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(illustration)
--BACON.
EDITED BY
(imprint)
Copyright, 1877. By JAMES R. OSGOOD & CO.
UNIVERSITY PRESS: WELCH, BIGELOW, & CO., CAMBRIDGE.
(preface)
It is my wish, and that of my Executors, that it should be published by
our friends, MESSRS. FIELDS, OSGOOD, & CO., of Boston; and
every requisite has been provided for their edition being of a similar
character and quality with the English. Theirs is therefore the edition
authorized by me and my Executors.
HARRIET MARTINEAU.
AMBLESIDE, July 22d, 1869.
(contents)
Mrs. Somerville. Joanna Baillie. Political and scientific men. Sir C. Bell and others. The Artists. Sir A. Callcott. Chantrey. Allan Cunningham. Westmacott. Phillips. Macready. The Kembles. Sir C. Eastlake. Other artists. Blue-stocking parties. Miss Berry's. Lady Mary Shepherd's. Lady Stepney. My own soirées. Intimate friends. Mrs. Marsh's first novel. The Carlyles. Mazzini. John Sterling. Leigh Hunt. Thomas Carlyle. Occasional mornings. Sitting for portraits and casts. Mr. Warburton's Dissection Bill. Mr. Toynbee's request. Professional phrenologists' judgments on me. Coleridge. Godwin. Condition of Woman. Basil Montagu. Morning visitors. Dr. Chalmers. Mr. Chadwick. Rowland Hill. Lord Monteagle. Mr. G.R. Porter. Mr. Urquhart. Other morning visitors. Capel Lofft, junior. The Brownings. Miss Mitford. Talfourd. Mr. H.F. Chorley. Miss Landon. Correspondents. Miss Edgeworth. Fraser's hoax. Miss Kelty. Miss Bremer. Modes of authorship among my acquaintance.
205
(introduction)
the beginning of this last winter, however, I had hopes of being able to unite my political work with this; and on New Year's Day I said to myself that the year must not close without my having recorded the story of my life. I was probably strengthened in this purpose by having for some time past felt that my energies were declining, and that I had no longer a right to depend on being able to do whatever I chose. Two or three weeks more settled the business. Feeling very unwell, I went to London to obtain a medical opinion in regard to my health. Two able physicians informed me that I had a mortal disease, which might spare me some considerable space of life, but which might, as likely as not, destroy me at any moment. No doubt could remain after this as to what my next employment should be: and as soon after my return home as I had settled my business with my Executor, I began this autobiography. I thought it best to rewrite the early portion, that the whole might be offered from one point of view, and in a consistent spirit. Without any personal desire about living a few months or weeks more or less, I rather hope that I may be able to finish my story with my own hands. If not, it will be done by another, from materials of more or less value. But one part which ought to be done by myself is the statement of my reasons for so serious a step as forbidding the publication of my private correspondence; and I therefore stop at the Third Period of my Memoir, to write this Introduction, to the following passages of which I request the reader's earnest attention.
I admit, at the outset, that it is rather a piece of self-denial
in me to interdict the publication of my letters. I have no solicitude
about fame, and no fear of my reputation of any sort being injured by the
publication of any thing I have ever put upon paper. My opinions and
feelings have been remarkably open to the world; and my position has been
such as to impose no reserves on a disposition naturally open and
communicative; so that if any body might acquiesce in the publication of
correspondence, it should be myself. Moreover, I am disposed to think that
what my friends tell me is true; that it would be rather an advantage to me
than the contrary to be known by my
private letters All these considerations point out to me that I am therefore precisely the person to bear emphatic practical testimony on behalf of the principle of the privacy of epistolary intercourse; and therefore it is that I do hereby bear that testimony.
Epistolary correspondence is written speech; and the
onus rests with those who publish it to show
why the laws of honor which are uncontested in regard to conversation may
be violated when the conversation is written instead of spoken. The plea is
of the utility of such material for biographical purposes; but who would
admit that plea in regard to fireside conversation? The most valuable
conversation, and that which best illustrates character, is that which
passes between two friends, with their feet on the fender, on winter
nights, or in a summer ramble: but what would be thought of the
traitor who should supply such material for biographical or other purposes?
How could human beings ever open their hearts and minds to each other, if
there were no privacy guaranteed by principles and feelings of honor? Yet
has this security lapsed from that half of human conversation which is
written instead of spoken. Whether there is still time to restore it, I
know not: but I have done my part towards an attempted restoration by
a stringent provision in my Will against any public use whatever being made
of my letters, unless I should myself authorize the publication of some,
which will, in that case, be of some public interest, and not confidential
letters. Most of my friends have burnt my letters,--partly because
they knew my desire thus to enforce my assertion of the principle, and
partly because it was less painful to destroy them while I was still among
them than to escape the importunities of hunters of material after my
death. Several eminent persons of this century have taken stringent
precautions against the same mischief; and very many more, I fear, have
taken the more painful precaution of writing no letters which any body
would care to have. Seventy years ago, Dr. Johnson said in conversation
"It is now become so much the fashion to publish letters, that, in
order to avoid it, I put as little into mine as I can." Nobody will
question the hardship and mischief of a practice
which acts upon epistolary correspondence as the spy system under a despotism acts upon speech: and when we find that a half a dozen of the greatest minds of our time have deprived themselves and their friends of their freedom of epistolary speech for the same reason, it does seem to be time that those qualified to bear testimony against such an infringement on personal liberty should speak out.
"But," say unscrupulous book-makers and readers,
"there are many eminent persons who are so far from feeling as you do
that they have themselves prepared for the publication of their letters.
There was Doddridge:--he left a copy of every letter and note
that he ever wrote, for this very purpose. There was Madame
D'Arblay:--on her death-bed, and in extreme old
age, she revised and had copies made of all the letters she received and
wrote when in the height of her fame as Fanny Burney,--preparing for
publication the smooth compliments and monstrous flatteries written by
hands that had long become dust. There was Southey:--he too kept
copies, or left directions, by which he arranged the method of making his
private letters to his friends property to his heirs. These, and many more,
were of a different way of thinking from you."--They were
indeed: and my answer is,--what were the letters worth, as
letters, when these arrangements became known? What would fireside
conversation be worth, as confidential talk, if it was known that the
speaker meant to make it a newspaper article the next day? And when
Doddridge's friends, and Southey's, heard that what they had
taken for conversational out-pouring on paper was so much literary
production, to appear hereafter in a book,--what was the worth of
those much-prized letters then? Would the correspondents not as soon
have received a page of a dissertation, or the proof of a review article?
Surely the only word necessary as to this part of the question is a word of
protest against every body, or every eminent person, being deprived of
epistolary liberty because there have been some among their predecessors or
contemporaries who did not know how to use it, or happen to value it.
We are recommended, again, to "leave the matter to the
dis-
cretion of survivors." I, for my part, have too much regard for my Executors to bequeath to them any such troublesome office as withstanding the remonstrances of any number of persons who may have a mind to see my letters, or of asserting a principle which it is my business to assert for myself. If they were to publish my letters, they would do what I believe to be wrong: and if they refused to publish them, they might be subject to importunity or censure which I have no right to devolve upon them. And why are we to leave this particular piece of testamentary duty to the discretion of survivors, when we are abundantly exhorted, in the case of every other, to do our own testamentary duty ourselves,--betimes, carefully and conscientiously?
Then comes the profit argument,--the plea of how much the world
would have lost without the publication of the letters of A. B. and C. This
is true, in a way. The question is whether the world has not lost more by
the injury to epistolary freedom than it has gained by reading the letters
of nonconsenting letter-writers. There will always be plenty of
consenting and willing letter-writers: let society have their
letters. But there should be no others,--at least till privacy is
altogether abolished as an unsocial privilege. This grossly utilitarian
view does not yet prevail; and I do not think it ever will. Meantime, I
claim the sanction of every principle of integrity, and every feeling of
honor and delicacy, on behalf of my practice. I claim, over and above
these, the sanction of the law.--Law reflects the principles of
morals; and in this case the mirror presents a clear image of the right and
the duty. The law vests the right of publication of private letters solely
in the writer, no one else having any such right during the author's
life, or after his death, except by his express permission. On the
knowledge of this provision I have acted, in my arrangements about my own
correspondence; and I trust that others, hitherto unaccustomed to the grave
consideration of the subject, will feel, in justice to myself and others
who act with me, that there can be no wrong, no moral inexpediency, in the
exercise of a right thus expressly protected by the Law. If, by what I have
done, I have fixed attention upon the morality of the case, this will be a
greater social benefit than
the publication of any letters written by me, or by persons far wiser and more accomplished than myself.
I have only to say further, in the way of introduction, a word or two as
to my descent and parentage. On occasion of the Revelation of the Edict of
Nantes, in 1688, a surgeon of the name of Martineau, and a family of the
name of Pierre, crossed the Channel, and settled with other Huguenot
refugees, in England. My ancestor married a young lady of the Pierre
family, and settled in Norwich, where his descendants afforded a succession
of surgeons up to my own day. My eminent uncle, Mr. Philip Meadows
Martineau, and my eldest brother, who died before the age of thirty, were
the last Norwich surgeons of the name.--My grandfather, who was one of
the honorable series, died at the age of forty-two, of a fever
caught among his poor patients. He left a large family, of whom my father
was the youngest. When established as a Norwich manufacturer, my father
married Elizabeth Rankin, the eldest daughter of a sugar-refiner at
Newcastle upon Tyne. My father and mother had eight children, of whom I was
the sixth: and I was born on the 12th of June, 1802.
(illustration)
sinking under diarrhoea. My bad health during my whole childhood and youth, and even my deafness, was always ascribed by my mother to this. However it might be about that, my health certainly was very bad till I was nearer thirty than twenty years of age; and never was poor mortal cursed with a more beggarly nervous system. The long years of indigestion by day and night-mare terrors are mournful to think of now.--Milk has radically disagreed with me, all my life: but when I was a child, it was a thing unheard of for children not to be fed on milk: so, till I was old enough to have tea at breakfast, I went on having a horrid lump at my throat for hours of every morning, and the most terrific oppressions in the night. Sometimes the dim light of the windows in the night seemed to advance till it pressed upon my eyeballs, and then the windows would seem to recede to an infinite distance. If I laid my hand under my head on the pillow, the hand seemed to vanish almost to a point, while the head grew as big as a mountain. Sometimes I was panic struck at the head of the stairs, and was sure I could never get down; and I could never cross the yard to the garden without flying and panting, and fearing to look behind, because a wild beast was after me. The starlight sky was the worst; it was always coming down, to stifle and crush me, and rest upon my head. I do not remember any dread of thieves or ghosts in particular; but things as I actually saw them were dreadful to me; and it now appears to me that I had scarcely any respite from the terror. My fear of persons was as great as any other. To the best of my belief, the first person I was ever not afraid of was Aunt Kentish, who won my heart and my confidence when I was sixteen. My heart was ready enough to flow out; and it often did: but I always repented of such expansion, the next time I dreaded to meet a human face.--It now occurs to me, and it may be worth while to note it,--what the extremest terror of all was about. We were often sent to walk on the Castle Hill at Norwich. In the wide area below, the residents were wont to expose their feather-beds, and to beat them with a stick. That sound,--a dull shock,--used to make my heart stand still: and it was no use my standing at the rails above, and
seeing the process. The striking of the blow and the arrival of the sound did not correspond; and this made matters worse. I hated that walk; and I believe for that reason. My parents knew nothing of all this. It never occurred to me to speak of anything I felt most: and I doubt whether they ever had the slightest idea of my miseries. It seems to me now that a little closer observation would have shown them the causes of the bad health and fitful temper which gave them so much anxiety on my account; and I am sure that a little more of the cheerful tenderness which was in those days thought bad for children, would have saved me from my worst faults, and from a world of suffering.
My hostess and nurse at the above-mentioned cottage was a Mrs.
Merton, who was, as was her husband, a Methodist or melancholy Calvinist of
some sort. The family story about was that I came home the absurdest little
preacher of my years (between two and three) that ever was. I used to nod
my head emphatically, and say "Never ky for tyfles:"
"Dooty fust, and pleasure afterwards," and so forth: and
I sometimes got courage to edge up to strangers, and ask them to give
me--"a maxim." Almost before I could join letters, I got
some sheets of paper,and folded them into a little square book, and wrote,
in double lines, two or three in a page, my beloved maxims. I believe this
was my first effort at book-making. It was probably what I picked up
at Carleton that made me so intensely religious as I certainly was from a
very early age. The religion was of a bad sort enough, as might be expected
from the urgency of my needs; but I doubt whether I could have got through
without it. I pampered my vain-glorious propensities by dreams of
divine favor, to make up for my utter deficiency of
self-respect: and I got rid of otherwise incessant remorse by
a most convenient confession and repentance, which relieved my nerves
without at all, I suspect, improving my conduct.
To revert to my earliest recollections:--I certainly could
hardly walk alone when our nursemaid took us,--including my sister
Elizabeth, who was eight years older than myself,--an unusual walk;
through a lane, (afterwards called by us the
"Spinner's Lane") where some Miss Taskers, acquaintances of Elizabeth's and her seniors, were lodging, in a cottage which had a fir grove behind it. Somebody set me down at the foot of a fir, where I was distressed by the slight rising of the ground at the root, and by the long grass, which seemed a terrible entanglement. I looked up the tree, and was scared at its height, and at that of so many others. I was comforted with a fir-cone; and then one of the Miss Taskers caught me up in her arms and kissed me; and I was too frightened to cry till we got away.--I was not more than two years old when an impression of touch occurred to me which remains vivid to this day. It seems indeed as if impressions of touch were at that age more striking than those from the other senses. I say this from observation of others besides myself; for my own case is peculiar in that matter. Sight, hearing and touch were perfectly good in early childhood; but I never had the sense of smell; and that of taste was therefore exceedingly imperfect. On the occasion I refer to, I was carried down a flight of steep back stairs, and Rachel (a year and half older than I) clung to the nursemaid's gown, and Elizabeth was going before, (still quite a little girl) when I put down my finger ends to feel a flat velvet button on the top of Rachel's bonnet. The rapture of the sensation was really monstrous, as I remember it now. Those were our mourning bonnets for a near relation; and this marks the date, proving me to have been only two years old.
I was under three when my brother James was born. That day was another
of the distinct impressions which flashed upon me in after years. I found
myself within the door of the best bedroom,--an impressive place from
being seldom used, from its having a dark, polished floor, and from the
awful large gay figures of the chintz bed hangings. That day the curtains
were drawn, the window blinds were down, and an unknown old woman, in a mob
cap, was at the fire, with a bundle of flannel in her arms. She beckoned to
me, and I tried to go, though it seemed impossible to cross the slippery
floor. I seem to hear now the paltering of my feet. When I arrived at her
knee, the
nurse pushed out with her foot a tiny chair, used as a footstool, made me sit down on it, laid the bundle of flannel across my knees, and opened it so that I saw the little red face of the baby. I then found out that there was somebody in the bed,--seeing a nightcap on the pillow. This was on the 21st of April, 1805. I have a distinct recollection of some incidents of that summer. My mother did not recover well from her confinement, and was sent to the sea, at Yarmouth. On our arrival there, my father took me along the old jetty,--little knowing what terror I suffered. I remember the strong grasp of his large hand being some comfort; but there were holes in the planking of the jetty quite big enough to let my foot through; and they disclosed the horrible sight of waves flowing and receding below, and great tufts of green weeds swaying to and fro. I remember the sitting room at our lodgings, and my mother's dress as she sat picking shrimps, and letting me try to help her.--Of all my many fancies, perhaps none was so terrible as a dream that I had at four years old. The impression is as fresh as possible now; but I cannot at all understand what the fright was about. I know nothing more strange than this power of re-entering, as it were, into the narrow mind of an infant, so as to compare it with that of maturity; and therefore it may he worth while to record that piece of precious nonsense,--my dream at four years old. I imagine I was learning my letters then from cards, where each letter had its picture,--as a stag for S. I dreamed that we children were taking our walk with our nursemaid out of St. Austin's Gate (the nearest bit of country to our house.) Out of the public-house there came a stag, with prodigious antlers. Passing the pump, it crossed the road to us, and made a polite bow, with its head on one side, and with a scrape of one foot, after which it pointed with its foot to the public-house, and spoke to me, inviting me in. The maid declined, and turned to go home. Then came the terrible part. By the time we were at our own door it was dusk, and we went up the steps in the dark; but in the kitchen it was bright sunshine. My mother was standing at the dresser, breaking sugar; and she lifted me up, and set me in the sun, and gave me a bit of sugar.
Such was the dream which froze me with horror! Who shall say why? But my panics were really unaccountable. They were a matter of pure sensation, without any intellectual justification whatever, even of the wildest kind. A magic-lantern was exhibited to us on Christmas-day, and once or twice in the year besides. I used to see it cleaned by daylight, and to handle all its parts,--understanding its whole structure; yet, such was my terror of the white circle on the wall, and of the moving slides, that, to speak the plain truth, the first apparition always brought on bowel-complaint; and, at the age of thirteen, when I was pretending to take care of little children during the exhibition, I could never look at it without having the back of a chair to grasp, or hurting myself, to carry off the intolerable sensation. My bitter shame may be conceived; but then, I was always in a state of shame about something or other. I was afraid to walk in the town, for some years, if I remember right, for fear of meeting two people. One was an unknown old lady who very properly rebuked me one day for turning her off the very narrow pavement of London Lane, telling me, in an awful way, that little people should make way for their elders. The other was an unknown farmer, in whose field we had been gleaning (among other trespassers) before the shocks were carried. This man left the field after us, and followed us into the city,--no doubt, as I thought, to tell the Mayor, and send the constable after us. I wonder how long it was before I left off expecting that constable. There were certain little imps, however, more alarming still. Our house was in a narrow street; and all its windows, except two or three at the back, looked eastward. It had no sun in the front rooms, except before breakfast in summer. One summer morning, I went into the drawing-room, which was not much used in those days, and saw a sight which made me hide my face in a chair, and scream with terror. The drops of the lustre on the mantle-piece, on which the sun was shining, were somehow set in motion, and the prismatic colors danced vehemently on the walls. I thought they were alive,--imps of some sort; and I never dared go into that room alone in the morning, from that time forward. I am afraid
I must own that my heart has beat, all my life long, at the dancing of prismatic colors on the wall.
I was getting some comfort, however, from religion by this time. The
Sundays began to be marked days, and pleasantly marked, on the whole. I do
not know why crocuses were particularly associated with Sunday at that
time; but probably my mother might have walked in the garden with us, some
early spring Sunday. My idea of Heaven was of a place gay with yellow and
lilac crocuses. My love of gay colors was very strong. When I was sent with
the keys to a certain bureau in my mother's room, to fetch miniatures
of my father and grandfather, to be shown to visitors, I used to stay an
unconscionable time, though dreading punishment for it, but utterly unable
to resist the fascination of a certain watch-ribbon kept in a drawer
there. This ribbon had a pattern in floss silk, gay and beautifully shaded;
and I used to look at it till I was sent for, to be questioned as to what I
had been about. The young wild parsley and other weeds in the hedges used
to make me sick with their luscious green in spring. One crimson and purple
sunrise I well remember, when James could hardly walk alone, and I could
not therefore have been more than five. I awoke very early, that summer
morning, and saw the maid sound asleep in her bed, and "the
baby" in his crib. The room was at the top of the house; and some
rising ground beyond the city could be seen over the opposite roofs. I
crept out of bed, saw James's pink toes showing themselves invitingly
through the rails of his crib, and gently pinched them, to wake him. With a
world of trouble I got him over the side, and helped him to the window, and
upon a chair there. I wickedly opened the window, and the cool air blew in;
and yet the maid did not wake. Our arms were smutted with the blacks on the
window-sill, and our bare feet were corded with the impression of
the rush-buttomed chair; but we were not found out. The sky was
gorgeous, and I talked very religiously to the child. I remember the mood,
and the pleasure of expresing it, but nothing of what I said.
I must have been a remarkably religious child, for the only
support and pleasure I remember having from a very early age was from that source. I was just seven when the grand event of my childhood took place,--a journey to Newcastle to spend the summer (my mother and four of her children) at my grandfather's; and I am certain that I cared more for religion before and during that summer than for anything else. It was after our return, when Ann Turner, daughter of the Unitarian Minister there, was with us, that my piety first took a practical character; but it was familiar to me as an indulgence long before. While I was afraid of everybody I saw, I was not in the least afraid of God. Being usually very unhappy, I was constantly longing for heaven, and seriously, and very frequently planning suicide in order to get there. I knew it was considered a crime; but I did not feel it so. I had a devouring passion for justice;--justice, first to my own precious self, and then to other oppressed people. Justice was precisely what was least understood in our house, in regard to servants and children. Now and then I desperately poured out my complaints; but in general I brooded over my injuries, and those of others who dared not speak; and then the temptation to suicide was very strong. No doubt, there was much vindictiveness in it. I gloated over the thought that I would make somebody care about me in some sort of way at last: and, as to my reception in the other world, I felt sure that God could not be very angry with me for making haste to him when nobody else cared for me, and so many people plagued me. One day I went to the kitchen to get the great carving knife, to cut my throat; but the servants were at dinner, and this put it off for that time. By degrees, the design dwindled down into running away. I used to lean out of the window, and look up and down the street, and wonder how far I could go without being caught. I had no doubt at all that if I once got into a farm-house, and wore a woollen petticoat, and milked the cows, I should be safe, and that nobody would inquire about me any more.--It is evident enough that my temper must have been very bad. It seems to me now that it was downright devilish, except for a placability which used to
annoy me sadly. My temper might have been early made a thoroughly good one, by the slightest indulgence shown to my natural affections, and any rational dealing with my faults: but I was almost the youngest of a large family, and subject, not only to the rule of severity to which all were liable, but also to the rough and contemptuous treatment of the elder children, who meant no harm, but injured me irreparably. I had no self-respect, and an unbounded need of approbation and affection. My capacity for jealousy was something frightful. When we were little more than infants, Mr. Thomas Watson, son of my father's partner, one day came into the yard, took Rachel up in his arms, gave her some grapes off the vine, and carried her home, across the street, to give her Gay's Fables, bound in red and gold. I stood with a bursting heart, beating my hoop, and hating every body in the world. I always hated Gay's Fables, and for long could not abide a red book. Nobody dreamed of all this; and the "taking down" system was pursued with me as with the rest, issuing in the assumed doggedness and wilfulness which made me desperately disagreeable during my youth, to every body at home. The least word or tone of kindness melted me instantly, in spite of the strongest predeterminations to be hard and offensive. Two occasions stand out especially in my memory, as indeed almost the only instances of the enjoyment of tenderness manifested to myself individually.
When I was four or five years old, we were taken to a lecture of Mr.
