which our new acquaintance so firmly believed. In the month
+of April I was invited to attend a <i>s&eacute;ance</i> at Professor de
+Morgan's, and was much astonished and affected by communications
+purporting to come to me from my dear son Claude. With constant prayer
+for enlightenment and guidance, we experimented at home. The teachings
+that seemed given us from the spirit-world were often akin to those of
+the gospel; at other times they were more obviously emanations of evil.
+I felt thankful for the assurance thus gained of an invisible world, but
+resolved to neglect none of my common duties for spiritualism.' Among
+the Hewitts' fellow-converts were Robert Chambers, Robert Owen, the
+Carter Halls and the Alaric Watts's; while Sir David Brewster and Lord
+Brougham were earnest inquirers into these forms of psychical phenomena.</p>
+
+<p>In 1865 William Howitt was granted a pension by Government, and a
+year later the couple moved from Highgate to a cottage called the
+Orchard, near their former residence at Esher. Of their four surviving
+children, only Margaret, the youngest, was left at home. Anna, already
+the author of a very interesting book, <i>An Art Student at Munich</i>,
+had, as her mother observes, taken her place among the successful
+artists and writers of her day, 'when, in the spring of 1856, a severe
+private censure of one of her oil-paintings by a king among critics so
+crushed her sensitive nature, as to make her yield to her bias for the
+supernatural, and withdraw from the arena of the fine arts.' In 1857
+Anna became the wife of Alfred Watts, the son of her parents' old
+friends, Alaric and Zillah Watts. The two boys, Alfred and Charlton,
+born explorers and naturalists, both settled in Australia. Alfred, early
+in the sixties, had explored the district of Lake Torrens, a land of
+parched deserts, dry-water-courses, and soda-springs, whose waters
+effervesced tartaric acid; and had opened up for the Victorian
+Government the mountainous district of Gippsland, with the famous
+gold-field of the Crooked River. In 1861 he had been employed to head
+the relief-party that went in search of the discoverer, Robert O'Hara
+Burke, and his companions, and a year later he brought back the remains
+of the ill-fated explorers to Melbourne for public burial. Later in life
+he was successfully employed in various Government enterprises, and
+published, in collaboration with a friend, a learned work on the
+aborigines of Australia.</p>
+
+<p>Charlton Howitt, the younger son, after five years' uncongenial work
+in a London office, emigrated to Australia in 1860. His quality was
+quickly recognised by the Provincial Government, which, in 1862,
+appointed him to command an expedition to examine the rivers in the
+province of Canterbury, with a view to ascertaining whether they
+contained gold. So admirably was the work accomplished that, on his
+return to Christchurch, he was intrusted with the task of opening up
+communications between the Canterbury plains and the newly-discovered
+gold and coal district on the west coast. 'This duty was faithfully
+performed, under constant hardships and discouragement,' relates his
+mother. 'But a few miles of road remained to be cut, when, at the end of
+June, 1863, after personally rescuing other pioneers and wanderers from
+drowning and starvation in that watery, inhospitable forest region,
+Charlton, with two of his men, went down in the deep waters of Lake
+Brunner; a fatal accident which deprived the Government of a valued
+servant, and saddened the hearts of all who knew him.'</p>
+
+<p>After four peaceful years at Esher, the <i>Wanderlust</i>, that
+gipsy spirit, which not even the burden of years could tame, took
+possession of William and Mary once more, and they suddenly decided that
+they must see Italy before they died. In May, 1870, they let the
+Orchard, and, aged seventy-seven and seventy-one respectively, set out
+on their last long flight into the world. The summer was spent on the
+Lake of Lucerne, where the old-world couple came across that modern of
+the moderns, Richard Wagner, and his family. By way of the Italian Lakes
+and Venice they travelled, in leisurely fashion, to Rome, where they
+celebrated their golden wedding in April, 1871. The Eternal City threw
+its glamour around these ancient pilgrims, who found both life and
+climate exactly suited to the needs of old age. 'I prized in Rome,'
+writes Mrs. Howitt, 'the many kind and sympathetic friends that were
+given to us, the ease of social existence, the poetry, the classic
+grace, the peculiar and deep pathos diffused around; above all, the
+stirring and affecting historic memories.... From the period of arrival
+in Rome, I may truly say that the promise in Scripture, "At evening time
+there shall be light," was, in our case, fulfilled.'</p>
+
+<p>The simple, homely life of the aged couple continued unbroken amid
+their new surroundings. William interested himself in the planting of
+Eucalyptus in the Campagna, as a preventive against malaria, and had
+seeds of different varieties sent over from Australia, which he
+presented to the Trappist monks of the Tre Fontani. He helped to
+establish a society for the prevention of cruelty to animals, and struck
+up a friendship with the gardeners and custodians of the Pincio, to whom
+he gave expert advice on the subject of the creatures under their
+charge. The summer months were always spent in the Tyrol, where the
+Howitts had permanent quarters in an old mansion near Bruneck, called
+Mayr-am-Hof. Here William was able to indulge in his favourite
+occupation of gardening. He dug indefatigably in a field allotment with
+his English spade, a unique instrument in that land of clumsy husbandry,
+and was amazed at the growth of the New Zealand spinach, the widespread
+rhubarb, the exuberant tomatoes, and towering spikes of Indian corn.