Drummond's, for the sake, no doubt, of the pretty shows, we were to
see,--the chief of which was the Phantasmagoria of which we had heard,
as a fine sort of magic-lantern. I did not like the darkness, to
begin with; and when Minerva appeared, in a red dress, at first extremely
small, and then approaching, till her owl seemed coming directly upon me,
it was so like my nightmare dreams that I shrieked aloud. I remember my own
shriek. A pretty lady who sat next us, took me on her lap, and let me hide
my face in her bosom, and held me fast. How intensely I loved her, without
at all knowing who she was! From that time we knew her, and she filled a
large space in my life; and above forty years after, I had the honor of
having her for my
guest in my own house. She was Mrs. Lewis Cooper, then the very young mother of two girls of the ages of Rachel and myself, of whom I shall have to say more presently.--The other occasion was when I had a terrible ear-ache one Sunday. The rest went to chapel in the afternoon; and my pain grew worse. Instead of going into the kitchen to the cook, I wandered into a lumber room at the top of the house. I laid my aching ear against the cold iron screw of a bedstead, and howled with pain; but nobody came to me. At last, I heard the family come home from chapel. I heard them go into the parlor, one after another, and I knew they were sitting round the fire in the dusk. I stole down to the door, and stood on the mat, and heard them talking and laughing merrily. I stole in, thinking they would not observe me, and got into a dark corner. Presently my mother called to me, and asked what I was doing there. Then I burst out,--that my ear ached so I did not know what to do! Then she and my father both called me tenderly, and she took me on her lap, and laid the ear on her warm bosom. I was afraid of spoiling her starched muslin handkerchief with the tears which would come; but I was very happy, and wished that I need never move again. Then of course came remorse for all my naughtiness; but I was always suffering that, though never, I believe, in my whole childhood, being known to own myself wrong. I must have been an intolerable child; but I need not have been so.
I was certainly fond of going to chapel before that Newcastle era which
divided my childhood into two equal portions: but my besetting
troubles followed me even there. My passion for justice was baulked there,
as much as any where. The duties preached were those of inferiors to
superiors, while the per contra was not
insisted on with any equality of treatment at all. Parents were to bring up
their children "in the nurture and admonition of the Lord," and
to pay servants due wages; but not a word was ever preached about the
justice due from the stronger to the weaker. I used to thirst to hear some
notice of the oppression which servants and children had (as I supposed
universally) to endure, in regard to their feelings, while duly clothed,
fed, and taught: but nothing of the sort ever came; but instead, a doctrine of passive obedience which only made me remorseful and miserable. I was abundantly obedient in act; for I never dreamed of being otherwise; but the interior rebellion kept my conscience in a state of perpetual torture. As far as I remember my conscience was never of the least use to me; for I always concluded myself wrong about every thing, while pretending entire complacency and assurance. My moral discernment was almost wholly obscured by fear and mortification.--Another misery at chapel was that I could not attend to the service, nor refrain from indulging in the most absurd vain-glorious dreams, which I was ashamed of, all the while. The Octagon Chapel at Norwich has some curious windows in the roof;--not skylights, but letting in light indirectly. I used to sit staring up at those windows, and looking for angels to come for me, and take me to heaven, in sight of all the congregation,--the end of the world being sure to happen while we were at chapel. I was thinking of this, and of the hymns, the whole of the time, it now seems to me. It was very shocking to me that I could not pray at chapel. I believe that I never did in my life. I prayed abundantly when I was alone; but it was impossible to me to do it in any other way; and the hypocrisy of appearing to do so was a long and sore trouble to me.--All this is very painful; but I really remember little that was not painful at that time of my life.--To be sure, there was Nurse Ayton, who used to come, one or two days in the week, to sew. She was kind to me, and I was fond of her. She told us long stories about her family; and she taught me to sew. She certainly held the family impression of my abilities,--that I was a dull, unobservant, slow, awkward child. In teaching me to sew, she used to say (and I quite acquiesced) that "slow and sure" was the maxim for me, and "quick and well" was the maxim for Rachel. I was not jealous about this,--it seemed to me so undeniable. On one occasion only I thought Nurse Ayton unkind. The back of a rickety old nursing-chair came off when I was playing on it; and I was sure she could save me from being scolded by sewing it on again. I insisted that she could sew anything. This made my mother
laugh when she came up; and so I forgave nurse: and I believe that was our only quarrel.
My first political interest was the death of Nelson. I was then four
years old. My father came in from the counting-house at an unusual
hour, and told my mother, who cried heartily. I certainly had some
conception of a battle, and of a great man being a public loss. It always
rent my heart-strings (to the last day of her life,) to see and hear
my mother cry; and in this case it was clearly connected with the death of
a great man. I had my own notions of Bonaparte too. One day, at dessert,
when my father was talking anxiously to my mother about the expected
invasion, for which preparations were made all along the Norfolk coast, I
saw them exchange a glance, because I was standing staring, twitching my
pinafore with terror. My father called me to him, and took me on his knee,
and I said "But, papa, what will you do if Boney comes?"
"What will I do?" said he, cheerfully, "Why, I will ask
him to take a glass of Port with me,"--helping himself to a
glass as he spoke. That wise reply was of immense service to me. From the
moment I knew that "Boney" was a creature who could take a
glass of wine, I dreaded him no more. Such was my induction into the
department of foreign affairs. As to social matters,--my passion for
justice was cruelly crossed, from the earliest time I can remember, by the
imposition of passive obedience and silence on servants and tradespeople,
who met with a rather old-fashioned treatment in our house. We
children were enough in the kitchen to know how the maids avenged
themselves for scoldings in the parlor, before the family and visitors, to
which they must not reply; and for being forbidden to wear white gowns,
silk gowns, or any thing but what strict housewives approved. One of my
chief miseries was being sent with insulting messages to the
maids,--e.g., to "bid them not be so like carthorses
overhead," and the like. On the one hand, it was a fearful sin to
alter a message; and, on the other, it was impossible to give such an one
as that: so I used to linger and delay to the last moment, and then
deliver something civil, with all imaginable sheepishness, so that the
maids used to look at one another
and laugh. Yet, one of my most heartfelt sins was towards a servant who was really a friend of my mother's and infinitely respected, and a good deal loved, by us children,--Susan Ormsby, who came to live with us just before James was born, and staid till that memorable Newcastle journey, above four years afterwards. When she was waiting at dinner one day, I stuck my knife upright, in listening to something, so that the point cut her arm. I saw her afterwards washing it at the pump; and she shook her head at me in tender reproach. My heart was bursting; but I dared not tell her how sorry I was. I never got over it, or was happy with her again; and when we were to part, the night before our journey, and she was kissing us with tears, it was in dumb grief and indignation that I heard her tell my mother that children do not feel things as grown people do, and that they could not think of any thing else when they were going a journey.
One more fact takes its place before that journey,--the awakening
of a love of money in me. I suspect I have had a very narrow escape of
being an eminent miser. A little more, or a little less difficulty, or
another mode of getting money would easily have made me a miser. The first
step, as far as I remember, was when we played cards, one winter evening,
at our uncle Martineau's, when I was told that I had won twopence.
The pavement hardly seemed solid when we walked home,--so elated was
I. I remember equal delight when Mrs. Meadows Taylor gave us children
twopence when we expected only a halfpenny, to buy string for a top:
but in this last case it was not the true amor
nummi, as in the other. The same avarice was excited in the same
way, a few years later, when I won eighteen-pence at cards on a
visit. The very sight of silver and copper was transporting to me, without
any thought of its use. I stood and looked long at money, as it lay in my
hand. Yet I do not remember that this passion ever interfered with my
giving away money, though it certainly did with my spending it otherwise. I
certainly wa very close, all my childhood and youth. I may as well mention
here that I made rules and kept them, in regard to my expenditure, from the
time I had an allowance. I believe we gave away
something out of our first allowance of a penny a week. When we had twopence, I gave away half. The next advance was to half-a-guinea a quarter, to buy gloves and sashes: then to ten pounds a year (with help) for clothes; then fifteen, and finally twenty, without avowed help. I sewed indefatigably all those years,--being in truth excessively fond of sewing, with the amusement of either gossiping, or learning poetry by heart, from a book, lying open under my work. I never had the slightest difficulty in learning any amount of verse; and I knew enough to have furnished me for a wandering reciter,--if there had been such a calling in our time,--as I used to wish there was. While thus busy, I made literally all my clothes, as I grew up, except stays and shoes. I platted bonnets at one time, knitted stockings as I read aloud, covered silk shoes for dances, and made all my garments. Thus I squeezed something out of the smaller allowance, and out of the fifteen pounds, I never spent more than twelve in dress; and never more than fifteen pounds out of the twenty. The rest I gave away, except a little which I spent in books. The amount of time spent in sewing now appears frightful; but it was the way in those days, among people like ourselves. There was some saving in our practice of reading aloud, and in mine of learning poetry in such mass: but the censorious gossip which was the bane of our youth drove prose and verse out of the field, and wasted more of our precious youthful powers and dispositions than any repentance and amendment in after life could repair. This sort of occupation, the sewing however, was less unfitting than might now appear, considering that the fortunes of manufacturers, like my father, were placed in jeopardy by the war, and that there was barely a chance for my father ever being able to provide fortunes for his daughters. He and my mother exercised every kind of self-denial to bring us up qualified to take care of ourselves. They pinched themselves in luxuries to provide their girls, as well as their boys, with masters and schooling; and they brought us up to an industry like their own;--the boys in study and business, and the girls in study and household cares. Thus was I saved from being a literary lady who could not sew; and when, in
after years, I have been insulted by admiration at not being helpless in regard to household employments, I have been wont to explain, for my mother's sake, that I could make shirts and puddings, and iron and mend, and get my bread by my needle, if necessary,--(as it once was necessary, for a few months), before I won a better place and occupation with my pen.
Travelling was no easy matter in those days. My mother, our dear,
pretty, gentle aunt Margaret, sister Elizabeth, aged fifteen, Rachel,
myself, and little James, aged four, and in nankeen frocks, were all
crammed into a post-chaise, for a journey of three or four days.
Almost every incident of those days is still fresh: but I will report
only one, which is curious from showing how little aware we children were
of our own value. I really think, if I had once conceived that any body
cared for me, nearly all the sins and sorrows of my anxious childhood would
have been spared me; and I remember well that it was Ann Turner who first
conveyed the cheering truth to me. She asked me why my mother sat sewing so
diligently for us children, and sat up at night to mend my stockings, if
she did not care for me; and I was convinced at once;--only too happy
to believe it, and being unable to resist such evidence as the
stocking-mending
at night, when we children were asleep. Well: on our second day's journey, we stopped at Burleigh House, and the three elders of the party went in, to see the picture gallery.--Children were excluded; so we three little ones were left to play among the haymakers on the lawn. After what seemed a long time, it suddenly struck us that the elders must have forgotten us, and gone on to Newcastle without us. I, for my part, was entirely persuaded that we should never be missed, or remembered more by any body; and we set up a terrible lamentation. A good-natured haymaker, a sunburnt woman whose dialect we could not understand, took us in hand, and led us to the great door, where we were soon comforted by my mother's appearance. I remember wondering why she and aunt Margaret laughed aside when they led us back to the chaise.
Of course it was difficult to amuse little children so cooped up for so
long. There was a little quiet romping, I remember, and a great deal of
story telling by dear aunty: but the finest device was setting us to
guess what we should find standing in the middle of grandpapa's
garden. As it was something we had never seen or known about, there was no
end to the guessing. When we arrived at the gates of the Forth, (my
grandfather's house) the old folks and their daughters came out to
meet us, all tearful and agitated: and I, loathing myself for the
selfishness, could not wait, but called out,--"I
want to see what that thing is in the garden." After an enlightening
hint, and without any rebuke, our youngest aunt took me by the hand, and
led me to face the mystery. I could make nothing of it when I saw it. It
was a large, heavy, stone sundial. That dial is worth this much mention,
for it was of immeasurable value to me. I could see its face only by
raising myself on tiptoe on its step: and there, with my eyes on a
level with the plate, did I watch and ponder, day by day, painfully forming
my first clear conceptions of Time, amidst a bright confusion of notions of
day and night, and of the seasons, and of the weather. I loved that dial
with a sort of superstition; and when, nearly forty years after, I built a
house for myself at Ambleside, my strong wish was to have this very dial
for the platform below the terrace: but it was not
to be had. It had been once removed already,--when the railway cut through the old garden; and the stone mass was too heavy, and far too much fractured and crumbled for a second removal. So a dear friend set up for me a beautiful new dial; and I can only hope that it may possibly render as great a service to some child of a future generation as my grandfather's did for me.
It seems to me now that I seldom asked questions in those days. I went
on for years together in a puzzle, for want of its ever occurring to me to
ask questions. For instance, no accounts of a spring-gun answered to
my conception of it;--that it was a pea-green musket, used only
in spring! This absurdity at length lay by unnoticed in my mind till I was
twenty! Even so! At that age, I was staying at Birmingham; and we were
returning from a country walk in the dusk of the evening, when my host
warned us not to cross a little wood, for fear of spring-guns; and
he found and showed us the wire of one. I was truly confounded when the
sense of the old mistake, dormant in my mind till now, came upon me. Thus
it was with a piece of mystification imposed on me by my
grandfather's barber in 1809. One morning, while the
shaving-pot was heating, the barber took me on his knee, and
pretended to tell me why he was late that morning. Had I ever heard of a
failing star? Yes, I had. Well: a star had fallen in the night; and
it fell in the Forth lane, which it completely blocked up, beside Mr.
Somebody's orchard. It was quite round, and of the beautifullest and
clearest crystal. "Was it there still?" O yes,--or most of
it: but some of the crystal was shivered off, and people were
carrying it away when he arrived at the spot. He had to go round by
Something Street; and it was that which made him late. "Would there
be any left by the time we went for our walk?" He hoped there might.
I got through my lessons in a fever of eagerness that morning, and engaged
the nurse maid to take us through that lane. There was the orchard, with
the appletree stretching over the wall: but not a single spike of the
crystal was left. I thought it odd; but it never occurred to me to doubt
the story, or to speak to any body about it, except the
bar-
ber. I lay in wait for him the next morning; and very sorry he professed to be;--so sorry that he had not just picked up some crystals for me while there were so many; but no doubt I should come in the way of a fallen star myself, some day. We kept this up till October, when we bade him good bye: and my early notions of astronomy were cruelly bewildered by that man's rhodomontade. I dare not say how many years it was before I got quite clear of it.
There is little that is pleasant to say of the rest of that absence from
home. There was a naughty boy staying at my grandfather's, who caused
us to be insulted by imputations of stealing the green fruit, and to be
shut out of the garden, where we had never dreamed of touching a
gooseberry: and he led little James into mischief; and then canted
and made his own part good. Our hearts swelled under the injuries he caused
us. Then, we were injudiciously fed, and my nightmare miseries were
intolerable. The best event was that my theological life began to take
form. I had a prodigious awe of clergymen and ministers, and a strong
yearning towards them for notice. No doubt there was much vanity in this;
but it was also one investment of the religious sentiment, as I know by my
being at times conscious of a remnant of the feeling now, while radically
convinced that the intellectual and moral judgment of priests of all
persuasions is inferior to that of any other order of men. The first of the
order who took any direct notice of me was, as far as I know, good Mr.
Turner of Newcastle, my mother's pastor and friend before her
marriage. At Newcastle, we usually went to tea at his house on Sunday
evenings; and it was then that we began the excellent practice of writing
recollections of one of the sermons of the day. When the minister preaches
what children can understand, this practice is of the highest use in fixing
their attention, and in disclosing to their parents the character and
imperfections of their ideas on the most important class of subjects. On
occasion of our first attempt,--Rachel's and mine,--I felt
very triumphant beforehand. I remembered the text; and it seemed to me that
my head was full of thoughts from the sermon. I scrawled over the whole of
a large slate,
and was not a little mortified when I found that all I had written came into seven or eight lines of my mother's handwriting. I made sure that I had not been cheated, and then fell into discouragement at finding that my grand "sermon" came to nothing more. However, my attempt was approved; I was allowed to "sit up to supper," and the Sunday practice was begun which continued till I grew too deaf to keep up my attention successfully. For some years of that long period, our success was small, because Mr. Madge's, (our minister's) sermons conveyed few clear ideas to children, though much sweet and solemn impression. Dr. Carpenter's were the best I ever listened to for the purpose:--so good that I have known him carry a "recollection" written by a cousin of mine at the age of sixteen, to Mrs. Carpenter, as a curiosity,--not a single sentence of his sermon being altogether absent from the hearer's version of it.--Another religious impression that we children brought from Newcastle is very charming to me still. Our gentle, delicate aunt Mary, whom I remember so well in her white gown, with her pink color, thin silky brown hair, and tender manner towards us, used to get us round her knees as she sat in the window-seat at the Forth, where the westerly sun shone in, and teach us to sing Milton's hymn "Let us with a gladsome mind." It is the very hymn for children, set to its own simple tune; and I always, to this day, hear aunt Mary's weak, earnest voice in it. That was the gentle hymn. The woe-breathing one was the German Evening Hymn. The heroic one, which never failed to rouse my whole being was "Awake, my soul; stretch every nerve," sung to Artaxerxes. In those days, we learned Mrs. Barbauld's Prose Hymns by heart; and there were parts of them which I dearly loved: but other parts made me shiver with awe. I did not know what "shaking bogs" were, and was alarmed at that mysterious being "Child of Mortality." On the whole, however, religion was a great comfort and pleasure to me; and I studied the New Testament very heartily and profitably, from the time that Ann Turner went south with us, and encouraged me to confession and morning and nightly prayer.
For many years past, my amazement has been continually on the increase
that Unitarians can conceive that they are giving their children a
Christian education in making their religious training what it is. Our
family certainly insisted very strongly, and quite sincerely, on being
Christians, while despising and pitying the orthodox as much as they could
be despised and pitied in return; while yet, it must have been from
wonderful slovenliness of thought, as well as ignorance, that we could have
taken Unitarianism to be Christianity, in any genuine sense,--in any
sense which could justify separate Christian worship. In our particular
case, family pride and affection were implicated in our dissent. It was not
the dissent that was to be wondered at, but its having degenerated into
Unitarianism. Our French name indicates our origin. The first Martineaus
that we know of were expatriated Huguenots, who came over from Normandy on
the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes. They were, of course,
Calvinists,--so fully admitting the Christian religion to be a scheme
of redemption as to deserve, without limitation or perversion, the title of
Christians. But their descendants passed by degrees, with the congregations
to which they belonged, out of Calvinism into the
pseudo-Christianity of Arianism first, and then of Unitarianism,
under the guidance of pastors whose natural sense revolted from the
essential points of the Christian doctrine, while they had not learning
enough, biblical, ecclesiastical, historical or philosophical, to discover
that what they gave up was truly essential, and that the name of
Christianity was a mere sham when applied to what they retained. One
evening when I was a child, I entered the parlor when our Unitarian
minister, Mr. Madge, was convicting of error (and what he called idiotcy)
an orthodox schoolmaster who happened to be our visitor. "Look
here," said Mr. Madge, seizing three wine-glasses, and placing
them in a row: "here is the Father,--here's the
Son,--and here's the Holy Ghost; do you mean to tell me that
those three glasses can be in any case one? 'Tis mere
nonsense." And so were we children taught that it was "mere
nonsense." I certainly wondered exceedingly that so vast a majority
of the people of Norwich could accept such nonsense,
and so very few see through it as the Unitarians of the city: but there was no one to suggest to me that there might be more in the matter than we saw, or than even our minister was aware of. This was pernicious enough: but far worse was the practice, necessarily universal among Unitarians, of taking any liberties they please with the revelation they profess to receive. It is true, the Scriptures are very properly declared by them to be not the revelation itself, but the record of it: but it is only through the record that the revelation can be obtained--at least by Protestants: and any tamperings with the record are operations upon the revelation itself. To appreciate the full effect of such a procedure, it is only necessary to look at what the Unitarians were doing in the days of my youth. They were issuing an Improved Version, in which considerable portions were set aside (printed in a different type) as spurious. It is true, those portions flatly contradicted some other portions in regard to dates and other facts; but the shallow scholarship of the Unitarians made its own choice what to receive and what to reject, without perceiving that such a process was wholly incompatible with the conception of the Scriptures being the record of a divine revelation at all. Having begun to cut away and alter, there was no reason for stopping; and every Unitarian was at liberty to make the Scriptures mean what suited his own views. Mr. Belsham's Exposition of the Epistles is a remarkable phenomenon in this way. To get rid of some difficulties about heaven and hell, the end of the world, salvation and perdition, &c., he devised a set of figurative meanings which he applied with immense perseverance, and a poetical ingenuity remarkable in so thoroughly prosaic a man; and all the while, it never seems to have occurred to him that that could hardly be a revelation designed for the rescue of the human race from perdition, the explanation of which required all this ingenuity at the hand of a Belsham, after eighteen centuries. I as a deeply-interested a reader of those big volumes as any Unitarian in England; and their ingenuity gratified some of my faculties exceedingly; but there was throughout a haunting sense of unreality which made me uneasy,--a consciousness that this kind of solemn amusement was no
fitting treatment of the burdensome troubles of conscience, and the moral irritations which made the misery of my life. This theological dissipation, and the music and poetry of psalms and hymns, charmed away my woes for the hour; but they were not the solid consolation I needed. So, to work I went in my own way, again and again studying the New Testament,--making "Harmonies," poring over the geography, greedily gathering up every thing I could find in the way of commentary and elucidation, and gladly working myself into an enthusiasm with the moral beauty and spiritual promises I found in the Sacred Writings. I certainly never believed, more or less, in the "essential doctrines" of Christianity, which represent God as the predestinator of men to sin and perdition, and Christ as their rescuer from that doom. I never was more or less beguiled by the trickery of language by which the perdition of man is made out to be justice, and his redemption to be mercy. I never suffered more or less from fear of hell. The Unitarianism my parents saved me from that. But nothing could save me from the perplexity of finding so much of indisputable statement of those doctrines in the New Testament, nor from a covert sense that it was taking a monstrous liberty with the Gospel to pick and choose what made me happy, and reject what I did not like or could not receive. When I now find myself wondering at Unitarians who do so,--who accept heaven and reject hell,--who get rid somehow of the reign of Christ and the apostles on earth, and derive somehow a sanction of their fancy of a heaven in the stars, peopled with old acquaintances, and furnished for favourite pursuits, I try to recal the long series of years during which I did the same thing, with far more, certainly, of complacency than of misgiving. I try to remember how late on in life I have said that I confidently reckoned on entering the train of Socrates in the next world, and getting some of his secrets out of Pythagoras, besides making friendship with all the Christian worthies I especially inclined to. When I now see the comrades of my early days comfortably appropriating all the Christian promises, without troubling themselves with the clearly-specified condition,--of faith in Christ as a Redeemer,--I remind
myself that this is just what I did for more than the first half of my life. The marvel remains how they now, and I then, could possibly wonder at the stationary or declining fortunes of their sect,--so evidently as Unitarianism is a mere clinging, from association and habit, to the old privilege of faith in a divine revelation, under an actual forfeiture of all its essential conditions.
My religious belief, up to the age of twenty, was briefly this. I
believed in a God, milder and more beneficent and passionless than the God
of the orthodox, inasmuch as he would not doom any of his creatures to
eternal torment. I did not at any time, I think, believe in the Devil, but
understood the Scriptures to speak of Sin under that name, and of eternal
detriment under the name of eternal punishment. I believed in inestimable
and eternal rewards of holiness; but I am confident that I never in my life
did a right thing, or abstained from a wrong one from any consideration of
reward or punishment. To the best of my recollection, I always feared sin
and remorse extremely, and punishment not at all; but, on the contrary,
desired punishment or any thing else that would give me the one good that I
pined for in vain,--ease of conscience. The doctrine of forgiveness on
repentance never availed me much, because forgiveness for the past was
nothing without safety in the future; and my sins were not curable, I felt,
by any single remission of their consequences,--if such remission were
possible. If I prayed and wept, and might hope that I was pardoned at
night, it was small comfort, because I knew I should be in a state of
remorse again before the next noon. I do not remember the time when the
forgiveness clause in the Lord's Prayer was not a perplexity and a
stumbling-block to me. I did not care about being let off from
penalty. I wanted to be at ease in conscience; and that could only be by
growing good, whereas I hated and despised myself every day. My belief in
Christ was that he was the purest of all beings, under God; and his
sufferings for the sake of mankind made him as sublime in my view and my
affections as any being could possibly be. The Holy Ghost was a mere
fiction to me. I took all the miracles for facts, and contrived to
worship the letter of the Scriptures long after I had, as desired, given up portions as "spurious," "interpolations" and so forth. I believed in a future life as a continuation of the present, and not as a new method of existence; and, from the time when I saw that the resurrection of the body and the immortality of the soul could not both be true, I adhered to the former,--after St. Paul. I was uncomfortably disturbed that Christianity had done so little for the redemption of the race: but the perplexity was not so serious as it would have been if I had believed in the perdition of the majority of men; and, for the rest, I contrived to fix my view pretty exclusively on Christendom itself,--which Christians in general find a grand resource in their difficulties. In this way, and by the help of public worship, and of sacred music, and Milton, and the Pilgrim's Progress, I found religion my best resource, even in its first inconsistent and unsatisfactory form, till I wrought my way to something better, as I shall tell by and by.
When I was seven years old,--the winter after our return from
Newcastle,--I was kept from chapel one Sunday afternoon by some
ailment or other. When the house door closed behind the
chapel-goers, I looked at the books on the table. The
ugliest-looking of them was turned down open; and my turning it up
was one of the leading incidents of my life. That plain, clumsy,
calf-bound volume was "Paradise Lost;" and the common
blueish paper, with its old-fashioned type, became as a scroll out
of heaven to me. The first thing I saw was "Argument," which I
took to mean a dispute, and supposed to be stupid enough: but there
was something about Satan cleaving Chaos, which made me turn to the poetry;
and my mental destiny was fixed for the next seven years. That volume was
henceforth never to be found but by asking me for it, till a young
acquaintance made me a present of a little Milton of my own. In a few
months, I believe there was hardly a line in Paradise Lost that I could not
have instantly turned to. I sent myself to sleep by repeating it: and
when my curtains were drawn back in the morning, descriptions of heavenly
light rushed into my memory. I think this must have been my first
expe-
rience of moral relief through intellectual resource. I am sure I must have been somewhat happier from that time forward; though one fact of which I am perfectly certain shows that the improvement must have been little enough. From the time when Ann Turner and her religious training of me put me, as it were, into my own moral charge, I was ashamed of my habit of misery,--and especially of crying. I tried for a long course of years,--I should think from about eight to fourteen,--to pass a single day without crying. I was a persevering child; and I know I tried hard: but I failed. I gave up at last; and during all those years, I never did pass a day without crying. Of course, my temper and habit of mind must have been excessively bad. I have no doubt I was an insufferable child for gloom, obstinacy and crossness, Still, when I remember my own placability,--my weakness of yielding every thing to the first word or tone of tenderness, I cannot but believe that there was grievous mistake in the case, and that even a little more sympathy and moral support would have spared me and others a hideous amount of fault and suffering.
How I found my way out we shall see hereafter: meantime, one small
incident, which occurred when I was eleven years old, may foreshadow my
release. Our eldest brother, Thomas, was seven years older than myself. He
was silent and reserved generally, and somewhat strict to us younger ones,
to whom he taught our Latin grammar. We revered and loved him intensely, in
the midst of our awe of him: but once in my childhood I made him
laugh against his will, by a pun in my Latin lesson (which was a great
triumph) and once I ventured to confide to him a real
difficulty,--without result. I found myself by his side during a
summer evening walk, when something gave me courage to ask him--(the
man of eighteen!)--the question which I had long been secretly
revolving:--how, if God foreknew everything, we could be blamed
or rewarded for our conduct, which was thus absolutely settled for us
beforehand. He considered for a moment, and then told me, in a kind voice,
that this was a thing which I could not understand at present, nor for a
long time to come. I dared not
remon-
state; but I was disappointed: and I felt that if I could feel the difficulty, I had a right to the solution. No doubt, this refusal of a reply helped to fix the question in my mind.
I have said that by this time I had begun to take moral or spiritual
charge of myself. I did try hard to improve; but I fear I made little
progress. Every night, I reviewed the thoughts and actions of the day, and
tried to repent; but I could seldom comfort myself about any amendment. All
the while, however, circumstances were doing for me what I could not do for
myself,--as I have since found to be incessantly happening. The first
great wholesome discipline of my life set in (unrecognized as such) when I
was about eight years old. The kind lady who took me upon her lap at Mr.
Drummond's lecture had two little girls, just the ages of Rachel and
myself: and, after that incident, we children became acquainted, and
very soon, (when the family came to live close beside us in Magdalen
Street) as intimate as possible. I remember being at their house in the
Market Place when I was seven years old; and little E. could not stand, nor
even sit, to see the magic-lantern, but was held in her papa's
arms, because she was so very lame. Before the year was out, she lost her
leg. Being a quiet-tempered child, and the limb being exceedingly
wasted by disease, she probably did not suffer very much under the
operation. However that might be, she met the occasion with great courage,
and went through it with remarkable composure, so that she was the talk of
the whole city. I was naturally very deeply impressed by the affair. It
turned my imagination far too much on bodily suffering, and on the peculiar
glory attending fortitude in that direction. I am sure that my nervous
system was seriously injured, and especially that my subsequent deafness
was partly occasioned by the exciting and vain-glorious dreams that
I indulged for many years after my friend E. lost her leg. All manner of
deaths at the stake and on the scaffold, I went through in imagination, in
the low sense in which St. Theresa craved martyrdom; and night after night,
I lay bathed in cold perspiration till I sank into the sleep of exhaustion.
All this is detestable to think of now; but it is a duty to relate the
truth, because
parents are apt to know far too little of what is passing in their children's imaginations, unless they win the confidence of the little creatures about that on which they are shyest of all,--their aspirations. The good side of this wretched extravagance of mine was that it occasioned or strengthened a power of patience under pain and privation which was not to be looked for in a child so sensitive and irritable by nature. Fortitude was in truth my favorite virtue; and the power of bearing quietly a very unusual amount of bodily pain in childhood was the poor recompense I enjoyed for the enormous detriment I suffered from the turn my imagination had taken.
This, however, is not the discipline I referred to as arising from my
companionship with E. In such a case as hers, all the world acquiesces in
the parents' view and method of action: and in that case the
parents made a sad mistake. They enormously increased their
daughter's suffering from her infirmity by covering up the fact in an
unnatural silence. E.'s lameness was never mentioned, nor recognized
in any way, within my remembrance, till she, full late, did it herself. It
was taken for granted that she was like other children; and the delusion
was kept up in play-hours at my expense. I might almost say that
from the time E. and I grew intimate, I never more had any play. Now, I was
fond of play,--given to romp; and I really wonder now when I look back
upon the many long years during which I stood, with cold feet and a longing
mind, with E. leaning on my arm, looking on while other children were at
play. It was a terrible uneasiness to me to go walks with her,--shy
child as I was,--fancying every body in the streets staring at us, on
account of E.'s extreme difficulty in walking. But the long
self-denial which I never thought of refusing or grumbling at, must
have been morally good for me, if I may judge by the pain caused by two
incidents;--pain which seems to me now to swallow up all that issued
from mere privation.--The fatigue of walking with E. was very great,
from her extreme need of support, and from its being always on the same
side. I was never very strong; and when growing fast, I was found to
growing sadly crooked, from E.'s constant tugging at one arm.
I cannot at all understand how my mother could put it upon me to tell E.'s mother that I must not walk with her, because it made me crooked: but this ungracious message I was compelled to carry; and it cost me more pain than long years of privation of play. The hint was instantly taken; but I suffered the shame and regret over again every time that I saw E. assigned to any one else; and I had infinitely rather have grown crooked than have escaped it by such a struggle.--The other incident was this. We children were to have a birthday party; and my father gave us the rare and precious liberty to play hide-and-seek in the warehouse, among the packing-cases and pigeon-holes where the bombasines were stored. For weeks I had counted the days and hours till this birthday and this play; but E. could not play hide-and-seek; and there we stood, looking at the rest,--I being cold and fidgety, and at last uncontrollably worried at the thought that the hours were passing away, and I had not had one bit of play. I did the fatal thing which has been a thorn in my mind ever since. I asked E. if she would much mind having some one else with her for a minute while I hid once,--just once. O no,--she did not mind; so I sent somebody else to her, and ran off, with a feeling of self-detestation which is fresh at this day. I had no presence-of-mind for the game,--was caught in a minute; and came back to E. damaged in self-respect, for the whole remaining course of our friendship. However, I owe her a great deal; and she and her misfortune were among the most favourable influences I had the benefit of after taking myself in hand for self-government. I have much pleasure in adding that nothing could be finer than her temper in after life, when she had taken her own case in hand, and put an end, as far as it lay with her to do so, to the silence about her infirmity. After I wrote my "Letter to the Deaf," we seemed to be brought nearer together by our companionship in infirmity. Years after that, when I had written "The Crofton Boys," and was uneasy lest my evident knowledge of such a case should jar upon her feelings,--always so tenderly considered,--I wrote her a confession of my uneasiness, and had in reply a most charming letter,--free, cheerful, magnanimous;--
such a letter as has encouraged me to write as I have now done.
The year 1811 was a marked one to me,--first, by my being sent into
the country for my health, for the whole summer and autumn; and next for
the birth of the best-beloved member of my family,--my sister
Ellen.--It was not a genuine country life in a farm-house, that
summer, but a most constrained and conventional one, in the abode of a rich
lawyer,--a cousin of my father's, who sent a daughter of his to
our house for the advantage of city masters, in exchange for me, who went
for health. I was not, on the whole, happy them:--indeed, it is
pretty clear by this time that I was not happy anywhere. The old fancy for
running away came back strongly upon me, and I was on the very point of
attempting it when a few words of concession and kindness upset my purpose,
as usual. I detested the governess,--and with abundant reason. The
very first day, she shut me up and punished me because I, a
town-bred child, did not know what a copse was. "Near yonder
copse," &c. She insisted that every body must know what a copse
is, and that therefore I was obstinate and a liar. After such a beginning,
it will be easily conceived that our relations could not be cordial or
profitable. She presently showed herself jealous of my being in advance of
her pupils in school-room knowledge; and she daily outraged my sense
of justice, expressly, and in the most purpose-like manner. She was
thoroughly vulgar; and in a few weeks she was sent away.--One
annoyance that I remember at that place was (what now appears very strange)
the whispers I overheard about myself, as I sat on a little stool in a
corner of the dining-room, reading. My hostess, who might have said
anything in her ordinary voice without my attending to her, used to whisper
to her morning visitors about my wonderful love of reading,--that I
never heard anything that was said while I sat reading, and that I had
written a wonderful sermon. All the while, she pretended to disguise it,
winking and nudging, and saying "We never hear any thing
when we are reading:" "We have written a
sermon which is really quite wonderful at our age,"
&c. &c. I wished that sermon at Jericho
a hundred times; for in truth, I was heartily ashamed of it. It was merely a narrative of St. Paul's adventures, out of the Acts; and I knew it was no more a sermon than a string of parables out of the Gospels would have been.
There were some sweet country pleasures that summer. I never see
chestnuts bursting from their sheaths, and lying shining among the autumn
leaves, without remembering the old Manor-house where we children
picked up chestnuts in the avenue, while my hostess made her call at the
house. I have always loved orchards and apple-gatherings since, and
blossomy lanes. The truth is, my remembrances of that summer may be found
in "Deerbrook," though I now finally, (as often before,)
declare that the characters are not real. More or less suggestion from real
characters there certainly is; but there is not one, except the hero, (who
is not English,) that any person is justified in pointing out as
"from the life." Of the scenery too, there is more from Great
Marlow than from that bleak Norfolk district: but the fresh country
impressions are certainly derived from the latter. It was there that I had
that precious morsel of experience which I have elsewhere
detailed;*--the first
putting
my hand in among the operations of Nature, to modify them. After a morning
walk, we children brought in some wild strawberry roots, to plant in our
gardens. My plant was sadly withered by the time we got home; and it was
then hot noon,--the soil of my garden was warm and parched, and there
seemed no chance for my root. I planted it, grieved over its flabby leaves,
watered it, got a little child's chair, which I put over it for
shelter, and stopped up the holes in the chair with grass. When I went at
sunset to look at it, the plant was perfectly fresh; and after that, it
grew very well. My surprise and pleasure must have been very great, by my
remembering such a trifle so long; and I am persuaded that I looked upon
Nature with other eyes from the moment that I found I had power to modify
her processes.
In November came the news which I had been told to expect. My sister
Rachel had been with us in the country for a
fort-
___________________
night; and we knew that there was to be a baby at home before we went back; and I remember pressing so earnestly, by letter, to know the baby's name as to get a rebuff. I was told to wait till there was a baby. At last, the carrier brought us a letter one evening which told us that we had a little sister. I still longed to know the name, but dared not ask again. Our host saw what was in my mind. He went over to Norwich a day or two after, and on his return told me that he hoped I should like the baby's name now she had got one;--"Beersheba." I did not know whether to believe him or not; and I had set my mind on "Rose." "Ellen," however, satisfied me very well. Homesick before, I now grew downright ill with longing. I was sure that all old troubles were wholly my fault, and fully resolved that there should be no more. Now, as so often afterwards, (as often as I left home) I was destined to disappointment. I scarcely felt myself at home before the well-remembered bickerings began;--not with me, but from the boys being troublesome, James being naughty; and our eldest sister angry and scolding. I then and there resolved that I would look for my happiness to the new little sister, and that she should never want for the tenderness which I had never found. This resolution turned out more of a prophecy than such decisions, born of a momentary emotion, usually do. That child was henceforth a new life to me. I did lavish love and tenderness on her; and I could almost say that she has never caused me a moment's pain but by her own sorrows. There has been much suffering in her life; and in it I have suffered with her: but such sympathetic pain is bliss in comparison with sack feelings as she has not excited in me during our close friendship of above forty years. When I first saw her it was as she was lifted out of her crib, at a fortnight old, asleep, to be shown to my late hostess, who had brought Rachel and me home, The passionate fondness I felt for her from that moment has been unlike any thing else I have felt in life,--though I have made idols of not a few nephews and nieces. But she was a pursuit to me, no less than an attachment. I remember telling a young lady at the Gate-House Concert, (a weekly undress concert) the next night, that
I should now see the growth of a human mind from the very beginning. I told her this because I was very communicative to all who showed me sympathy in any degree. Years after, I found that she was so struck by such a speech from a child of nine that she had repeated it till it had spread all over the city, and people said somebody had put it into my head: but it was perfectly genuine. My curiosity was intense; and all my spare minutes were spent in the nursery, watching,--literally watching,--the baby. This was a great stimulus to me in my lessons, to which I gave my whole power, in order to get leisure the sooner. That was the time when I took it into my head to cut up the Bible into a rule of life, as I have already told; and it was in the nursery chiefly that I did it,--sitting on a stool opposite the nursemaid and baby, and getting up from my notes to devour the child with kisses. There were bitter moments and hours,--as when she was vaccinated or had her little illnesses. My heart then felt bursting, and I went to my room, and locked the door, and prayed long and desperately. I knew then what the Puritans meant by "wrestling in prayer."--One abiding anxiety which pressed upon me for two years. or more was lest this child should be dumb: and if not, what an awful amount of labour was before the little creature! I had no other idea than that she must learn to speak at all as I had now to learn French,--each word by an express effort: and if I, at ten and eleven, found my vocabulary so hard, how could this infant learn the whole English language? The dread went off in amazement when I found that she sported new words every day, without much teaching at first, and then without any. I was as happy to see her spared the labour as amused at her use of words in her pretty prattle.
For nearly two years after our return from that country visit, Rachel
and I were taught at home. Our eldest brother taught Latin, and the next
brother, Henry, writing and arithmetic: and our sister, French,
reading and exercises. We did not get on well, except with the Latin. Our
sister expected too much from us, both morally and intellectually; and she
had not been herself carried on so far as to have much resource as a
teacher. We owed
to her however a thorough grounding in our French grammar (especially the verbs) which was of excellent service to us afterwards at school, as was a similar grounding in the Latin grammar, obtained from our brother. As for Henry, he made our lessons in arithmetic, &c. his funny time of day; and sorely did his practical jokes and ludicrous severity afflict us. He meant no harm; but he was too young to play schoolmaster; and we improved less than we should have done under less head-ache and heart-ache from his droll system of torture. I should say, on their behalf, that I, for one, must have seemed a most unpromising pupil,--my wits were so completely scattered by fear and shyness. I could never give a definition, for want of presence of mind. I lost my place in class for every thing but lessons that could be prepared beforehand. I was always saying what I did not mean. The worst waste of time, energy, money and expectation was about my music. Nature made me a musician in every sense. I was never known to sing out of tune. I believe all who knew me when I was twenty would give a good account of my playing. There was no music that I ever attempted that I did not understand, and that I could not execute,--under the one indispensable condition, that nobody heard me. Much money was spent in instruction; and I dislike thinking of the amount of time lost in copying music. My mother loved music, and, I know, looked to me for much gratification in this way which she never had. My deafness put an end to all expectation of the kind at last; but long before that, my music was a misery to me,--while yet in another sense, my dearest pleasure. My master was Mr. Beckwith, organist of Norwich Cathedral;--an admirable musician; but of so irritable a temper as to be the worst of masters to a shy girl like me. It was known that he had been dismissed from one house or more for rapping his pupils' knuckles; and that he had been compelled to apologize for insufferable scolding. Neither of these things happened at our house; but really I wondered sometimes that they did not,--so very badly did I play and sing when he was at my elbow. My fingers stuck together as in cramp, and my voice was as husky as if I had had cotton-wool in my throat.
Now and then he complimented my ear; but he oftener told me that I had no more mind than the music-book,--no more feeling than the lid of the piano,--no more heart than the chimney-piece; and that it was no manner of use trying to teach me any thing. All this while, if the room-door happened to be open without my observing it when I was singing Handel by myself, my mother would be found dropping tears over her work, and I used myself, as I may now own, to feel fairly transported. Heaven opened before me at the sound of my own voice when I believed myself alone;--that voice which my singing-master assuredly never heard. It was in his case that I first fully and suddenly learned the extent of the mischief caused by my shyness. He came twice a week. On those days it was an effort to rise in the morning,--to enter upon a day of misery; and nothing could have carried me through the morning but the thought of the evening, when he would be gone,--out of my way for three days, or even four. The hours grew heavier: my heart fluttered more and more: I could not eat my dinner; and his impatient loud knock was worse to me than sitting down in the dentist's chair. Two days per week of such feelings, strengthened by the bliss of the evenings after he was gone, might account for the catastrophe, which however did not shock me the less for that. Mr. Beckwith grew more and more cross, thinner and thinner, so that his hair and beard looked blacker and blacker, as the holidays approached, when he was wont to leave home for a week or two. One day when somebody was dining with us, and I sat beside my father at the bottom of the table, he said to my mother, "By the way, my dear, there is a piece of news which will not surprise you much, I fancy. Poor John Beckwith is gone. He died yesterday." Once more, that name made my heart jump into my mouth; but this time, it was with a dreadful joy. While the rest went on very quietly saying how ill he had looked for some time, and "who would have thought he would never come back?"--and discussing how Mrs. B. and the children were provided for, and wondering who would be organist at the Cathedral, my spirits were dancing in secret rapture. The worst of my besetting terrors was over
for ever! All days of the week would henceforth be alike, as far as that knock at the door was concerned. Of come, my remorse at this glee was great; and thus it was that I learned how morally injured I was by the debasing fear I was wholly unable to surmount.
Next to fear, laziness was my worst enemy. I was idle about brushing my
hair,--late in the morning,--much afflicted to have to go down to
the apple-closet in winter; and even about my lessons I was
indolent. I learned any thing by heart very easily, and I therefore did it
well: but I was shamefully lazy about using the dictionary, and went
on, in full anticipation of rebuke, translating
la rosée the rose,
tomber, to bury, and so on. This shows that
there must have been plenty of provocation on my side, whatever mistakes
there may have been on that of my teachers. I was sick and weary of the
eternal "Telemachus," and could not go through the labours of
the dictionary for a book I cared so little about. This difficulty soon
came to an end; for in 1813 Rachel and I went to a good day-school
for two years, where our time was thoroughly well spent; and there we
enjoyed the acquisition of knowledge so much as not to care for the
requisite toil.