+Thanks to the four great doctors before mentioned, he remained hale and
+hearty up to December, 1878, in which month he celebrated his
+eighty-seventh birthday. A few weeks later he was attacked by
+bronchitis, which, owing to an unsuspected weakness of the heart, he was
+unable to throw off. He died in his house on the Via Sistina, close to
+his favourite Pincio, on March 3, 1879.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Howitt now finally gave up the idea of returning to end her
+days in England. Her husband and companion of more than fifty years was
+buried in the Protestant Cemetery at Home, and when her time came, she
+desired to be laid by his side. The grant of a small pension added to
+the comfort of her last years, and was a source of much innocent pride
+and gratification, for, as she tells her daughter Anna, 'It was so
+readily given, so kindly, so graciously, for my literary merits, by Lord
+Beaconsfield, without the solicitation or interference of any friend or
+well-wisher.' In May, 1880, she writes to a friend from Meran about 'a
+project, which seems to have grown up in a wonderful way by itself, or
+as if invisible hands had been arranging it; that we should have a
+little home of our own <i>im heiligen Land Tirol</i>. This really is a
+very great mercy, seeing that the Tyrol is so beautiful, the climate so
+beneficial to health, and the people, taken as a whole, so very honest
+and devout. Our little nest of love, which we shall call "Marienruhe,"
+will be perched on a hill with beautiful views, surrounded by a small
+garden.' On September 29, 1881, Mrs. Howitt and her daughter, Margaret,
+slept, for the first time, in their romantically-situated new home near
+Meran.</p>
+
+<p>At Marienruhe, the greater portion of the last seven years of Mary
+Howitt's life was spent in peace and contentment. Here she amused
+herself with writing her 'Reminiscences' for <i>Good Words</i>, which
+were afterwards incorporated in her <i>Autobiography</i>. Age had no
+power to blunt her interest in the events of the day, political or
+literary, and at eighty-seven we find her reading with keen enjoyment
+Froude's <i>Oceana</i> and Besant's <i>All Sorts and Conditions of Men</i>,
+books that dealt with questions which she and her husband had had at
+heart for the best part of a lifetime, and for which they had worked
+with untiring zeal. Of the first she writes to a friend: 'We much
+approve of his (Froude's) very strong desire that our colonies should,
+like good, faithful, well-trained children, be staunch in love and
+service to old Mother England. How deeply we feel on this subject I
+cannot tell you; and I hope and trust that you join strongly in this
+truly English sentiment.' Of the second she writes to Mrs. Leigh Smith:
+'I am more interested than I can tell you in <i>All Sorts and
+Conditions of Men</i>. It affects me like the perfected fruit of some
+glorious tree which my dear husband and I had a dim dream of planting
+more than thirty years ago, and which we did, in our ignorance and
+incapacity, attempt to plant in soil not properly prepared, and far too
+early in the season. I cannot tell you how it has recalled the hopes and
+dreams of a time which, by the overruling Providence of God, was so
+disastrous to us. It is a beautiful essay on the dignity of labour.'</p>
+
+<p>The last few years of Mary Howitt's life were saddened by the deaths
+of her beloved sister, Anna, and her elder daughter, Mrs. Watts, but
+such blows are softened for aged persons by the consciousness that their
+own race is nearly run. Mary had, moreover, one great spiritual
+consolation in her conversion, at the age of eighty-three, to the
+doctrines of Roman Catholicism In spite of her oft-repeated
+protestations against the likelihood of her 'going over,' in spite of
+her declaration, openly expressed as late as 1871, that she firmly
+believed in the anti-Christianity of the Papacy, and that she and her
+husband were watching with interest the progress of events which, they
+trusted, would bring about its downfall, Mrs. Howitt was baptized into
+the Roman Church in May, 1882. Her new faith was a source of intense
+happiness to the naturally religious woman, who had found no refuge in
+any sectarian fold since her renunciation of her childish creed. In
+1888, the year of the Papal Jubilee, though her strength was already
+failing, she was well enough to join the deputation of English pilgrims,
+who, on January 10, were presented to the Pope by the Duke of Norfolk.
+In describing the scene, the last public ceremony in which she took
+part, she writes: 'A serene happiness, almost joy, filled my whole being
+as I found myself on my knees before the Vicar of Christ. My wish was to
+kiss his foot, but it was withdrawn, and his hand given to me. You may
+think with what fervour I kissed the ring. In the meantime he had been
+told my age and my late conversion. His hands were laid on my shoulders,
+and, again and again, his right hand in blessing on my head, whilst he
+spoke to me of Paradise.'</p>
+
+<p>Having thus achieved her heart's desire, it seemed as if the last
+tie which bound the aged convert to earth was broken. A few days later
+she was attacked by bronchitis, and, after a short illness, passed away
+in her sleep on January 30, 1888, having nearly completed her
+eighty-ninth year. To the last, we are told, Mary Howitt's sympathy was
+as warm, her intelligence as keen as in the full vigour of life, while
+her rare physical strength and pliant temper preserved her in unabated
+enjoyment of existence to the verge of ninety. Although many of her
+books were out of print at the time of her death, it was said that if
+every copy had been destroyed, most of her ballads and minor poems could
+have been collected from the memories of her admirers, who had
+them--very literally--by heart.</p>
+
+<p>William and Mary Howitt, it may be observed in conclusion, though
+not leaders, were brave soldiers in the army of workers for humanity,
+and if now they seem likely to share the common lot of the rank and
+file--oblivion--it must be remembered that they were among those
+favoured of the gods who are crowned with gratitude, love, and
+admiration by their contemporaries. To them, asleep in their Roman
+grave, the neglect of posterity brings no more pain than the homage of
+modern critics brings triumph to the slighted poet who shares their last
+resting-place.<br>
+</p>
+
+<p><br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;">
+
+<p><br>
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Little Memoirs of the Nineteenth
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