Before entering on that grand new period, I may as well advert to a few
noticeable points.--I was certainly familiar with the idea of death
before that time. The death of Nelson, when I was four years old, was
probably the earliest association in my mind of mournful feelings with
death. When I was eight or nine, an aunt died whom I had been in the
constant habit of seeing. She was old-fashioned in her dress, and
peculiar in her manners. Her lean arms were visible between the
elbow-ruffles and the long mits she wore; and she usually had an
apron on, and a muslin handkerchief crossed on her bosom. She fell into
absent-fits which puzzled and awed us children: but we heard
her so highly praised (as she richly deserved) that she was a very
impressive personage to us. One morning when I came down, I found the
servants at breakfast unusually early: they looked very gloomy; bade
me make no noise; but would not explain what it was all about. The shutters
were half-closed;
and when my mother came down, she looked so altered by her weeping that I hardly knew whether it was she. She called us to her, and told us that aunt Martineau had died very suddenly, of a disease of the heart. The whispers which were not meant for us somehow reached our ears all that week. We heard how my father and mother had been sent for in the middle of the night by the terrified servants, and how they had heard our poor uncle's voice of mourning before they had reached the house; and how she looked in her coffin, and all about the funeral: and we were old enough to be moved by the sermon in her praise at chapel, and especially by the anthem composed for the occasion, with the words from Job,--"When the ear heard her then it blessed her," &c. My uncle's gloomy face and unpowdered hair were awful to us; and, during the single year of his widowhood, he occasionally took us children with him in the carriage, when he went to visit country patients. These drives came to an end with the year of widowhood; but he gave us something infinitely better than any other gift or pleasure in his second wife, whose only child was destined to fill a large space in our hearts and our lives.--Soon after that funeral, I somehow learned that our globe swims in space, and that there is sky all round it. I told this to James; and we made a grand scheme which we never for a moment doubted about executing. We had each a little garden, under the north wall of our garden. The soil was less than two feet deep; and below it was a mass of rubbish,--broken bricks, flints, pottery, &c. We did not know this; and our plan was to dig completely through the globe, till we came out at the other side. I fully expected to do this, and had an idea of an extremely deep hole, the darkness of which at the bottom would be lighted up by the passage of stars, slowly traversing the hole. When we found our little spades would not dig through the globe, nor even through the brickbats, we altered our scheme. We lengthened the hole to our own length, having an extreme desire to know what dying was like. We lay down alternately in this grave, and shut our eyes, and fancied ourselves dead, and told one another our feelings when we came out again. As far
as I can remember, we fully believed that we now knew all about it.
A prominent event of my childhoOd happened in 1812, when we went to
Cromer for the sake of the baby's health. I had seen the sea, as I
mentioned, when under three years old, as it swayed under the old jetty at
Yarmouth: and I had seen it again at Tynemouth, when I was
seven: but now it was like a wholly new spectacle; and I doubt
whether I ever received a stronger impression than when, from the rising
ground above Cromer, we caught sight of the sparkling expanse. At
Tynemouth, that singular incident took place which I have elsewhere
narrated,*--that I was shown
the sea, immediately below my feet, at the foot of the very slope on which
I was standing, and could not see it. The rest of the party must have
thought me crazy or telling a lie; but the distress of being unable to see
what I had so earnestly expected, was real enough; and so was the amazement
when I at last perceived the fluctuating tide. All this had gone out of my
mind when we went to Cromer; and the spectacle seemed a wholly new one.
That was a marvellous month that the nursemaid and we children spent there.
When we were not down on the sands, or on the cliffs, I was always perched
on a bank in the garden whence I could see that straight blue line, or
those sparkles which had such a charm for me. It was much that I was happy
for a whole month; but I also obtained many new ideas, and much
development;--the last chiefly, I think, in a religious direction.
In the preceding year another instance had occurred,--a most
mortifying one to me,--of that strange inability to see what one is
looking for (no doubt because one looks wrongly) of which the Tynemouth
sea-gazing was a strong
illustration.+ When the
great comet of 1811 was attracting all eyes, my star-gazing was just
as ineffectual. Night after night, the whole family of us went up to the
long windows at the top of my father's warehouse; and the
exclamations on all hands about the comet perfectly exasperated
me,--because I could not see it! "Why,
___________________
there it is!" "It is as big as a saucer." "It is as big as a cheese-plate." "Nonsense; you might as well pretend not to see the moon." Such were the mortifying comments on my grudging admission that I could not see the comet. And I never did see it. Such is the fact; and philosophers may make of it what they may,--remembering that I was then nine years old, and with remarkably good eyes.
We were horribly nervous, the first day we went to school. It was a very
large vaulted room, whitewashed, and with a platform for the master and his
desk; and below, rows of desks and benches, of wood painted red, and carved
all over with idle boys' devices. Some good many boys remained for a
time; but the girls had the front row of desks, and could see nothing of
the boys but by looking behind them. The thorough way in which the boys did
their lessons, however, spread its influence over us, and we worked as
heartily as if we had worked together. I
remember being somewhat oppressed by the length of the first morning,--from nine till twelve,--and dreading a similar strain in the afternoon, and twice every day: but in a very few days, I got into all the pleasure of it, and a new state of happiness had fairly set in. I have never since felt more deeply and thoroughly the sense of progression than I now began to do. As far as I remember, we never failed in our lessons, more or less. Our making even a mistake was very rare: and yet we got on fast. This shows how good the teaching must have been. We learned Latin from the old Eton grammar, which I therefore, and against all reason, cling to,--remembering when we recited all that Latin, prose and verse, which occupied us four hours. Two other girls, besides Rachel and myself, formed the class; and we certainly attained a capability of enjoying some of the classics, even before the two years were over. Cicero, Virgil, and a little of Horace were our main reading then: and afterwards I took great delight in Tacitus. I believe it was a genuine understanding and pleasure, because I got into the habit of thinking in Latin, and had something of the same pleasure in sending myself to sleep with Latin as with English poetry. Moreover, we stood the test of verse-making, in which I do not remember that we ever got any disgrace, while we certainly obtained, now and then, considerable praise. When Mr. Perry was gone, and we were put under Mr. Banfather, one of the masters at the Grammar-school, for Latin, Mr. B. one day took a little book out of his pocket, and translated from it a passage which he desired us to turn into Latin verse. My version was precisely the same as the original, except one word (annosa for antiqua) and the passage was from the Eneid. Tests like these seem to show that we really were well taught, and that our attainment was sound, as far as it went. Quite as much care was bestowed on our French, the grammar of which we learned thoroughly, while the pronunciation was scarcely so barbarous as in most schools during the war, as there was a French lady engaged for the greater part of the time. Mr. Perry prided himself, I believe, on his process of composition being exceedingly methodical; and he enjoyed above every thing initiating us into
the mystery. The method and mystery were more appropriate in our lessons in school than in his sermons in chapel;--at least, the sermons were fearfully dull; whereas the lessons were highly interesting and profitable. The only interest we could feel in his preaching was when he first brought the familiar fore-finger into play, and then built up his subject on the scaffolding which we knew so well. There was the Proposition, to begin with: then the Reason, and the Rule; then the Example, ancient and modern; then the Confirmation; and finally, the Conclusion. This may be a curious method, (not altogether apostolic) of preaching the gospel; but it was a capital way of introducing some order into the chaos of girls' thoughts. One piece of our experience which I remember is highly illustrative of this. In a fit of poetic furor one day we asked leave for once to choose our own subject for a theme,--the whole class having agreed before-hand what the subject should be. Of course, leave was granted; and we blurted out that we wanted to write "on Music." Mr. Perry pointed out that this was not definite enough to be called a subject. It might be on the Uses of Psalmody, or on the effect of melody in certain situations, or of martial music, or of patriotic songs, &c. &c.: but he feared there would be some vagueness if so large a subject were taken, without circumscription. However, we were bent on our own way, and he wisely let us have it. The result may easily be foreseen. We were all floating away on our own clouds, and what a space we drifted over may be imagined. We came up to Mr. P.'s desk all elate with the consciousness of our sensibility and eloquence; and we left it prodigiously crest-fallen. As one theme after another was read, no two agreeing even so far as the Proposition, our folly became more and more apparent; and the master's few, mild, respectful words at the end were not necessary to impress the lesson we had gained. Up went the fore-finger, with "You perceive, ladies" ......... and we saw it all; and thenceforth we were thankful to be guided, or dictated to, in the choice of our topics. Composition was my favourite exercise; and I got credit by my themes, I believe. Mr. Perry told me so, in 1834, when I had just completed the publication of my Political Economy
Tales, and when I had the pleasure of making my acknowledgments to him as my master in composition, and probably the cause of my mind being turned so decidedly in that direction. That was a gratifying meeting, after my old master and I had lost sight of one another for so many years. It was our last. If I remember right, we met on the eve of my sailing for America; and he was dead before my return.
Next to Composition, I think arithmetic was my favourite study. My
pleasure in the working of numbers is something inexplicable to
me,--as much as any pleasure of sensation. I used to spend my play
hours in covering my slate with sums, washing them out, and covering the
slate again. The fact is, however, that we had no lessons that were not
pleasant. That was the season of my entrance upon an intellectual life. In
an intellectual life I found then, as I have found since, refuge from moral
suffering, and an always unexhausted spring of moral strength and
enjoyment.
Even then, and in that happy school, I found the need of a refuge from
trouble. Even there, under the care of our just and kind master, I found my
passion for justice liable to disappointment as elsewhere. Some of our
school-fellows brought a trumpery charge, out of school, against
Rachel and me; and our dismay was great at finding that Mrs. Perry, and
therefore, no doubt, Mr. Perry believed us capable of a dirty trick. We
could not establish our innocence; and we had to bear the knowledge that we
were considered guilty of the offence in the first place, and of telling a
lie to conceal it in the next. How vehemently I used to determine that I
would never, in all my life, believe people to be guilty of any offence,
where disproof was impossible, and they asserted their
innocence.--Another incident made a great impression on me.--It
happened before the boys took their final departure; and it helped to make
me very glad when we girls (to the number of sixteen) were left to
ourselves.
Mr. Perry was one day called out, to a visitor who was sure to detain
him for some time. On such occasions, the school was left in charge of the
usher, whose desk was at the farther end of the great room. On this
particular day, the boys would not let
the girls learn their lessons. Somehow, they got the most absurd masks within the sphere of our vision; and they said things that we could not help laughing at, and made soft bow-wows, cooings, bleatings, &c., like a juvenile House of Commons, but so as not to be heard by the distant usher. While we girls laughed, we were really angry, because we wanted to learn our lessons. It was proposed by somebody, and carried unanimously, that complaint should be made to the usher. I believe I was the youngest; and I know I was asked by the rest to convey the complaint. Quite innocently I did what I was asked. The consequence,--truly appalling to me,--was that coming up the school-room again was like running the gauntlet. O! that hiss! "S-s-s--tell-tale--tell-tale!&r dquo; greeted me all the way up: but there was worse at the end. The girls who had sent me said I was served quite right, and they would have nothing to do with a tell-tale. Even Rachel went against me. And was I really that horrible thing called a tell-tale? I never meant it; yet not the less was it even so! When Mr. Perry came back, the usher's voice was heard from the lower regions--"Sir!" and then came the whole story, with the names of all the boys in the first class. Mr. Perry was generally the mildest of men; but when he went into a rage, he did the thing thoroughly. He became as white as his powdered hair, and the ominous fore-finger shook: and never more than on this occasion. J.D., as being usually "correct," was sentenced to learn only thirty lines of Greek, after school. (He died not long after, much beloved.) W.D., his brother, less "correct" in character, had fifty. Several more had from thirty to fifty; and R.S. (now, I believe, the leading innkeeper in old Norwich)--"R.S., always foremost in mischief, must now meet the consequences. R.S. shall learn SEVENTY lines of Greek before he goes home." How glad should I have been to learn any thing within the compass of human knowledge to buy off those boys! They probably thought I enjoyed seeing them punished. But I was almost as horror-struck at their fate as at finding that one could be a delinquent, all in a moment, with the most harmless intentions.
An incident which occurred before Mr. Perry's departure from
Norwich startled me at the time, and perhaps startles me even more now, as showing how ineffectual the conscience becomes when the moral nature of a child is too much depressed.--All was going on perfectly well at school, as far as we knew, when Mr. Perry one day called, and requested a private interview with my father or mother. My mother and he were talking so long in the drawing-room, that dinner was delayed above half-an-hour, during which time I was growing sick with apprehension. I had no doubt whatever that we had done something wrong, and that Mr. Perry had come to complain of us. This was always my way,--so accustomed was I to censure, and to stiffen myself under it, right or wrong; so that all clear sense of right and wrong was lost. I believe that, at bottom, I always concluded myself wrong. In this case it made no difference that I had no conception what it was all about. When my mother appeared, she was very grave: the mood spread, and the dinner was silent and gloomy,--father, brothers and all. My mother had in her heart a little of the old-fashioned liking for scenes: and now we had one,--memorable enough to me! "My dear," said she to my father, when the dessert was on the table, and the servant was gone, "Mr. Perry has been here." "So I find, my love." "He had some very important things to say. He had something to say about--Rachel--and--Harriet." I had been picking at the fringe of my doily; and now my heart sank, and I felt quite faint. "Ah! here it comes," thought I, expecting to hear of some grand delinquency. My mother went on, very solemnly. "Mr. Perry says that he has never had a fault to find with Rachel and Harriet; and that if he had a school full of such girls, he should be the happiest man alive." The revulsion was tremendous. I cried desperately, I remember, amidst the rush of congratulations. But what a moral state it was, when my conscience was of no more use to me than this! The story carries its own moral.
What Mr. Perry came to say was, however, dismal enough. He was no man of
the world; and his wife was no manager: and they were in debt and
difficulty. Their friends paid their debts (my father taking a generous
sham) and they removed to
Ipswich. It was the bitterest of my young griefs, I believe,--their departure. Our two years' schooling seemed like a lifetime to look back upon: and to this day it fills a disproportionate space in the retrospect of my existence,--so inestimable was its importance. When we had to bid our good master farewell, I was deputed to utter the thanks and good wishes of the pupils: but I could not get on for tears, and he accepted our grief as his best tribute. He went round, and shook hands with us all, with gracious and solemn words, and sent us home passionately mourning.--Though this seemed like the close of one period of my life, it was in fact the opening of its chief phase,--of that intellectual existence which my life has continued to be, more than any thing else, through its whole course.
After his departure, and before I was sent to Bristol, our mode of life
was this. We had lessons in Latin and French, and I in music, from masters;
and we read aloud in family a good deal of history, biography, and critical
literature. The immense quantity of needlework and music-copying
that I did remains a marvel to me; and so does the extraordinary bodily
indolence. The difficulty I had in getting up in the morning, the
detestation of the daily walk, and of all visiting, and of every break in
the monotony that I have always loved, seem scarcely credible to me
now,--active as my habits have since become. My health was bad,
however, and my mind ill at ease. It was a depressed and wrangling life;
and I have no doubt I was as disagreeable as possible. The great calamity
of my deafness was now opening upon me; and that would have been quite
enough for youthful fortitude, without the constant indigestion, languor
and muscular weakness which made life a burden to me. My religion was a
partial comfort to me; and books and music were a great resource: but
they left a large margin over for wretchedness. My beloved hour of the day
was when the cloth was drawn, and I stole away from the dessert, and read
Shakspere by firelight in winter in the drawing-room. My mother was
kind enough to allow this breach of good family manners; and again at a
subsequent time when I took to newspaper reading very
heartily. I have often thanked her for this forbearance since. I was conscious of my bad manners in keeping the newspaper on my chair all dinner-time, and stealing away with it as soon as grace was said; and of sticking to my Shakspere, happen what might, till the tea was poured out: but I could not forego those indulgences, and I went on to enjoy them uneasily. Our newspaper was the Globe, in its best days, when, without ever mentioning Political Economy, it taught it, and viewed public affairs in its light. This was not quite my first attraction to political economy (which I did not know by name till five or six years later;) for I remember when at Mr. Perry's fastening upon the part of our geography book (I forget what it was) which treated of the National Debt, and the various departments of the Funds. This was fixed in my memory by the unintelligible raillery of my brothers and other companions, who would ask me with mock deference to inform them of the state of the Debt, or would set me, as a forfeit at Christmas Games, to make every person present understand the operation of the Sinking Fund. I now recal Mr. Malthus's amusement, twenty years later, when I told him I was sick of his name before I was fifteen. His work was talked about then, as it has been ever since, very eloquently and forcibly, by persons who never saw so much as the outside of the book. It seems to me that I heard and read an enormous deal against him and his supposed doctrines; whereas when, at a later time, I came to inquire, I could never find any body who had read his book. In a poor little struggling Unitarian periodical, the Monthly Repository, in which I made my first appearance in print, a youth, named Thomas Noon Talfourd, was about this time making his first attempts at authorship. Among his earliest papers, I believe, was one "On the System of Malthus," which had nothing in fact to do with the real Malthus and his system, but was a sentimental vindication of long engagements. It was prodigiously admired by very young people: not by me, for it was rather too luscious for my taste,--but by some of my family, who read it, and lived on it for awhile: but it served to mislead me about Malthus, and helped to sicken me of his name, as I told him
long afterwards. In spite of this, however, I was all the while becoming a political economist without knowing it, and, at the same time, a sort of walking Concordance of Milton and Shakspere.
The first distinct recognition of my being deaf, more or less, was when
I was at Mr. Perry's,--when I was about twelve years old. It was
a very slight, scarcely-perceptible hardness of hearing at that
time; and the recognition was merely this;--that in that great vaulted
school-room before-mentioned, where there was a large space
between the class and the master's desk or the fire, I was excused
from taking places in class, and desired to sit always at the top, because
it was somewhat nearer the master, whom I could not always hear further
off. When Mr. Perry changed his abode, and we were in a smaller
school-room, I again took places with the rest. I remember no other
difficulty about hearing at that time. I certainly heard perfectly well at
chapel, and all public speaking (I remember Wilberforce in our vast St.
Andrew's Hall) and general conversation everywhere: but before
I was sixteen, it had become very noticeable, very inconvenient, and
excessively painful to myself. I did once think of writing down the whole
dreary story of the loss of a main sense, like hearing; and I would not now
shrink from inflicting the pain of it on others, and on myself, if any
adequate benefit could be obtained by it. But, really, I do not see that
there could. It is true,--the sufferers rarely receive the comfort of
adequate, or even intelligent sympathy: but there is no saying that
an elaborate account of the woe would create the sympathy, for practical
purposes. Perhaps what I have said in the "Letter to the Deaf,"
which I published in 1834, will serve as well as anything I could say here
to those who are able to sympathise at all; and I will therefore offer no
elaborate description of the daily and hourly trials which attend the
gradual exclusion from the world of sound.
Some suggestions and conclusions, however, it is right to offer.--I
have never seen a deaf child's education welt managed at home, or at
an ordinary school. It does not seem to be ever considered by parents and
teachers how much more is learned by
oral intercourse than in any other way; and, for want of this consideration, they find too late, and to their consternation, that the deaf pupil turns out deficient in sense, in manners, and in the knowledge of things so ordinary that they seem to be matters of instinct rather than of information. Too often, also, the deaf are sly and tricky, selfish and egotistical; and the dislike which attends them is the sin of the parent's ignorance visited upon the children. These worst cases are of those who are deaf from the outset, or from a very early age; and in as far as I was exempt from them, it was chiefly because my education was considerably advanced before my hearing began to go. In such a case as mine, the usual evil (far less serious) in that the sufferer is inquisitive,--will know everything that is said, and becomes a bore to all the world. From this I was saved (or it helped to save me) by a kind word from my eldest brother. (From how much would a few more such words have saved me?) He had dined in company with an elderly single lady,--a sort of provincial blue-stocking in her time,--who was growing deaf, rapidly, and so sorely against her will that she tried to ignore the fact to the last possible moment. At that dinner-party, this lady sat next her old acquaintance, William Taylor of Norwich, who never knew very well how to deal with ladies (except, to his honour be it spoken, his blind mother;) and Miss N-- teased him to tell her all that every body said till he grew quite testy and rude. My brother told me, with tenderness in his voice, that he thought of me while blushing, as every body present did, for Miss N--; and that he hoped that if ever I should grow as deaf as she, I should never be seen making myself so irksome and absurd. This helped me to a resolution which I made and never broke,--never to ask what was said. Amidst remonstrance, kind and testy, and every sort of provocation, I have adhered to this resolution,--confident in its soundness. I think now, as I have thought always, that it is impossible for the deaf to divine what is worth asking for and what is not; and that one's friends may always be trusted, if left unmolested, to tell one whatever is essential, or really worth hearing.
One important truth about the case of persons deficient in a sense I
have never seen noticed; and I much doubt whether ever occurs to any but
the sufferers under that deficiency. We sufferers meet with abundance of
compassion for our privations: but the privation is, (judging by my
own experience) a very inferior evil to the fatigue imposed by the
obstruction. In my case, to be sure, the deficiency of three senses out of
five renders the instance a very strong one: but the merely blind or
deaf must feel something of the laboriousness of life which I have found it
most difficult to deal with. People in general have only to sit still in
the midst of Nature, to be amused and diverted (in the strict
sense of the word,--distracted, in the French sense) so
as to find "change of work as good as rest:" but I have
had, for the main part of my life, to go in search of impressions and
influences, as the alternative from abstract or unrelieved thought, in an
intellectual view, and from brooding, in a moral view. The fatigue
belonging to either alternative may easily be conceived, when once
suggested: and considerate persons will at once see what large
allowance must in fairness be made for faults of temper, irritability or
weakness of nerves, narrowness of mind, and imperfection of sympathy, in
sufferers so worn with toil of body and mind as I, for one, have been. I
have sustained, from this cause, fatigue which might spread over double my
length of life; and in this I have met with no sympathy till I asked for it
by an explanation of the ease. From this labour there is, it must be
remembered, no holiday, except in sleep. Life is a long, hard, unrelieved
working-day to us, who hear, or see, only by express effort, or have
to make other senses serve the turn of that which is lost. When three out
of five are deficient, the difficulty of cheerful living is great, and the
terms of life are truly hard.--If I have made myself understood about
this, I hope the explanation may secure sympathy for many who cannot be
relieved from their burden, but may be cheered under it.
Another suggestion that I would make is that those who hear should not
insist on managing the case of the deaf for them. As much sympathy as you
please; but no overbearing interference in a case which you cannot possibly
judge of. The fact is,--
the family of a person who has a growing infirmity are reluctant to face the truth; and they are apt to inflict frightful pain on the sufferer to relieve their own weakness and uneasiness. I believe my family would have made almost any sacrifice to save me from my misfortune; but not the less did they aggravate it terribly by their way of treating it. First, and for long, they insisted that it was all my own fault,--that I was so absent,---that I never cared to attend to any thing that was said,--that I ought to listen this way, or that, or the other; and even (while my heart was breaking) they told me that "none are so deaf as those that won't hear." When it became too bad for this, they blamed me for not doing what I was sorely tempted to do,--inquiring of them about every thing that was said, and not managing in their way, which would have made all right. This was hard discipline; but it was most useful to me in the end. It showed me that I must take my case into my own hands; and with me, dependent as I was upon the opinion of others, this was redemption from probable destruction. Instead of drifting helplessly as hitherto, I gathered myself up for a gallant breasting of my destiny; and in time I reached the rocks where I could take a firm stand. I felt that here was an enterprise; and the spirit of enterprise was roused in me; animating me to sure success, with many sinkings and much lapse by the way. While about it, I took my temper in hand,--in this way. I was young enough for vows,--was, indeed, at the very age of vows;--and I made a vow of patience about this infirmity;--that I would smile in every moment of anguish from it; and that I would never lose temper at any consequences from it,--from losing public worship (then the greatest conceivable privation) to the spoiling of my cap-borders by the use of the trumpet I foresaw I must arrive at. With such a temper as mine was then, an infliction so worrying, so unintermitting, so mortifying, so isolating as loss of hearing must "kill or cure." In time, it acted with me as a cure, (in comparison with what my temper was in my youth:) but it took a long long time to effect the cure, and it was so far from being evident, or even at all perceptible when I was fifteen, that my parents were determined by
medical advice to send me from home for a considerable time, in hope of improving my health, nerves and temper by a complete and prolonged change of scene and objects.
Before entering upon that new chapter of my life, however, I must say
another word about this matter of treatment of personal infirmity. We had a
distant relation, in her young womanhood when I was a child, who, living in
the country, came into Norwich sometimes on market days, and occasionally
called at our house. She had become deaf in infancy,--very very deaf;
and her misfortune had been mismanaged. Truth to speak, she was far from
agreeable: but it was less for that than on account of the trouble of
her deafness that she was spoken of as I used to hear, long before I ever
dreamed of being deaf myself. When it was announced by any child at the
window that -- -- was passing, there was an exclamation of
annoyance; and if she came up the steps, it grew into lamentation.
"What shall we do?" "We shall be as hoarse
as ravens all day." "We shall be completely worn out,"
and so forth. Sometimes she was wished well at Jericho. When I was growing
deaf, all this came back upon me; and one of my self-questionings
was--"Shall I put people to flight as -- -- does?
Shall I be dreaded and disliked in that way all my
life?" The lot did indeed seem at times too hard to be borne. Yet
here am I now, on the borders of the grave, at the end of a busy life,
confident that this same deafness is about the best thing that ever
happened to me;--the best, in a selfish view, as the grandest impulse
to self-mastery; and the best in a higher view, as my most peculiar
opportunity of helping others, who suffer the same misfortune without equal
stimulus to surmount the false shame, and other unspeakable miseries which
attend it.
By this time, the battle of Waterloo had been fought. I suppose most
children were politicians dining the war. I was a great one. I remember Mr.
Perry's extreme amusement at my breaking through my shyness, one day,
and stopping him as he was leaving the school-room, to ask, with
much agitation, whether he believed in the claims of one of the many Louis
XVII.'s who have turned up in my time. It must be
consid-
ered that my mother remembered the first French Revolution. Her sympathies were with the royal family; and the poor little Dauphin was an object of romantic interest to all English children who knew anything of the story at all. The pretence that he was found set thousands of imaginations on fire, whenever it was raised; and among many other wonderful effects, it emboldened me to speak to Mr. Perry about other things than lessons. Since the present war (of 1854) broke out, it has amused me to find myself so like my old self of forty years before, in regard to telling the servants the news. In the old days, I used to fly into the kitchen, and tell my father's servants how sure "Boney" was to be caught,--how impossible it was that he should escape,--how his army was being driven back through the Pyrenees,--or how he had driven back the allies here or there. Then, I wanted sympathy, and liked the importance and the sensation of carrying news. Now, the way has been to summon my own servants after the evening post, and bid them get the map, or come with me to the globe, and explain to them the state of the war, and give them the latest news,--probably with some of the old associations lingering in my mind; but certainly with the dominant desire to give these intelligent girls an interest in the interests of freedom, and a clear knowledge of the position and duties of England in regard to the war. I remember my father's bringing in the news of some of the Peninsular victories, and what his face was like when he told my mother of the increase of the Income-tax to ten per cent, and again, of the removal of the Income-tax. I remember the proclamation of peace in 1814, and our all going to see the illuminations; those abominable transparencies, among the rest, which represented Bonaparte (always in green coat, white breeches and boots) as carried to hell by devils, pitch-forked in the fiery lake by the same attendant, or haunted by the Duc d'Enghien. I well remember the awful moment when Mr. Drummond (of the chemical lectures) looked in at the back door (on his way from the counting-house) and telling my mother that "Boney" had escaped from Elba, and was actually in France. This impressed me more than the subsequent hot Midsummer morning when
somebody (I forget whether father or brother) burst in with the news of the Waterloo slaughter. It was the slaughter that was uppermost with us, I believe, though we never had a relative, nor, as far as I know, even an acquaintance, in either army or navy.
I was more impressed still with the disappointment about the effects of
the peace, at the end of the first year of it. The country was overrun with
disbanded soldiers, and robbery and murder were frightfully frequent and
desperate. The Workhouse Boards were under a pressure of pauperism which
they could not have managed if the Guardians had been better informed than
they were in those days; and one of my political panics (of which I
underwent a constant succession) was that the country would become bankrupt
through its poor-law. Another panic was about revolution,--our
idea of revolution being, of course, of guillotines in the streets, and all
that sort of thing. Those were Cobbett's grand days, and the days of
Castlereagh and Sidmouth spy-systems and conspiracies. Our pastor
was a great radical; and he used to show us the caricatures of the day
(Hone's, I think) in which Castlereagh was always flogging Irishmen,
and Canning spouting froth, and the Regent insulting his wife, and the
hungry, haggard multitude praying for vengeance on the Court and the
Ministers; and every Sunday night, after supper, when he and two or three
other bachelor friends were with us, the talk was of the absolute certainty
of a dire revolution. When, on my return from Bristol in 1819, I then
turned to say what my conscience bade me say, and what I had been led to
see by a dear aunt, that it was wrong to catch up and believe and spread
reports injurious to the royal family, who could not reply to slander like
other people, I was met by a shout of derision first, and then by a serious
reprimand for my immorality in making more allowance for royal sinners than
for others. Between my dread of this worldliness, and my sense that they
had a worse chance than other people, and my further feeling that respect
should be shown them on account of their function first, and their
defenseless position afterwards, I was in what the Americans would call
"a fix." The conscientious
uncertainty I was in was a real difficulty and trouble to me; and this probably helped to fix my attention upon the principles of politics and the characteristics of parties, with an earnestness not very common at that age. Still,--how astonished should I have been if any one had then foretold to me that, of all the people in England, I should be the one to write the "History of the Peace!"
One important consequence of the peace was the interest with which
foreigners were suddenly invested, in the homes of the middle classes,
where the rising generation had seen no foreigners except old
emigrés,--powdered old Frenchmen,
and ladies with outlandish bonnets and high-heeled shoes. About this
time there came to Norwich a foreigner who excited an unaccountable
interest in our house,--considering what exceedingly proper people we
were, and how sharp a look-out we kept on the morals of our
neighbors. It was poor Polidori, well known afterwards as Lord
Byron's physician, as the author of "the Vampire," and as
having committed suicide under gambling difficulties. When we knew him, he
was a handsome, harum-scarum young man,--taken up by William
Taylor as William Taylor did take up harum-scarum young
men,--and so introduced into the best society the place afforded,
while his being a Catholic, or passing for such, insured him a welcome in
some of the most aristocratic of the county houses. He was a foolish
rattle,--with no sense, scarcely any knowledge, and no principle; but
we took for granted in him much that he had not, and admired whatever he
had. For his part, he was an avowed admirer of our eldest sister (who
however escaped fancy-free;) and he was forever at our house. We
younger ones romanced amazingly about him,--drew his remarkable
profile on the backs of all our letters, dreamed of him, listened to all
his marvelous stories, and, when he got a concussion of the brain by
driving his gig against a tree in Lord Stafford's park, were
inconsolable. If he had (happily) died then, he would have remained a hero
in our imaginations. The few following years (which were very possibly all
the wilder for that concussion of the brain) disabused every body of all
expectation of good from him; but yet when he died,
frantic under gaming debts, the shock was great, and the impression, on my mind at least, deep and lasting. My eldest sister, then in a happy home of her own, was shocked and concerned; but we younger ones felt it far more. I was then in the height of my religious fanaticism; and I remember putting away all doubts about the theological propriety of what I was doing, for the sake of the relief of praying for his soul. Many times a day, and with my whole heart, did I pray for his soul.
I was too shy ever to ask to be taught any thing,--except, indeed,
of good-natured strangers. I have mentioned that we were well
practiced in some matters of domestic management. We could sew, iron, make
sweets, gingerbread and pastry, and keep order generally throughout the
house. But I did not know,--what nobody can know without being
taught,--how to purchase stores, or to set out a table, or to deal
with the butcher and fish-monger. It is inconceivable what a trouble
this was to me for many years. I was always in terror at that great
mountain of duty before me, and wondering what was to become of me if my
mother left home, or if I should marry. Never once did it occur to me to go
to my mother, and ask to be taught: and it was not pride but fear
which so incapacitated me. I liked that sort of occupation, and had great
pleasure in doing what I could do in that way; insomuch that I have
sometimes felt myself what General F. called his wife, -- "a
good housemaid spoilt." My "Guides
to Service," ("The Maid-of-all-work," "Housemaid," "Lady's Maid," and "Dress-maker,") written twenty years afterwards, may show something of this. Meantime, never was poor creature more dismally awkward than I was when domestic eyes were upon me: and this made me a most vexatious member of the family. I remember once upsetting a basin of moist sugar into a giblet pie. (I remember nothing else quite so bad.) I never could find any thing I was sent for, though I could lay my hands in the dark on any thing I myself wanted. On one occasion, when a workwoman was making mourning in the midst of us, I was desired to take the keys, and fetch a set of cravats for marking, out of a certain drawer. My heart sank at the order, and already the inevitable sentence rung in my ears,--that I was more trouble than I was worth; which I sincerely believed. The drawer was large, and crammed. I could not see one thing from another; and in no way could I see any cravats. Slowly and fearfully I came back to say so. Of course, I was sent again, and desired not to come back without them. That time, and again the next, I took every thing out of the drawer; and still found no cravats. My eldest sister tried next; and great was my consolation when she returned crest-fallen,--having found no cravats. My mother snatched the keys, under a strong sense of the hardship of having to do every thing herself, when Rachel suggested another place where they might have been put. Then they were found; and my heart was swelling with vindictive pleasure when my mother, by a few noble words, turned the tide of feeling completely. In the presence of the workwoman, she laid her hand on my arm, kissed me, and said, "And now, my dear, I have to beg your pardon." I answered only by tears; but the words supported me for long after.
I look back upon another scene with horror at my own audacity, and
wonder that my family could endure me at all. At Mr. Perry's, one of
our school-fellows was a clever, mischievous girl,--so clever,
and so much older than myself as to have great influence over me when she
chose to try her power, though I disapproved her ways very heartily. She
one day asked me, in a corner, in a mysterious sort of way, whether I did
not perceive
that Rachel was the favourite at home, and treated with manifest partiality. Every body else, she said, observed it. This had never distinctly occurred to me. Rachel was handy and useful, and not paralysed by fear, as I was; and, very naturally, our busy mother resorted to her for help, and put trust in her about matters of business, not noticing the growth of an equally natural habit in Rachel of quizzing or snubbing me, as the elder ones did. From the day of this mischievous speech of my schoo-fellow, I was on the watch, and with the usual result to the jealous. Months,--perhaps a year or two--passed on while I was brooding over this, without a word to any one; and then came the explosion, one winter evening after tea, when my eldest sister was absent, and my mother, Rachel and I were sitting at work. Rachel criticized something that I said, in which I happened to be right. After once defending myself, I sat silent. My mother remarked on my "obstinacy," saying that I was "not a bit convinced." I replied that nothing convincing had been said. My mother declared that she agreed with Rachel, and that I ought to yield. Then I passed the verge, and got wrong. A sudden force of daring entering my mind, I said, in the most provoking way possible, that this was nothing new, as she always did agree with Rachel against me. My mother put down her work, and asked me what I meant by that. I looked her full in the face, and said that what I meant was that every thing that Rachel said and did was right, and every thing that I said and did was wrong. Rachel burst into an insulting laugh, and was sharply bidden to "be quiet." I saw by this that I had gained some ground; and this was made clearer by my mother sternly desiring me to practise my music. I saw that she wanted to gain time. The question now was how I should get through. My hands were clammy and tremulous: my fingers stuck to each other; my eyes were dim, and there was a roaring in my ears. I could easily have fainted; and it might have done no harm if I had. But I made a tremendous effort to appear calm. I opened the piano, lighted a candle with a steady hand, began, and derived strength from the first chords. I believe I never played better in my life. Then the question was--how was I ever to
leave off? On I went for what seemed to me an immense time, till my mother sternly called to me to leave off and go to bed. With my candle in my hand, I said "Good-night." My mother laid down her work, and said, "Harriet, I am more displeased with you to-night than ever I have been in your life." Thought I, "I don't care: I have got it out, and it is all true." "Go and say your prayers," my mother continued; "and ask God to forgive you for your conduct to-night; for I don't know that I can. Go to your prayers." Thought I,--"No, I shan't." And I did not: and that was the only night from my infancy to mature womanhood that I did not pray. I detected misgiving in my mother's forced manner; and I triumphed. If the right was on my side (as I entirely believed) the power was on hers; and what the next morning was to be I could not conceive. I slept little, and went down sick with dread. Not a word was said, however, then or ever, of the scene of the preceding night; but henceforth, a most scrupulous impartiality between Rachel and me was shown. If the occasion had been better used still,--if my mother had but bethought herself of saying to me, "My child, I never dreamed that these terrible thoughts were in your mind. I am your mother. Why do you not tell me every thing that makes you unhappy?" I believe this would have wrought in a moment that cure which it took years to effect, amidst reserve and silence.
It has been a difficulty with me all my life (and its being a difficulty
shows some deep-seated fault in me) how to reconcile sincerity with
peace and good manners in such matters as other people's little
mistakes of fact. As an example of what I mean, a school-fellow
spelled Shakspere as I spell it here. Mr. Perry but in an a,
observing that the name was never spelt in print without an a.
I ventured to doubt this; but he repeated his assertion. At afternoon
school, I showed him a volume of the edition we had at home, which proved
him wrong. He received the correction with so indifferent a grace that I
was puzzled as to whether I had done right or wrong,--whether
sincerity required me to set my master right before the face of his
scholars. Of course, if I had been older, I should have done it more
privately. But this is a specimen of the difficulties of that class that I have struggled with almost ever since. The difficulty was immensely increased by the family habit of requiring an answer from me, and calling me obstinate if the reply was not an unconditional yielding. I have always wondered to see the ease and success with which very good people humour and manage the aged, the sick and the weak, and sometimes every body about them. I could never attempt this; for it always seemed to me such contemptuous treatment of those whom I was at the moment respecting more than ever, on account of their weakness. But I was always quite in the opposite extreme;--far too solemn, too rigid, and prone to exaggeration of differences and to obstinacy at the same time. It was actually not till I was near forty that I saw how the matter should really be,--saw it through a perfect example of an union of absolute sincerity with all possible cheerfulness, sweetness, modesty and deference for all, in proportion to their claims. I have never attained righteous good-manners, to this day; but I have understood what they are since the beauties of J.S.'s character and manners were revealed to me under circumstances of remarkable trial.
While organised, it seems to me, for sincerity, and being generally
truthful, except for the exaggeration which is apt to beset persons of
repressed faculties, I feel compelled to state here (what belongs to this
part of my life) that towards one person I was habitually untruthful, from
fear. To my mother I would in my childhood assert or deny any thing that
would bring me through most easily. I remember denying various harmless
things,--playing a game at battledore, for one; and often without any
apparent reason: and this was so exclusively to one person that,
though there was remonstrance and punishment, I believe I was never
regarded as a liar in the family. It seems now all very strange: but
it was a temporary and very brief phase. When I left home, all temptation
to untruth ceased, and there was henceforth nothing more than the habit of
exaggeration and strong expression to struggle with.
Before I went to Bristol, I was the prey of three
griefs,--prominent among many. I cannot help laughing while I write
them. They were my bad hand-writing, my deafness, and the state of my hair. Such a trio of miseries! I was the first of my family who failed in the matter of hand-writing; and why I did remains unexplained. I am sure I tried hard; but I wrote a vulgar, cramped, untidy scrawl till I was past twenty;--till authorship made me forget manner in matter, and gave freedom to my hand. After that, I did very well, being praised by compositors for legibleness first, and in course of time, for other qualities. But it was a severe mortification while it lasted; and many bitter tears I shed over the reflections that my awkward hand called forth. It was a terrible penance to me to write letters home from Bristol; and the day of the week when it was to be done was very like the Beckwith music-lesson days. If any one had told me then how many reams of paper I should cover in the course of my life, life would have seemed a sort of purgatory to me.--As to my deafness, I got no relief about that at Bristol. It was worse when I returned in weak health.--The third misery, which really plagued me seriously, was cured presently after I left home, I made my dear aunt Kentish the depositary of my confidence in all matters; and this, of course, among the rest. She induced me to consult a friend of hers, who had remarkably beautiful hair; and then it came out that I had been combing overmuch, and that there was nothing the matter with my hair, if I would be content with brushing it. So that grief was annihilated, and there was an end of one of those trifles which "make up the sum of human things."
And now the hour was at hand when I was to find, for the first time, a
human being whom I was not afraid of. That blessed being was my dear aunt
Kentish, who stands distinguished in my mind by that from all other persons
whom I have ever known.
I did not understand the facts about my leaving home till I had been
absent some months; and when I did, I was deeply and effectually moved by
my mother's consideration for my feelings. We had somehow been
brought up in a supreme contempt of boarding-schools: and I
was therefore truly amazed when my mother sounded me, in the spring of
1817, about going for a
year or two to a Miss Somebody's school at Yarmouth. She talked of the sea, of the pleasantness of change, and of how happy L.T--, an excessively silly girl of our acquaintance, was there: but I made such a joke of L. and her studies, and of the attainments of the young ladies, as we had heard of them, that my mother gave up the notion of a scheme which never could have answered. It would have been ruin to a temper like mine at that crisis to have sent me among silly and ignorant people, to have my "manners formed," after the most ordinary boarding school fashion. My mother did much better in sending me among people so superior to myself as to improve me morally and intellectually, though the experiment failed in regard to health. A brother of my mother's had been unfortunate in business at Bristol, and had not health to retrieve his affairs; and his able and accomplished wife, and clever young daughters opened a school. Of the daughters, one was within a few weeks of my own age; and we have been intimate friends from that time (the beginning of 1818) till this hour. Another was two years younger; another, two years older; while the eldest had reached womanhood. Of these clever cousins we had heard much, for many years, without having seen any of them. At the opening of the year 1818, a letter arrived from my aunt to my mother, saying that it was time the young people should be becoming acquainted; that her girls were all occupied in the school, for the routine of which Rachel was somewhat too old; but that if Harriet would go, and spend some time with them, and take the run of the school, she would be a welcome guest, &c. &c. This pleased me much, and I heard with joy that I was to go when my father took his next journey to Bristol,--early in February. My notion was of a stay of a few weeks; and I was rather taken aback when my mother spoke of my absence as likely to last a year or more. It never entered my head that I was going to a boarding-school; and when I discovered, long after, that the Bristol family understood that I was, I was not (as I once might have been) angry at having been tricked into it, but profoundly contrite for the temper which made such management necessary, and touched by the trouble
my mother took to spare my silly pride, and consider my troublesome feelings.
I was, on the whole, happy during the fifteen months I spent at Bristol,
though home-sickness spoiled the last half of the time. My home
affections seem to have been all the stronger for having been repressed and
baulked. Certainly, I passionately loved my family, each and all, from the
very hour that parted us; and I was physically ill with expectation when
their letters became due;--letters which I could hardly read when they
came, between my dread of something wrong, and the beating heart and
swimming eyes with which I received letters in those days. There were some
family anxieties during the latter part of the time; and there was one
grand event,--the engagement of my eldest sister, who had virtually
ceased to belong to us by the time I returned home.
I found my cousins even more wonderfully clever than I had expected; and
they must have been somewhat surprised at my striking inferiority in
knowledge, and in the power of acquiring it. I still think that I never met
with a family to compare with theirs for power of acquisition, or effective
use of knowledge. They would learn a new language at odd minutes; get
through a tough philosophical book by taking turns in the court for air;
write down an entire lecture or sermon, without missing a sentence; get
round the piano after a concert, and play and sing over every new piece
that had been performed. Ability like this was a novel spectacle to me; and
it gave me the pure pleasure of unmixed admiration; for I was certainly not
conscious of any ability whatever at that time. I had no great deal to do
in the school, being older than every girl there but one; and I believe I
got no particular credit in such classes as I did join. For one thing, my
deafness was now bad enough to be a disadvantage; but it was a worse
disqualification that my memory, always obedient to my own command, was
otherwise disobedient. I could remember whatever I had learned in my own
way, but was quite unable to answer in class, like far younger girls, about
any thing just communicated. My chief intellectual improvement during that
important period was derived from
private study. I read some analytical books, on logic and rhetoric, with singular satisfaction; and I lost nothing afterwards that I obtained in this way. I read a good deal of History too, and revelled in poetry,--a new world of which was opened to me by my cousins. The love of natural scenery was a good deal developed in me by the beauty around Bristol. One circumstance makes me think that I had become rather suddenly awakened to it not long before,--though my delight in the sea at Cromer dated some years earlier. Mr. Perry tried upon us the reading of L'Allegro and Il Penseroso; and it failed utterly. I did not feel any thing whatever, though I supposed I understood what I heard. Not long after he was gone, I read both pieces in the nursery, one day; and straightway went into a transport, as if I had discovered myself in possession of a new sense. Thus it was again now, when I was transferred from flat, bleak Norfolk to the fine scenery about Bristol. Even the humble beauty of our most frequent walk, by the Logwood Mills, was charming to me,--the clear running water, with its weedy channel, and the meadow walk on the brink: and about Leigh woods, Kingsweston, and the Downs, my rapture knew no bounds.
Far more important, however, was the growth of kindly affections in me
at this time, caused by the free and full tenderness of my dear aunt
Kentish, and of all my other relations then surrounding me. My heart warmed
and opened, and my habitual fear began to melt away. I have since been told
that, on the day of my arrival, when some of the school-girls asked
my cousin M. what I was like, (as she came out of the parlour where I was)
she said that I looked as if I was cross; but that she knew I was not; and
that I looked unhappy. When I left Bristol, I was as pale as a ghost, and
as thin as possible; and still very frowning and repulsive-looking;
but yet with a comparatively open countenance. The counteracting influence
to dear aunt Kentish's was one which visited me very strongly at the
same time,--that of a timid superstition. She was herself, then and
always, very religious; but she had a remarkable faculty of making her
religion suggest and sanction whatever she
liked: and, as she liked whatever was pure, amiable, unselfish and unspoiling, this tendency did her no harm. Matters were otherwise with me. My religion too took the character of my mind; and it was harsh, severe and mournful accordingly. There was a great furor among the Bristol Unitarians at that time about Dr. Carpenter, who had recently become their pastor. He was a very devoted Minister, and a very earnest pietist: superficial in his knowledge, scanty in ability, narrow in his conceptions, and thoroughly priestly in his temper. He was exactly the dissenting minister to be worshipped by his people, (and especially by the young) and to be spoiled by that worship. He was worshipped by the young, and by none more than by me; and his power was unbounded while his pupils continued young: but, as his instructions and his scholars were not bound together by any bond of essential Christian doctrine, every thing fell to pieces as soon as the merely personal influence was withdrawn. A more extraordinary diversity of religious opinion than existed among his pupils when they became men and women could not be seen. They might be found at the extremes of catholicism and atheism, and every where between. As for me, his devout and devoted Catechumen, he made me desperately superstitious,--living wholly in and for religion, and fiercely fanatical about it. I returned home raving about my pastor and teacher, remembering every word he had ever spoken to me,--with his instructions burnt in, as it were, upon my heart and conscience, and with an abominable spiritual rigidity and a truly respectable force of conscience casually mingled together, so as to procure for me the no less curiously mingled ridicule and respect of my family. My little sister, then learning to sew on her stool at my mother's knee, has since told me what she perceived, with the penetrating eyes and heart of childhood. Whenever I left the room, my mother and elder sisters used to begin to quiz my fanaticism,--which was indeed quizzical enough; but the little one saw a sort of respect for me underlying the mockery, which gave her her first clear sense of moral obligation, and the nature of obedience to it.
The results of the Bristol experiment were thus good on the
whole. My health was rather worse than better, through wear and tear of nerves,--home-sickness, religious emotions, overmuch study (so my aunt said, against my conviction) and medical mismanagement. I had learned a good deal, and had got into a good way of learning more. My domestic affections were regenerated; and I had become sincerely and heartily religious, with some improvement in temper in consequence, and not a little in courage, hope and conscientiousness. The fanaticism was a stage which I should probably have had to pass through at any rate,--and by the same phase of pastor-worship,--whoever the pastor might have been.
My eldest sister's marriage in 1820 made young women at once of
Rachel and myself. It was on all accounts a happy event, though we dreaded
excessively the loss of her from home, which she eminently graced. But
never did woman grow in grace more remarkably than she did by her marriage.
When she had found her own heart, it proved a truly noble one; and the
generosity, sweetness, and wisdom of her whole conduct towards her own
children showed that her mistakes in her treatment of us were merely the
crudities of inexperience. I may say, once for all, that her home at
Newcastle was ever open to us, and that all possible kindness from her
hospitable husband and herself was always at our command, without hindrance
or difficulty, till my recovery from a hopeless illness, in 1844, by
Mesmerism, proved too much for the natural prejudice of a surgeon and a
surgeon's wife, and caused, by the help of the ill-offices of
another relation, a family breach, as absurd as it was lamentable. My
sister was then under the early symptoms of her last illness; and matters
might have ended more happily if
she had been in her usual state of health and nerve, as they certainly would if advantage had not been taken of her natural irritation against Mesmerism to gratify in another jealousies to which she was herself far superior. My own certainty of this, and my grateful remembrance of the long course of years during which I enjoyed her friendship and generosity, and her cordial sympathy in my aims and successes, incline me to pass over her final alienation, and dwell upon the affectionate intercourse we enjoyed, at frequent intervals, for twenty years from her marriage day.
Our revered and beloved eldest brother had, by this time, settled in
Norwich as a surgeon, in partnership with our uncle, Mr. P.M. Martineau,
the most eminent provincial surgeon of his day,--in some departments,
if not altogether. My brother's health was delicate, and we were to
lose him by death in five years. One of the sweetest recollections of my
life is that I had the honour and blessing of his intimate friendship,
which grew and deepened from my sister's marriage to the time of his
own death. My mother, too, took me into her confidence more and more as my
mind opened, and, I may add, as my deafness increased, and bespoke for me
her motherly sympathy. For some years, indeed, there was a genuine and
cordial friendship between my mother and me, which was a benefit to me in
all manner of ways; and, from the time when I began to have literary
enterprises, (and quite as much before I obtained success as after) I was
sustained by her trustful, generous, self-denying sympathy and
maternal appreciation. After a time, when she was fretted by cares and
infirmities, I became as nervous in regard to her as ever, (even to the
entire breaking down of my health;) but during the whole period of which I
am now treating,--(and it is a very large space in my
life)--there were no limitations to our mutual confidence.
One other relation which reached its highest point, and had begun to
decline, during this period was one which I must abstain from discussing.
The briefest possible notice will be the best method of treatment. All who
have ever known me are aware that the strongest passion I have ever
entertained was
in regard to my youngest brother, who has certainly filled the largest space in the life of my affections of any person whatever. Now, the fact,--the painful fact,--in the history of human affections is that, of all natural relations, the least satisfactory is the fraternal. Brothers are to sisters what sisters can never be to brothers as objects of engrossing and devoted affection. The law of their frames is answerable for this: and that other law--of equity--which sisters are bound to obey, requires that they should not render their account of their disappointments where there can be no fair reply. Under the same law, sisters are bound to remember that they cannot be certain of their own fitness to render an account of their own disappointments, or to form an estimate of the share of blame which may be due to themselves on the score of unreasonable expectations. These general considerations decide me to pass over one of the main relations and influences of my life in a few brief and unsatisfactory lines, though I might tell a very particular tale. If I could see a more truthful, just, and satisfactory method of treating the topic, I should most gladly adopt it.--As for the other members of our numerous family, I am thankful and rejoiced to bear testimony that they have given all possible encouragement to the labours of my life; and that they have been the foremost of all the world to appreciate and rejoice in my successes, and to respect that independence of judgment and action on my part which must often have given them pain, and which would have overpowered any generosity less deeply rooted in principle and affection than theirs.
When I was young, it was not thought proper for young ladies to study
very conspicuously; and especially with pen in hand. Young ladies (at least
in provincial towns) were expected to sit down in the parlour to
sew,--during which reading aloud was permitted,--or to practice
their music; but so as to be fit to receive callers, without any signs of
blue-stockingism which could be reported abroad. Jane Austen
herself, the Queen of novelists, the immortal creator of Anne Elliott, Mr.
Knightly, and a score or two more of unrivalled intimate friends of the
whole public, was compelled by the feelings of her family to
cover up her manuscripts with a large piece of muslin work, kept on the table for the purpose, whenever any genteel people came in. So it was with other young ladies, for some time after Jane Austen was in her grave; and thus my first studies in philosophy were carried on with great care and reserve. I was at the work table regularly after breakfast,--making my own clothes, or the shirts of the household, or about some fancy work: I went out walking with the rest,--before dinner in winter, and after tea in summer: and if ever I shut myself into my own room for an hour of solitude, I knew it was at the risk of being sent for to join the sewing-circle, or to read aloud,--I being the reader, on account of my growing deafness. But I won time for what my heart was set upon, nevertheless,--either in the early morning, or late at night. I had a strange passion for translating, in those days; and a good preparation it proved for the subsequent work of my life. Now, it was meeting James at seven in the morning to read Lowth's Prelections in the Latin, after having been busy since five about something else, in my own room. Now it was translating Tacitus, in order to try what was the utmost compression of style that I could attain.--About this I may mention an incident while it occurs. We had all grown up with a great reverence for Mrs. Barbauld (which she fully deserved from much wiser people than ourselves) and, reflectively, for Dr. Aikin, her brother,--also able in his way, and far more industrious, but without her genius. Among a multitude of other labours, Dr. Aikin had translated the Agricola of Tacitus. I went into such an enthusiasm over the original, and especially over the celebrated concluding passage, that I thought I would translate it, and correct it by Dr. Aikin's, which I could procure from our public library. I did it, and found my own translation unquestionably the best of the two. I had spent an infinity of pains over it,--word by word; and I am confident I was not wrong in my judgment. I stood pained and mortified before my desk, I remember, thinking how strange and small a matter was human achievement, if Dr. Aikin's fame was to be taken as a testimony of literary desert. I had beaten him whom I had taken for my master. I need not point out that, in the
first place, Dr. Aikin's fame did not hang on this particular work; nor that, in the second place, I had exaggerated his fame by our sectarian estimate of him. I give the incident as a curious little piece of personal experience, and one which helped to make me like literary labour more for its own sake, and less for its rewards, than I might otherwise have done.--Well: to return to my translating propensities. Our cousin J.M.L., then studying for his profession in Norwich, used to read Italian with Rachel and me,--also before breakfast. We made some considerable progress, through the usual course of prose authors and poets; and out of this grew a fit which Rachel and I at one time took, in concert with our companions and neighbours, the C.'s, to translate Petrarch. Nothing could be better as an exercise in composition than translating Petrach sonnets into English of the same limits. It was putting ourselves under compulsion to do with the Italian what I had set myself voluntarily to do with the Latin author. I believe we really succeeded pretty well; and I am sure that all these exercises were a singularly apt preparation for my after work. At the same time, I went on studying Blair's Rhetoric (for want of a better guide) and inclining mightily to every kind of book or process which could improve my literary skill,--really as if I had foreseen how I was to spend my life.
These were not, however, my most precious or serious studies. I studied
the Bible incessantly and immensely; both by daily reading of chapters,
after the approved but mischievous method, and by getting hold of all
commentaries and works of elucidation that I could lay my hands on. A work
of Dr. Carpenter's, begun but never finished, called "Notes and
Observations on the Gospel History," which his catechumens used in
class, first put me on this track of study,--the results of which
appeared some years afterwards in my "Traditions of Palestine."
It was while reading Mr. Kenrick's translation from the German of
"Helon's Pilgrimage to Jerusalem," with which I was
thoroughly bewitched, that I conceived, and communicated to James, the
audacious idea of giving a somewhat resembling account of the Jews and
their country, under the immediate expectation of the
Messiah, and even in his presence, while carefully abstaining from permitting more than his shadow to pass over the scene. This idea I cherished till I found courage, under a new inspiration some years after, to execute it: and so pleasant was the original suggestion, and so congenial the subject altogether, that even now, at the distance of a quarter of a century, I regard that little volume with a stronger affection than any other of my works but one;--that one being "Eastern Life."
Dr. Carpenter was inclined also to the study of philosophy, and wrote on
it,--on mental and moral philosophy; and this was enough, putting all
predisposition out of the question, to determine me to the study. He was of
the Locke and Hartley school altogether, as his articles on "Mental
and Moral Philosophy," in Rees's Cyclopedia, and his work on
"Systematic Education" show. He used to speak of Hartley as one
who had the intellectual qualities of the seraphic order combined with the
affections of the cherubic; and it was no wonder if Hartley became my idol
when I was mistress of my own course of study. I must clear myself from all
charge of having ever entertained his doctrine of Vibrations. I do not
believe that Dr. Carpenter himself could have prevailed with me so far as
that. But neither did Hartley prevail with Dr. Carpenter so far as that.
The edition of Hartley that I used was Dr. Priestley's,--that
which gives the philosophy of Association, cleared from the incumbence of
the Vibration theory. That book I studied with a fervor and perseverance
which made it perhaps the most important book in the world to me, except
the bible; and there really is in it, amidst its monstrous deficiencies and
absurdities, so much that is philosophically true, as well as holy,
elevating and charming, that its influence might very well spread into all
the events and experience of life, and chasten the habits and feelings, as
it did in my case during a long series of years. So far from feeling, as
Dr. Channing and other good men have done, that the influence of that
philosophy is necessarily, in all cases, debasing, I am confident at this
moment that the spirit of the men, Locke and Hartley, redeems much of the
fault of their doctrine in its operation on young minds; and moreover, that
the conscientious
accuracy with which they apply their doctrine to the moral conduct of the smallest particulars of human life (Hartley particularly) forms a far better discipline, and produces a much more exalting effect on the minds of students than the vague metaphysical imaginations,--as various and irreconcilable as the minds that give them forth, which Dr. Channing and his spiritual school adopted (or believed that they adopted) as a "spiritual philosophy." I know this,--that while I read the Germans, Americans and English who am the received exponents of that philosophy with a general and extremely vague sense of elevation and beauty as the highest emotion produced, I cannot at this hour look at the portrait of Hartley prefixed to his work, or glance at his strange Scholia,--which I could almost repeat, word for word,--without a strong revival of the old mood of earnest desire of self-discipline, and devotion to duty which I derived from them in my youth. While the one school has little advantage over the other in the abstract department of their philosophy, the disciples of Hartley have infinitely the advantage over the dreaming school in their master's presentment of the concrete department of fact and of action. Compelled as I have since been to relinquish both as philosophy, I am bound to avow, (and enjoy the avowal) that I owe to Hartley the strongest and best stimulus and discipline of the highest affections and most important habits that it is perhaps possible, (or was possible for me) to derive from any book.--The study of Priestley's character and works (natural to me because he was the great apostle of Unitarianism) necessarily led me to the study of the Scotch school of philosophy, which I took the liberty to enjoy in its own way, in spite of Priestley's contempt of it. I never believed in it, because it was really inconceivable to me how anybody should; and I was moreover entirely wrong in not perceiving that the Scotch philosophers had got hold of a fragment of sound truth which the other school had missed,--in their postulate of a fundamental complete faculty, which could serve as a basis of the mind's operations,--whereas Hartley lays down simply the principle of association, and a capacity for pleasure and pain. I ought to have perceived that the Scotch proposition of Common
Sense would answer much better for purposes of interpretation, if I had not yet knowledge enough to show me that it was much nearer the fact of the case. I did not perceive this, but talked as flippantly as Priestley, with far less right to do so. At the same time, I surrendered myself, to a considerable extent, to the charm of Dugald Stewart's writings,--having no doubt that Priestley, if then living, would have done so too. About Beattie and Reid I was pert enough, from a genuine feeling of the unsatisfactoriness of their writings; but the truth of detail scattered through Dugald Stewart's elegant elucidations, the gentle and happy spirit, and the beautiful style, charmed me so much that I must have been among his most affectionate disciples, if I had not been fortified against his seductions by my devotion to Hartley.
It appears to me now that, though my prevailing weakness in study is
excessive sympathy, intellectual as well as moral, with my author, I even
then felt something of the need which long after became all-powerful
in me, of a clear distinction between the knowable and the
unknowable,--of some available indication of an indisputable point of
view, whence one's contemplation of human nature, as of every thing
else in the universe, should make its range. It may be that I am carrying
back too far in my life this sense of need. When I consider how contentedly
I went on, during the whole of this third period, floating and floundering
among metaphysical imaginations, and giving forth inbred conceptions as
truths of fact, I am disposed to think it probable that I am casting back
the light of a later time among the mists of an earlier, and supposing
myself sooner capable than I really was of practically distinguishing
between a conception and a conviction. But there can be no mistake about
the time and manner of my laying hold of a genuine conviction in a genuine
manner, as I will presently tell. It would no doubt haste been a fine thing
for me,--an event which would have elevated my whole
after-life,--if a teacher had been at hand to show ms the
boundary line between the knowable and the unknowable, as I see it now, and
to indicate to me that the purely human view of the universe, derived
solely from within, and proceeding
on the supposition that Man and his affairs and his world are the centre and crown of the universe, could not possibly be the true one. But, in the absence of such a teacher,--in my inability to see the real scope and final operation of the discovery of Copernicus and Galileo,--and the ultimate connexion of physical and moral science,--it was the next best thing, perhaps, to obtain by my own forces, and for my own use, the grand conviction which henceforth gave to my life whatever it has had of steadiness, consistency, and progressiveness.
I have told how, when I was eleven years old, I put a question to my
brother about the old difficulty of foreknowledge and freewill,--the
reconciliation of God's power and benevolence,--and how I was
baulked of an answer. That question had been in my mind ever since; and I
was not driven from entertaining it by Milton's account of its being
a favourite controversy in hell, nor even by a rebuke administered to one
of our family by Mr. Turner of Newcastle, who disapproved inquiry into what
he took for granted to be an unknowable thing. To me it seemed, turn it
which way I would, to be certainly a knowable thing,--so closely as it
presses on human morality,--to say nothing of man's religion and
internal peace. Its being reconcilable with theology is quite another
affair. I tried long to satisfy myself with the ordinary
subterfuge;--with declaring myself satisfied that good comes out of
evil, and a kind of good which could accrue in no other way: but this
would not do. I wrote religious poetry upon it, and wrought myself up to it
in talk: but it would not do. This was no solution; and it was
unworthy of a rational being to pretend to think it so. I tried
acquiescence and dismissal of the subject; but that would not do, because
it brought after it a clear admission of the failure of the scheme of
creation in the first place, and of the Christian scheme in the next. The
time I am now speaking of was, of course, prior to my study of Priestley
and of Hartley, or I should have known that there was a recognised doctrine
of Necessity.
One summer afternoon, when my brother James (then my oracle) was sitting
with my mother and me, telling us some of his experiences after his first
session at the York College (the Unita-
rian college) I seized upon some intimation that he dropped about this same doctrine of Necessity. I uttered the difficulty which had lain in my mind for so many years; and he just informed me that there was, or was held to be, a solution in that direction, and advised me to make it out for myself. I did so. From that time the question possessed me. Now that I had got leave, as it were, to apply the Necessarian solution, I did it incessantly. I fairly laid hold of the conception of general laws, while still far from being prepared to let go the notion of a special Providence. Though at times almost overwhelmed by the vastness of the view opened to me, and by the prodigious change requisite in my moral views and self-management, the revolution was safely gone through. My laboring brain and beating heart grew quiet, and something more like peace than I had ever yet known settled down upon my anxious mind. Being aware of my weakness of undue sympathy with authors whom I read with any moral interest, I resolved to read nothing on this question till I had thought it out; and I kept to my resolve. When I was wholly satisfied, and could use my new method of interpretation in all cases that occurred with readiness and ease, I read every book that I could hear of on the subject of the Will; and I need not add that I derived confirmation from all I read on both sides. I am bound to add that the moral effect of this process was most salutary and cheering. From the time when I became convinced of the certainty of the action of laws, of the true importance of good influences and good habits, of the firmness, in short, of the ground I was treading, and of the security of the results which I should take the right means to attain, a new vigour pervaded my whole life, a new light spread through my mind, and I began to experience a steady growth in self-command, courage, and consequent integrity and disinterestedness. I was feeble and selfish enough at best; but yet, I was like a new creature in the strength of a sound conviction. Life also was like something fresh and wonderfully interesting, now that I held in my hand this key whereby to interpret some of the most conspicuous of its mysteries.
That great event in my life seems very remote; and I have
been hearing more or less of the free-will difficulty ever since; and yet it appears to me, now as then, that none but Necessarians at all understand the Necessarian doctrine. This is merely saying in other words that its truth is so irresistible that, when once understood, it is adopted as a matter of course. Some, no doubt, say of the doctrine that every body can prove it, but nobody believes it; an assertion so far from true as not to be worth contesting, if I may judge by my own intercourses. Certainly, all the best minds I know are among the Necessarians;--all indeed which are qualified to discuss the subject at all. Moreover, all the world is practically Necessarian. All human action proceeds on the supposition that all the workings of the universe are governed by laws which cannot be broken by human will. In fact, the mistake of the majority in this matter is usually in supposing an interference between the will and the action of Man. The very smallest amount of science is enough to enable any rational person to see that the constitution and action of the human faculty of Will are determined by influences beyond the control of the possessor of the faculty: and when this very plain fact is denied in words it is usually because the denier is thinking of something else,--not of the faculty of willing, but of executing the volition. It is not my business here to argue out a question which has been settled in my own mind for the greater part of my life; but I have said thus much in explanation of the great importance of the conviction to me. For above thirty years I have seen more and more clearly how awful, and how irremediable except by the spread of a true philosophy, are the evils which arise from that monstrous remnant of old superstition,--the supposition of a self-determining power, independent of laws, in the human will; and I can truly say that if I have had the blessing of any available strength under sorrow, perplexity, sickness and toil, during a life which has been any thing but easy, it is owing to my repose upon eternal and irreversible laws, working in every department of the universe, without any interference from any random will, human or divine.--As to the ordinary objection to the doctrine,--that it is good for endurance but bad for action,--besides the obvious
reply that every doctrine is to be accepted or rejected for its truth or falsehood, and not because mere human beings fancy its tendency to be good or bad,--I am bound to reply from my own experience that the allegation is not true. My life has been (whatever else) a very busy one; and this conviction, of the invariable action of fixed laws, has certainly been the main-spring of my activity. When it is considered that, according to the Necessarian doctrine, no action falls to produce effects, and no effort can be lost, there seems every reason for the conclusion which I have no doubt is the fact, that true Necessarians must be the most diligent and confident of all workers. The indolent dreamers whom I happen to know are those who find an excuse for their idleness in the doctrine of free-will, which certainly leaves but scanty encouragement to exertion of any sort: and at the same time, the noblest activity that I ever witness, the most cheerful and self-denying toil, is on the part of those who hold the Necessarian doctrine as a vital conviction.
As to the effect of that conviction on my religion, in those days of my
fanaticism and afterwards, I had better give some account of it here,
though it will lead me on to a date beyond the limits of this third period
of my life.--In the first place, it appeared to me when I was twenty,
as it appears to me now, that the New Testament proceeds on the ground of
necessarian, rather than free-will doctrine. The prayer for daily
bread is there, it is true; but the Lord's prayer is compiled from
very ancient materials of the theocratic age. The fatalistic element of the
Essene doctrine strongly pervades the doctrine and morality of Christ and
the apostles; and its curious union with the doctrine of a special
providence is possible only under the theocratic supposition which is the
basis of the whole faith.--As for me, I seized upon the necessarian
element with eagerness, as enabling me to hold to my cherished faith; and I
presently perceived, and took instant advantage of the discovery, that the
practice of prayer, as prevailing throughout Christendom, is wholly
unauthorized by the New Testament. Christian prayer, as prevailing at this
day, answers precisely to the description of that pharisaic prayer which
Christ reprobated. His own method
of praying, the prayer he gave to his disciples, and their practice, were all wholly unlike any thing now understood by Christian prayer, in protestant as well as catholic countries. I changed my method accordingly,--gradually, perhaps, but beginning immediately and decidedly. Not knowing what was good for me, and being sure that every external thing would come to pass just the same, whether I liked it or not, I ceased to desire, and therefore to pray for, any thing external,--whether "daily bread," or health, or life for myself or others, or any thing whatever but spiritual good. There I for a long time drew the line. Many years after I had outgrown the childishness of wishing for I knew not what,--of praying for what might be either good or evil,--I continued to pray for spiritual benefits. I can hardly say for spiritual aid; for I took the necessarian view of even the higher form of prayer,--that it brought about, or might bring about, its own accomplishment by the spiritual dispositions which it excited and cherished. This view is so far from simple, and so irreconcilable with the notion of a revelation of a scheme of salvation, that it is clear that the one or the other view must soon give way. The process in my case was this. A long series of grave misfortunes brought me to the conviction that there is no saying beforehand what the external conditions of internal peace really are. I found myself now and then in the loftiest moods of cheerfulness when in the midst of circumstances which I had most dreaded, and the converse; and thus I grew to be, generally speaking, really and truly careless as to what became of me. I had cast off the torment of fear, except in occasional weak moments. This experience presently extended to my spiritual affairs. I found myself best, according to all trustworthy tests of goodness, when I cared least about the matter. I continued my practice of nightly examination of my hourly conduct; and the evidence grew wonderfully strong that moral advancement came out of good influences rather than self-management; and that even so much self-reference as was involved in "working out one's own salvation with fear and trembling" was demoralizing. Thus I arrived,--after long years,--at the same point of ease or resignation about my spiritual as my
temporal affairs, and felt that (to use a broad expression uttered by somebody) it was better to take the chance of being damned than be always quacking one's self in the fear of it. (Not that I had any literal notion of being damned,--any more than any other born and bred Unitarian.) What I could not desire for myself, I could not think of stipulating for others; and thus, in regard to petition, my prayers became simply an aspiration,--"Thy will be done!" But still, the department of praise remained. I need hardly say that I soon drew back in shame from offering to a Divine being a homage which would be offensive to an earthly one: and when this practice was over, my devotions consisted in aspiration,--very frequent and heartfelt,--under all circumstances and influences, and much as I meditate now, almost hourly, on the mysteries of life and the universe, and the great science and art of human duty. In proportion as the taint of fear and desire and self-regard fell off, and the meditation had fact instead of passion for its subject, the aspiration became freer and sweeter, till at length, when the selfish superstition had wholly gone out of it, it spread its charm through every change of every waking hour,--and does now, when life itself is expiring.
As to the effect that all this had on my belief in
Christianity,--it did not prevent my holding on in that
pseudo-acceptance of it which my Unitarian breeding rendered easy.
It was a grand discovery to me when I somewhere met with the indication,
(since become a rather favourite topic with Unitarian preachers) that the
fact of the miracles has nothing whatever to do with the quality of the
doctrine. When miracles are appealed to by the Orthodox as a proof of, not
only the supernatural orion, but the divine quality of the doctrine, the
obvious answer is that devils may work miracles, and the doctrine may
therefore be from hell. Such was the argument in Christ's time; and
such is it now among a good many protestants,--horrifying the
Catholics and High-Churchmen of our time as much as it horrified the
evangelists of old. The use to which it is turned by many who still call
themselves Unitarians, and to which it was applied by me is--the
holding to Christianity in a manner as a revelation, after
surrendering belief in the miracles. I suppose the majority of Unitarians still accept all the miracles (except the Miraculous Conception, of course)--even to the withering away of the fig-tree. Some hold to the resurrection, while giving up all the rest; and not a few do as I did,--say that the interior evidence of a divine origin of that doctrine is enough, and that no amount of miracles could strengthen their faith. It is clear however that a Christianity which never was received as a scheme of salvation,--which never was regarded as essential to salvation,--which might be treated, in respect to its records, at the will and pleasure of each believer,--which is next declared to be independent of its external evidences, because those evidences are found to be untenable,--and which is finally subjected in its doctrines, as in its letter, to the interpretation of each individual,--must cease to be a faith, and become a matter of speculation, of spiritual convenience, and of intellectual and moral taste, till it declines to the rank of a mere fact in the history of mankind. These are the gradations through which I passed. It took many years to travel through them; and I lingered long in the stages of speculation and taste, intellectual and moral. But at length I recognized the monstrous superstition in its true character of a great fact in the history of the race, and found myself, with the last link of my chain snapped,--a free rover on the broad, bright breezy common of the universe.
desired, I always did, as of course; and after he had left me to my widowhood soon after six o'clock, one bright September morning, I was at my desk before seven, beginning a letter to the Editor of the "Monthly Repository,"--that editor being the formidable prime minister of his sect,--Rev. Robert Aspland. I suppose I must tell what that first paper was, though I had much rather not; for I am so heartily ashamed of the whole business as never to have looked at the article since the first flutter of it went off. It was on Female Writers on Practical Divinity. I wrote away, in my abominable scrawl of those days, on foolscap paper, feeling mighty like a fool all the time. I told no one, and carried my expensive packet to the post-office myself, to pay the postage. I took the letter V for my signature,--I cannot at all remember why. The time was very near the end of the month: I had no definite expectation that I should ever hear any thing of my paper; and certainly did not suppose it could be in the forthcoming number. That number was sent in before service-time on a Sunday morning. My heart may have been beating when I laid hands on it; but it thumped prodigiously when I saw my article there, and, in the Notices to Correspondents, a request to bear more from V. of Norwich. There is certainly something entirely peculiar in the sensation of seeing one'sself in print for the first time:--the lines burn themselves in upon the brain in a way of which black ink is incapable, in any other mode. So I felt that day, when I went about with my secret.--I have said what my eldest brother was to us,--in what reverence we held him. He was just married, and he and his bride asked me to return from chapel with them to tea. After tea he said, "Come now, we have had plenty of talk; I will read you something;" and he held out his hand for the new "Repository." After glancing at it, he exclaimed, "They have got a new hand here. Listen." After a paragraph, he repeated, "Ah! this is a new hand; they have had nothing so good as this for a long while." (It would be impossible to convey to any who do not know the "Monthly Repository" of that day, how very small a compliment this was.) I was silent, of course. At the end of the first column,
he exclaimed about the style, looking at me in some wonder at my being as still as a mouse. Next (and well I remember his tone, and thrill to it still) his words were--"What a fine sentence that is! Why, do you not think so?" I mumbled out, sillily enough, that it did not seem any thing particular. "Then," said he, "you were not listening. I will read it again. There now!" As he still got nothing out of me, he turned round upon me, as we sat side by side on the sofa, with "Harriet, what is the matter with you? I never knew you so slow to praise any thing before." I replied, in utter confusion,--"I never could baffle any body. The truth is, that paper is mine." He made no reply; read on in silence, and spoke no more till I was on my feet to come away. He then laid his hand on my shoulder, and said gravely (calling me "dear" for the first time) "Now, dear, leave it to other women to make shirts and darn stockings; and do you devote yourself to this." I went home in a sort of dream, so that the squares of the pavement seemed to float before my eyes. That evening made me an authoress.
It was not all so glorious, however. I immediately after began to write
my first work,--"Devotional Exercises," of which I now
remember nothing. But I remember my brother's anxious doubting looks,
in which I discerned some disappointment, as he read the M.S. I remember
his gentle hints about precision and arrangement of ideas, given with the
utmost care not to discourage me; and I understood the significance of his
praise of the concluding essay (in a letter from Madeira, where he was
closing his precious life)--praise of the definiteness of object in
that essay, which, as he observed, furnished the key to his doubts about
the rest of the book, and which he conveyed only from an anxious desire
that I should work my way up to the high reputation which he felt I was
destined to attain. This just and gentle treatment, contrasting with the
early discouragements which had confused my own judgment, affected me
inexpressibly. I took these hints to heart in trying my hand at a sort of
theologico-metaphysical novel, which I entered upon with a notion of
enlightening the world through the same kind of interest as was then
excited by Mr. Ward's novel, "Tremaine,"
which was making a prodigious noise, and which perfectly enchanted me, except by its bad philosophy. I mighty enjoyed the prospect of this work, as did my mother; and I was flattered by finding that Rachel had higher expectations from it than even my own. But, at the end of half a volume, I became aware that it was excessively dull, and I stopped. Many years afterwards I burned it; and this is the only piece of my work but two (and a review) in my whole career that never was published.
Already I found that it would not do to copy what I wrote; and here (at
the outset of this novel) I discontinued the practice for ever,--thus
saving an immense amount of time which I humbly think is wasted by other
authors. The prevalent doctrine about revision and copying, and especially
Miss Edgeworth's account of her method of writing,--scribbling
first, then submitting her manuscript to her father, and copying and
altering many times over till, (if I remember right) no one paragraph of
her "Leonora" stood at last as it did at first,--made me
suppose copying and alteration to be indispensable. But I immediately found
that there was no use in copying if I did not alter; and that, if ever I
did alter, I had to change back again; and I, once for all committed myself
to a single copy. I believe the only writings I ever copied were
"Devotional Exercises," and my first tale;--a trumpery
story called "Christmas Day." It seemed clear to me that
distinctness and precision must be lost if alterations were made in a
different state of mind from that which suggested the first utterance; and
I was delighted when, long afterwards, I met with Cobbett's
advice;--to know first what you want to say, and then say it in the
first words that occur to you. The excellence of Cobbett's style, and
the manifest falling off of Miss Edgeworth's after her father's
death (so frankly avowed by herself) were strong confirmations of my own
experience. I have since, more than once, weakly fallen into
mannerism,--now metaphysically elliptical,--now poetically
amplified, and even, in one instance, bordering on the Carlylish; but
through all this folly, as well as since having a style of my
own,--(that is, finding expression by words as
easy as breathing air)--I have always used the same method in writing. I have always made sure of what I meant to say, and then written it down without care or anxiety,--glancing at it again only to see if any words were omitted or repeated, and not altering a single phrase in a whole work. I mention this because I think I perceive that great mischief arises from the notion that botching in the second place will compensate for carelessness in the first. I think I perceive that confusion of thought, and cloudiness or affectation in style are produced or aggravated by faulty prepossessions in regard to the method of writing for the press. The mere saving of time and labour in my own case may be regarded as no inconsiderable addition to my term of life.--Some modifications of this doctrine there must of course be in accordance with the strength or weakness of the natural faculty of expression by language: but I speak as strongly as I have just done because I have no reason to believe that the natural aptitude was particularly strong in myself. I believe that such facility as I have enjoyed has been mainly owing to my unconscious preparatory discipline; and especially in the practice of translation from various languages, as above related. And, again, after seeing the manuscripts or proof-sheets of many of the chief authors of my own time, I am qualified to say that the most marked mannerists of their day are precisely those whose manuscripts show most erasures and their proof-sheets most alterations.
Next, our beloved brother, who had always shown a tendency to
consumption, ruptured a blood-vessel in the lungs, and had to give
up his practice and professional offices, and to go, first into Devonshire,
and afterwards to Madeira, whence he never returned. He died at sea, on his
way home. I went with him and his wife into Devonshire, for the spring of
1823; and it was my office to read aloud for many hours of every day, which
I did
with great satisfaction, and with inestimable profit from his comments and unsurpassed conversation. Before breakfast, and while he enjoyed his classical reading on the sofa, I rambled about the neighbourhood of Torquay,--sometimes sketching, sometimes reading, sometimes studying the sea from the shelter of the caves, and, on the whole, learning to see nature, under those grave circumstances, with new eyes. Soon after our return, their child was born; and never was infant more beloved. It was my great solace during the dreary season of dismantling that home which we had had so much delight in forming, and sending those from us who were the joy of our lives. It was then that I learned the lesson I spoke of,--of our peace of mind being, at least in times of crisis, independent of external circumstances. Day by day, I had been silently growing more heartsick at the prospect of the parting; and I especially dreaded the night before;--the going to bed, with the thoughtful night before me, after seeing every thing packed, and knowing that the task of the coming day was the parting. Yet that night was one of the happiest of my life. It is easy to conceive what the process of thought was, and what the character of the religious emotion which so elevated me. The lesson was a sound one, whatever might be the virtue of the thoughts and feelings involved. The next day, all was over at length. I was the last who held the dear baby,--even to the moment of his being put into the carriage. The voyage was injurious to him; and it was probably the cause of his death, which took place soon after reaching Madeira. There was something peaceful, and very salutary in the next winter, though it could not reasonably be called a very happy one. There was a close mutual reliance between my mother and myself,--my sister Rachel being absent, and our precious little Ellen, the family darling, at school. We kept up a close correspondence with our absent ones; and there were the beautiful Madeira letters always to look for. I remember reading Clarendon's Rebellion aloud to my mother in the evenings; and we took regular walks in all weathers. I had my own troubles and anxieties, however. A dream had passed before me since the visit of a student friend of my brother James's, which
some words of my father's and mother's had strengthened into hope and trust. This hope was destined to be crushed for a time in two hearts by the evil offices of one who had much to answer for in what he did. This winter was part of the time of suspense. Under my somewhat heavy troubles my health had some time before begun to give way; and now I was suffering from digestive derangement which was not cured for four years after; and then only after severe and daily pain from chronic inflammation of the stomach. Still, with an ailing body, an anxious and often aching heart, and a mind which dreaded looking into the future, I regarded this winter of 1823-4 as a happy one;--the secret of which I believe to have been that I felt myself beloved at home, and enjoyed the keen relish of duties growing out of domestic love. At the end of the next June, my brother died. We were all prepared for the event, as far as preparation is ever possible; but my dear father, the most unselfish of men, who never spoke of his own feelings, and always considered other people's, never, we think, recovered from this grief. He was very quiet at the time; but his health began to go wrong, and his countenance to alter; and during the two remaining years of his life, he sustained a succession of cares which might have broken down a frame less predisposed for disease than his had become. In our remembrance of him there is no pain on the ground of any thing in his character. Humble, simple, upright, self-denying, affectionate to as many people as possible, and kindly to all, he gave no pain, and did all the good he could. He had not the advantage of an adequate education; but there was a natural shrewdness about him which partly compensated for the want. He was not the less, but the more, anxious to give his children the advantages which he had never received; and the whole family have always felt that they owe a boundless debt of gratitude to both their parents for the self-sacrificing efforts they made, through all the vicissitudes of the times, to fit their children in the best possible manner for independent action in life. My father's business, that of a Norwich manufacturer, was subject to the fluctuations to which all manufacture was liable during the war, and to others of its own; and our parents'
method was to have no reserves from their children, to let us know precisely the state of their affairs, and to hold out to us, in the light of this evidence, the probability that we might sooner or later have to work for our own living,--daughters as well as sons,--and that it was improbable that we should ever be rich. The time was approaching which was to prove the wisdom of their method. My father's business, never a very enriching one, had been for some time prosperous; and this year (1824) he indulged my brother James and myself with a journey;--a walking tour in Scotland, in the course of which we walked five hundred miles in a month. I am certainly of opinion now that that trip aggravated my stomach-complaint; and I only wonder it was no worse. I spent the next winter with my married sister, my sister-in-law, and other friends, and returned to Norwich in April, to undergo long months,--even years--of anxiety and grief.
In the reviews of my "History of the Thirty Years'
Peace," one chapter is noticed more emphatically than all the
rest;--the chapter on the speculations, collapse, and crash of 1825
and 1826. If that chapter is written with some energy, it is no wonder; for
our family fortunes were implicated in that desperate struggle, and its
issue determined the whole course of life of the younger members of our
family,--my own among the rest. One point on which my narrative in the
History is emphatic is the hardship on the sober man of business of being
involved in the destruction which overtook the speculator; and I had family
and personal reasons for saying this. My father never speculated; but he
was well nigh ruined during that calamitous season by the deterioration in
value of his stock. His stock of manufactured goods was larger, of course,
than it would have been in a time of less enterprise; and week by week its
value declined, till, in the middle of the winter, when the banks were
crashing down all over England, we began to contemplate absolute ruin.
My.father was evidently a dying man;--not from anxiety of mind, for
his liver disease was found to be owing to obstruction caused by a
prodigious gall-stone: but his illness was no doubt aggravated
and rendered more harassing by his cares for his
family. In the spring he was sent to Cheltenham, whence he returned after some weeks with the impression of approaching death on his face. He altered his Will, mournfully reducing the portions left to his daughters to something which could barely be called an independence. Then, three weeks before his death, he wisely, and to our great relief, dismissed the whole subject. He told my brother Henry, his partner in the business, that he had done what he could while he could: that he was now a dying man, and could be of no further use in the struggle, and that he wished to keep his mind easy for his few remaining days: so he desired to see no more letters of business, and to hear no more details. For a few more days, he sunned himself on the grass-plat in the garden, in the warm June mornings: then could not leave the house; then could not come down stairs; and, towards the end of the month died quietly, with all his family round his bed.--As for my share in this family experience,--it was delightful to me that he took an affectionate pleasure in my poor little book,--of value to me now for that alone,--"Addresses, Prayers and Hymns, for the use of families and school." It was going through the press at that time; and great was my father's satisfaction; and high were his hopes, I believe, of what I should one day be and do. Otherwise, I have little comfort in thinking of his last illness. The old habit of fear came upon me, more irresistibly than ever, on the assembling of the family; and I mourn to think how I kept out of the way, whenever it was possible, and how little I said to my father of what was in my heart about him and my feelings towards him. The more easily his humility was satisfied with whatever share of good fell to him, the more richly he should have been ministered to. By me he was not,--owing to this unhappy shyness. My married sister, who was an incomparable nurse, did the duty of others besides her own; and mine among the rest, while I was sorrowing and bitterly chiding myself in silence, and perhaps in apparent insensibility.
And now my own special trial was at hand. It is not necessary to go into
detail about it. The news which got abroad that we had grown comparatively
poor,--and the evident certainty
that we were never likely to be rich, so wrought upon the mind of one friend as to break down the mischief which I have referred to as caused by ill-offices. My friend had believed me rich, was generous about making me a poor man's wife, and had been discouraged in more ways than one. He now came to me, and we were soon virtually engaged. I was at first very anxious and unhappy. My veneration for his morale was such that I felt that I dared not undertake the charge of his happiness: and yet I dared not refuse, because I saw it would be his death blow. I was ill,--I was deaf,--I was in an entangled state of mind between conflicting duties and some lower considerations; and many a time did I wish, in my fear that I should fail, that had never seen him. I am far from wishing that now;--now that the beauty of his goodness remains to me, clear of all painful regrets. But there was a fearful period to pass through. Just when I was growing happy, surmounting my fears and doubts, and enjoying his attachment, the consequences of his long struggle and suspense overtook him. He became suddenly insane; and after months of illness of body and mind, he died. The calamity was aggravated to me by the unaccountable insults I received from his family, whom I had never seen. years afterwards, when his sister and I met, the mystery was explained. His family had been given to understand, by cautious insinuations, that I was actually engaged to another, while receiving my friend's addresses! There has never been any doubt in my mind that, considering what I was in those days, it was happiest for us both that our union was prevented by any means. I am, in truth, very thankful for not having married at all. I have never since been tempted, nor have suffered any thing at all in relation to that matter which is held to be all-important to woman,--love and marriage. Nothing, I mean, beyond occasional annoyance, presently disposed of. Every literary woman, no doubt, has plenty of importunity of that sort to deal with; but freedom of mind and coolness of manner dispose of it very easily: and since the time I have been speaking of, my mind has been wholly free from all idea of love affairs. My subsequent literary life in London was clear from all difficulty and embarrassment,
--no doubt because I was evidently too busy, and too full of interests of other kinds to feel any awkwardness,--to say nothing of my being then thirty years of age; an age at which, if ever, a woman is certainly qualified to take care of herself. I can easily conceive how I might have been tempted,--how some deep springs in my nature might have been touched, then as earlier; but, as a matter of fact, they never were; and I consider the immunity a great blessing, under the liabilities of a moral condition such as mine was in the olden time. If I had had a husband dependent on me for his happiness, the responsibility would have made me wretched. I had not faith enough in myself to endure avoidable responsibility. If my husband had not depended on me for his happiness, I should have been jealous. So also with children. The care would have so overpowered the joy,--the love would have so exceeded the ordinary chances of life,--the fear on my part would have so impaired the freedom on theirs, that I rejoice not to have been involved in a relation for which I was, or believed myself unfit. The veneration in which I hold domestic life has always shown me that that life was not for those whose self-respect had been early broken down, or had never grown. Happily, the majority are free from this disability. Those who suffer under it had better be as I,--as my observation of married, as well as single life assures me. When I see what conjugal love is, in the extremely rare cases in which it is seen in its perfection, I feel that there is a power of attachment in me that has never been touched. When I am among little children, it frightens me to think what my idolatry of my own children would have been. But, through it all, I have ever been thankful to be alone. My strong will, combined with anxiety of conscience, makes me fit only to live alone; and my taste and liking are for living alone. The older I have grown, the more serious and irremediable have seemed to me the evils and disadvantages of married life, as it exists among us at this time: and I am provided with what it is the bane of single life in ordinary cases to want,--substantial, laborious and serious occupation. My business in life has been to think and learn, and to speak out with absolute freedom what I have
thought and learned. The freedom is itself a positive and never-failing enjoyment to me, after the bondage of my early life. My work and I have been fitted to each other, as is proved by the success of my work and my own happiness in it. The simplicity and independence of this vocation first suited my infirm and ill-developed nature, and then sufficed for my needs, together with family ties and domestic duties, such as I have been blessed with, and as every woman's heart requires. Thus, I am not only entirely satisfied with my lot, but think it the very best for me,--under my constitution and circumstances: and I long ago came to the conclusion that, without meddling with the case of the wives and mothers, I am probably the happiest single woman in England. Who could have believed, in that awful year 1826, that such would be my conclusion a quarter of a century afterwards!
My health gave way, more and more; and my suffering throughout the year
1827 from the pain which came on every evening was such as it is
disagreeable to think of now. For pain of body and mind it was truly a
terrible year, though it had its satisfactions, one of the chief of which
was a long visit which I paid to my brother Robert and his wife (always a
dear friend of mine to this day) at their home in Dudley. I remember our
walks in the grounds of Dudley Castle, and the organ-playing at
home, after my brother's business hours, and the inexhaustible charm
of the baby, as gleams amidst the darkness of that season. I found then the
unequalled benefit of long solitary walks in such a case as mine. I had
found it even at Norwich, in midwinter, when all was bleak on that exposed
level country; and now, amidst the beauty which surrounds Dudley, there was
no end of my walks or of my relish for them; and I always came home with a
cheered and lightened heart. Such poetry as I wrote (I can't bear to
think of it) I wrote in those days. The mournful pieces, and those which
assume not to be mournful, which may be found in my
"Miscellanies" (published in America) may be referred to that
period. And so may some dull and doleful prose writings, published by the
solemn old Calvinistic publisher, Houlston, of Wellington in Shropshire. An
acquaintance
of mine had some time before put me in the way of correspondence with Houlston; and he had accepted the first two little eightpenny stories I sent him. I remember the amusement and embarrassment of the first piece of pecuniary success. As soon as it was known in the house that the letter from Wellington contained five pounds, every body wanted, and continued to want all day, to borrow five pounds of me. After a pause, Houlston wrote to ask for another story of somewhat more substance and bulk. My Globe newspaper readings suggested to me, the subject of Machine-breaking as a good one,--some recent outrages of that sort having taken place: but I had not remotest idea that I was meditating writing on Political Economy, the very name of which was then either unknown to me, or conveyed no meaning. I wrote the little story called "The Rioters;" and its success was such that some hosiers and lacemakers of Derby and Nottingham sent me a request to write a tale on the subject of Wages, which I did, calling it "The Turn Out." The success of both was such as to dispose Mr. Houlston to further dealings; and I wrote for him a good many tracts, which he sold for a penny, and for which he gave me a sovereign apiece. This seems to be the place in which to tell a fact or two about the use made of those early writings of mine, by the old man's sons and successors. Old Houlston died not very long afterwards, leaving among his papers, (I now remember,) a manuscript story of mine which I suppose lies there still; about a good governess, called, I think, "Caroline Shirley." I mention this that, if that story should come out with my name after my death, it may be known to have been written somewhere about this time,--1827. Old Houlston died, on perfectly good terms with me, as far as I remember. The next thing I heard was (and I heard it from various quarters) that those little tracts of mine, and some of my larger tales, were selling and circulating as Mrs. Sherwood's,--Houlston being her publisher. This was amusing; and I had no other objection to it than that it was not true. Next, certain friends and relations of my own who went to the Houlstons' shop in Paternoster Row, and asked for any works by me, had foisted upon them any rubbish that was
convenient, under pretence of its being mine. A dear old aunt was very mysterious and complimentary to me, one day, on her return from London, about "Judith Potts;" and was puzzled to find all her allusions lost upon me. At length, she produced a little story so entitled, which had been sold to her as mine over the Houlstons' counter, and, as she believed, by Mr. Houlston himself. This was rather too bad; for "Judith Potts" was not altogether a work that one would wish to build one's fame on: but there was worse to come. Long years after, when such reputation as I have had was at its height, (when I was ill at Tynemouth, about 1842) there had been some machine breaking; and Messrs. Houlston and Stoneman (as the firm then stood) brought out afresh my poor little early story of "The Rioters," with my name in the title-page for the first time, and not only with every external appearance of being fresh, but with interpolations and alterations which made it seem really so. For instance, "His Majesty" was altered to "Her Majesty." By advice of my friends, I made known the trick far and wide; and I wrote to Messrs. Houlston and Stoneman, to inform them that I was aware of their fraudulent transaction, and that it was actionable. These caterers for the pious needs of the religious world replied with insults, having nothing better to offer. They pleaded my original permission to their father to use my name or not; which was a fact, but no excuse for the present use of it: and to the gravest part of the whole charge,--that of illegal alterations for the fraudulent purpose of concealing the date of the book, they made no reply whatever. I had reason to believe, however, that by the exertions of my friends, the trick was effectually exposed. As far as I remember, this is almost the only serious complaint I have had to make of any publisher, during my whole career.
Meantime, in 1827 I was on excellent terms with old Houlston, and
writing for him a longer tale than I had yet tried my hand on. It was
called "Principle and Practice;" and it succeeded well enough
to induce us to put forth a "Sequel to Principle and Practice"
three or four years after. These were all that I wrote for Houlston, as far
as I remember, except a little
book whose appearance made me stand aghast. A most excellent young servant of ours, who had become quite. a friend of the household, went out to Madeira with my brother and his family, and confirmed our attachment to her by her invaluable services to them. Her history was a rather remarkable, and a very interesting one; and I wrote it in the form of four of Houlston's penny tracts. lie threw them together, and made a little book of them; and the heroine, who would never have heard of them as tracts, was speedily put in possession of her Memoirs in the form of the little book called "My Servant Rachel." An aunt of mine, calling on her one day, found her standing in the middle of the floor, and her husband reading the book over her shoulder. She was hurt at one anecdote,--which was certainly true, but which she had forgotten: but, as a whole, it could not but have been most gratifying to her. She ever after treated me with extreme kindness, and even tenderness; and we are hearty friends still, whenever we meet.--And here ends the chapter of my authorship in which Houlston, my first patron, was concerned.
It was in the autumn of 1827, I think, that a neighbour lent my sister
Mrs. Marcet's "Conversations on Political Economy." I
took up the book, chiefly to see what Political Economy precisely was; and
great was my surprise to find that I had been teaching it unawares, in my
stories about Machinery and Wages. It struck me at once that the principles
of the whole science might be advantageously conveyed in the same
way,--not by being smothered up in a story, but by being exhibited in
their natural workings in selected passages of social life. It has always
appeared very strange to me that so few people seem to have understood
this. Students of all manner of physical sciences afterwards wanted me to
"illustrate" things of which social life (and therefore
fiction) can afford no illustration. I used to say till I was tired that
none but moral and political science admitted of the method at all; and I
doubt whether many of those who talk about it understand the matter, to
this day. In the Edinburgh Review of my Political Economy series,--a
review otherwise as weak as it is kind,--there is the best
appreciation of
the principle of the work that I have seen any where; --a page or so* of perfect understanding of my view and purpose. That view and purpose date from my reading of Mrs. Marcet's Conversations. During that reading, groups of personages rose up from the pages, and a procession of action glided through its arguments, as afterwards from the pages of Adam Smith, and all the other Economists. I mentioned my notion, I remember, when we were sitting at work, one bright afternoon at home. Brother James nodded assent; my mother said "do it;" and we went to tea, unconscious what a great thing we had done since dinner.
There was meantime much fiddle-faddling to be gone through, with
such work as "Principle and Practice" and the like. But a new
educational period was about to open.--My complaint grew so serious,
and was so unbearably painful, and, in truth, medically mismanaged at
Norwich, that my family sent me to Newcastle, to my sister's, where
her husband treated me successfully, and put me in the way of entire cure.
It was a long and painful business; but the method succeeded; and, in the
course of time, and by the unremitting care of my host and hostess, I was
sent home in a condition to manage myself. It was some years before the
stomach entirely recovered its tone; but it was thoroughly healthy from
that time forward.
While I was at Newcastle, a spirited advertisement from the new editor
of the Monthly Repository, Mr. Fox, met my eye, appealing for literary aid
to those who were interested in its objects. I could not resist sending a
practical reply; and I was gratified to learn, long afterwards, that when
my name was mentioned to Mr. Fox, before he issued his appeal, he had said
that he wished for my assistance from the moment when he, as editor,
discovered from the office books that I was the writer of certain papers
which had fixed his attention: but that he could not specially invite
my contributions while he had no funds which could enable him to offer due
remuneration. His reply to my first letter was so cordial that I was
animated to offer him extensive assistance; and if he had then no money to
send me,
___________________
he paid me in something more valuable--in a course of frank and generous criticism which was of the utmost benefit to me. His editorial correspondence with me was unquestionably the occasion, and in great measure the cause, of the greatest intellectual progress I ever made before the age of thirty. I sent him Essays, Reviews and poetry (or what I called such)--the best specimens of which may be found in the "Miscellanies," before mentioned.--The Diffusion Society was at that time the last novelty. A member of the Committee who overrated his own influence, invited me to write a Life of Howard the Philanthropist, which I did, with great satisfaction, and under the positive promise of thirty pounds for it. From time to time, tidings were sent to me of its being approved, and at length of its being actually in type. In the approaching crisis of my fortunes, when I humbly asked when I might expect any part of the payment, I could obtain no clear answer: and the end of the matter was that it was found that half-a-dozen or more Lives of Howard had been ordered in a similar manner, by different members of the Committee; that my manuscript was found, after several years, at the bottom of a chest,--not only dirty, but marked and snipped,--its contents having been abundantly used without any acknowledgment,--as was afterwards admitted to me by some of the members who were especially interested in the prison question. I am far from regretting the issue now, because new materials have turned up which would have shamed that biography out of existence: but the case is worth mentioning, as an illustration of the way in which literary business is managed by corporate directories. I believe most people who ever had any connexion with the Diffusion Society have some similar story to tell.
While I was at Newcastle, a change, which turned out a very happy one,
was made in our domestic arrangements. My cousin, James Martineau Lee, who
had succeeded my brother as a surgeon at Norwich, having died that year,
his aged mother,--(my father's only surviving sister) came to
live with us; and with us she remained till her death in 1840. She was
hardly settled with us when the last of our series of family misfortunes
occurred. I call it a misfortune, because in common parlance it would be so treated; but I believe that my mother and all her other daughters would have joined heartily, if asked, in my conviction that it was one of the best things that ever happened to us. My mother and her daughters lost, at a stroke, nearly all they had in the world by the failure of the house,--the old manufactory,--in which their money was placed. We never recovered more than the merest pittance; and at the time, I, for one, was left destitute;--that is to say, with precisely one shilling in my purse. The effect upon me of this new "calamity," as people called it, was like that of a blister upon a dull, weary pain, or series of pains. I rather enjoyed it, even at the time; for there was scope for action; whereas, in the long, dreary series of preceding trials, there was nothing possible but endurance. In a very short time, my two sisters at home and I began to feel the blessing of a wholly new freedom. I, who had been obliged to write before breakfast, or in some private way, had henceforth liberty to do my own work in my own way; for we had lost our gentility. Many and many a time since have we said that, but for that loss of money, we might have lived on in the ordinary provincial method of ladies with small means, sewing, and economizing, and growing narrower every year: whereas, by being thrown, while it was yet time, on our own resources, we have worked hard and usefully, won friends, reputation and independence, seen the world abundantly, abroad and at home, and, in short, have truly lived instead of vegetated.
It was in June, 1829, that the old Norwich house failed. I had been
spending a couple of days at a country town, where the meeting of the
provincial Unitarian Association took place. Some of the members knew, on
the last day, what had happened to us; but I heard it first in the streets
of Norwich on my way to our own house. As well as I can remember, a pretty
faithful account of the event is given in one of my Political Economy
tales,- "Berkeley the Banker;" mixed up however with a
good many facts about other persons and times. I need not give the story
over again here, nor any part of it but what is concerned in the history of
my own mind and my own work.--
It was presently settled that my mother, my dear old aunt and I should live on in the family house. One sister went forth to earn the independence which she achieved after busy and honourable years of successful exertion. The youngest was busy teaching and training the children, chiefly, of the family, till her marriage.
The question was--what was I to do, with my deafness
precluding both music and governessing. I devised a plan for guiding the
studies of young people by correspondence, and sent out written
proposals: but, while every body professed to approve the scheme, no
pupil ever offered. I was ere long very glad of this; for the toil of the
pen would have been great, with small results of any kind, in comparison to
those which accrued from what I did write.--In the first place, I
inquired about my "Life of Howard," and found, to my interior
consternation, that there was no prospect in that quarter. Nobody knew that
I was left with only one shilling, insomuch that I dreaded the arrival of a
thirteenpenny letter, in those days of dear postage. The family supposed me
to be well-supplied, through Houlston's recent payment for one
of my little books: but that money had gone where all the rest was.
The sale of a ball-dress brought me three pounds. That was
something. I hoped, and not without reason, that my needle would bring me
enough for my small expenses, for a time; and I did earn a good many pounds
by fancy-work, in the course of the next year,--after which it
ceased to be necessary. For two years, I lived on fifty pounds a year. My
mother, always generous in money matters, would not hear of my paying my
home expenses till she saw that I should be the happier for her allowing
it: and then she assured me, and proved to me, that, as she had to
keep house at all events, and as my habits were exceedingly frugal (taking
no wine, &c.) thirty pounds a year would repay her for my residence.
Twenty pounds more sufficed for clothes, postage and sundries: and
thus did I live, as long as it was necessary, on fifty pounds a
year.--I must mention here a gift which dropped in upon me at that
time which gave me more pleasure than any money-gift that I ever
received. Our rich relations made boun-
tiful presents to my sisters, for their outfit on leaving home: but they supposed me in possession of the money they knew I had earned, and besides concluded that I could not want much, as I was to stay at home. My application about the Howard manuscript however came to the knowledge of a cousin of mine,--then and ever since, to this hour, a faithful friend to me; and he, divining the case, sent me ten pounds, in a manner so beautiful that his few lines filled me with joy. That happened on a Sunday morning; and I well remember what a happy morning it was. I had become too deaf now for public worship; and I went every fair Sunday morning over the wildest bit of country near Norwich,--a part of Mousehold, which was a sweet breezy common, overlooking the old city in its most picturesque aspect. There I went that Sunday morning; and I remember well the freshness of the turf and the beauty of the tormentilla which bestarred it, in the light and warmth of that good cousin's kindness
I now wrote to Mr. Fox, telling him of my changed circumstances, which
would compel me to render less gratuitous service than hitherto to the
"Repository." Mr. Fox replied by apologetically placing at my
disposal the only sum at his command at that time,--fifteen pounds a
year, for which I was to do as much reviewing as I thought proper. With
this letter arrived a parcel of nine books for review or notice.
Overwhelming as this was, few letters that I had ever received had given me
more pleasure than this. Here was, in the first place, work; in the next,
continued literary discipline under Mr. Fox; and lastly, this money would
buy my clothes. So to work I went, with needle and pen. I had before begun
to study German; and now, that study was my recreation; and I found a new
inspiration in the world of German literature, which was just opening,
widely and brightly, before my eager and awakened mind. it was truly
life that I lived during those days of strong intellectual and
moral effort.
After I had received about a dozen books, Mr. Fox asked me to send him
two or three tales, such as his "best readers" would not pass
by. I was flattered by this request; but I had no idea
that I could fulfil his wish, any more than I could refuse to try. Now was the time to carry out the notion I had formed on reading "Helon's Pilgrimage to Jerusalem,"--as I related above. I wrote "The Hope of the Hebrew" (the first of the "Traditions of Palestine,") and two others, as unlike it and each other as I could make them:--viz, "Solitude and Society," and "The Early Sowing,"--the Unitarian City Mission being at that time under deliberation.
I carried these stories to London myself, and put them into Mr.
Fox's own hands,--being kindly invited for a long stay at the
house of an uncle, in pursuit of my own objects. The Hebrew tale was put
forth first; and the day after its appearance, such inquiries were made of
Mr. Fox at a public dinner in regard to the authorship that I was at once
determined to make a volume of them; and the "Traditions of
Palestine" appeared accordingly, in the next spring. Except that
first story, the whole volume was written in a fortnight. By this little
volume was my name first made known in literature. I still love the memory
of the time when it was written, though there was little other
encouragement than my own pleasure in writing, and in the literary
discipline which I continued to enjoy under Mr. Fox's editorship.
With him I always succeeded; but I failed in all other directions during
that laborious winter and spring. I had no literary acquaintance or
connexion whatever; and I could not get any thing that I wrote even looked
at; so that every thing went into the "Repository" at last. I
do not mean that any amount of literary connexion would necessarily have
been of any service to me; for I do not believe that
"patronage," "introductions" and the like are of
any avail, in a general way. I know this;--that I have always been
anxious to extend to young or struggling authors the sort of aid which
would have been so precious to me in that winter of 1829-1830, and
that, in above twenty years, I have never succeeded but once. I obtained
the publication of "The Two Old Men's Tales,"--the
first of Mrs. Marsh's novels: but, from the time of my own
success to this hour, every other attempt, of the scores I have made, to
get a hearing for young or new aspirants has failed. My own
heart was often very near sinking,--as were my bodily forces; and with reason. During the daylight hours of that winter, I was poring over fine fancy-work, by which alone I earned any money; and after tea, I went upstairs to my room, for my day's literary labour. The quantity I wrote, at prodigious expenditure of nerve, surprises me now,--after my long breaking-in to hard work. Every night that winter, I believe, I was writing till two, or even three in the morning,--obeying always the rule of the house,--of being present at the breakfast table as the clock struck eight. Many a time I was in such a state of nervous exhaustion and distress that I was obliged to walk to and fro in the room before I could put on paper the last line of a page, or the last half sentence of an essay or review. Yet was I very happy. The deep-felt sense of progress and expansion was delightful; and so was the exertion of all my faculties; and, not least, that of will to overcome my obstructions, and force my way to that power of public speech of which I believed myself more or less worthy. The worst apprehension I felt,--far worse than that of disappointment, mortification and poverty,--was from the intense action of my mind. Such excitement as I was then sustaining and enjoying could not always last; and I dreaded the reaction, or the effects of its mere cessation. I was beginning, however, to learn that the future,--our intellectual and moral future,--had better be left to take care of itself, as long as the present is made the best use of; and I found, in due course, that each period of the mind's training has its own excitements, and that the less its condition is quacked, or made the subject of anticipation at all, the better for the mind's health. But my habit of anxiety was not yet broken. It was scarcely weakened. I have since found that persons who knew me only then, do not recognize me or my portraits now,--or at any tine within the last twenty years. The frown of those old days, the rigid face, the sulky mouth, the forbidding countenance, which looked as if it had never had a smile upon it, told a melancholy story which came to an end long ago: but it was so far from its end then that it amazes me now to think what liberality and forbearance were requisite in the treatment of me by Mr. Fox
and the friends I met at his house, and how capable they were of that liberality. My Sabbatarian strictness, and my prejudices on a hundred subjects must have been absurd and disagreeable enough to them: but their gentleness, respect and courtesy were such as I now remember with gratitude and pleasure. They saw that I was outgrowing my shell, and they had patience with me till I had rent it and cast it off; and if they were not equally ready with their sympathy when I had found freedom, but disposed to turn from me, in proportion as I was able to take care of myself, to do the same office for other incipient or struggling beings, this does not lessen my sense of obligation to them for the help and support they gave me in my season of intellectual and moral need.
My griefs deepened towards the close of that London visit. While failing
in all my attempts to get my articles even looked at, proposals were made
to me to remain in town, and undertake proof-correcting and other
literary drudgery, on a salary which would, with my frugal habits, have
supported me, while leaving time for literary effort on my own account. I
rejoiced unspeakably in this opening, and wrote home in high satisfaction
at the offer which would enable my young sister,--then only
eighteen,--to remain at home, pursuing her studies in companionship
with a beloved cousin of nearly her own age, and gaining something like
maturity and self-reliance before going out into the cold dark
sphere of governessing. But, to my disappointment,--I might almost
say, horror,--my mother sent me peremptory orders to go home, and to
fill the place which my poor young sister was to vacate. I rather wonder
that, being seven and twenty years old, I did not assert my independence,
and refuse to return,--so clear as was, in my eyes, the injustice of
remanding me to a position of helplessness and dependence, when a career of
action and independence was opening before me. If I had known what my young
sister was thinking and feeling, I believe I should have taken my own way,
for her sake: but I did not know all: the instinct and habit of
old obedience prevailed, and I went home, with some resentment, but far
more grief and desolation in my heart. My mother afterwards looked
back with surprise upon the peremptoriness with which she had assumed the direction of my affairs; and she told me, (what I had suspected before) that my well-meaning hostess, who knew nothing of literature, and was always perplexing me with questions as to "how much I should get" by each night's work, had advised my return home, to pursue,--not literature but needlework, by which, she wrote, I had proved that I could earn money, and in which career I should always have the encouragement and support of herself and her family. (Nothing could be more gracious than the acknowledgment of their mistake volunteered by this family at a subsequent time.) My mother was wont to be guided by them, whenever they offered their counsel; and this time it cost me very dear. I went down to Norwich, without prospect,--without any apparent chance of independence; but as fully resolved against being dependent as at any time before or after.
My mother received me very tenderly. She had no other idea at the moment
than that she had been doing her best for my good; and I, for my part,
could not trust myself to utter a word of what was swelling in my heart. I
arrived worn and weary with a night journey; and my mother was so uneasy at
my looks that she made me lie down on her bed after breakfast, and, as I
could not sleep, came and sat by me for a talk.--My news was that the
Central Unitarian Association had advertized for prize Essays, by which
Unitarianism was to be presented to the notice of Catholics, Jews, and
Mohammedans. The Catholic one was to be adjudicated on at the end of
September (1830) and the other two in the following March. Three
sub-committees were appointed for the examination of the manuscripts
sent in, and for decision on them: and these sub-committees
were composed of different members, to bar all suspicion of partiality. The
essays were to be superscribed with a motto; and the motto was to be
repeated on a sealed envelope, containing the writer's name, which
was not to be looked at till the prize was awarded; and then only in the
ease of the successful candidate. The prizes were, ten guineas for the
Catholic, fifteen for the Jewish, and twenty for the Mohammedan essay. I
told my mother, as
she sat by the bedside, of this gleam of a prospect for me; and she replied that she thought it might be as well to try for one prize. My reply was "If I try at all, it shall be for all." The money reward was trifling, even in the eyes of one so poor and prospectless as I was; but I felt an earnest desire to ascertain whether I could write, as Mr. Fox and other personal friends said I could. I saw that it was a capital opportunity for a fair trial of my competency in comparison with others; and I believe it was no small consideration to me that I should thus, at all events, tide over many months before I need admit despair. My mother thought this rather desperate work; but she gave me her sympathy and encouragement during the whole period of suspense,--as did the dear old aunt who lived with us. No one else was to know; and my secret was perfectly kept. The day after my return, I began to collect my materials; and before the week was done, I had drawn out the scheme of my Essay, and had begun it. It was done within a month; and then had to be copied, lest any member of the sub-committee should know my hand. I discovered a poor school-boy who wrote a good hand; and I paid him a sovereign which I could ill spare for his work. The parcel was sent in a circuitous way to the office in London: and then, while waiting in suspense, I wrote the Tale called "Five Years of Youth," which I have never looked at since, and have certainly no inclination to read. Messrs. Darton and Harvey gave me twenty pounds for this; and most welcome was such a sum at that time. It set me forward through the toil of the Mohammedan Essay, which I began in October, I think. The "Monthly Repository" for October contained a notification that the sub-committee sitting on the first of the three occasions had adjudged the prize for the Catholic Essay to me; and the money was presently forwarded. That announcement arrived on a Sunday morning and again I had a charming walk over Mousehold, as in the year before, among the heather and the bright tormentilla.
Next day, I went to the Public Library, and brought home Sale's
Koran. A friend whom I met said "What do you bore yourself with that
book for? You will never get through it."
He little guessed what I meant to get out of it, and out of Sale's preliminary Essay. It occurred to me that the apologue form would suit the subject best; and I ventured upon it, though fearing that such daring might be fatal. One of the sub-committee, an eminent scholar, told me afterwards that it was this which mainly influenced his suffrage in my favour. In five weeks, the work was done: but my tribulation about its preparation lasted much longer; for the careless young usher who undertook the copying was not only idle but saucy; and it was doubtful to the last day whether the parcel could be in London by the first of March. Some severe threatening availed however; and that and the Jewish Essay, sent round by different hands (the hands of strangers to the whole scheme) done up in different shapes, and in different kinds of paper, and sealed with different wax and seals, were deposited at the office on the last day of February. The Jewish Essay was beautifully copied by a poor woman who wrote a clerk-like hand. The titles of titles three Essays were--
"The Essential Faith of the Universal Church" (to
Catholics).
"The Faith as Unfolded by Many Prophets" (to
Mohammedans).
"The Faith as Manifested through Israel" (to Jews).
The last of these was grounded on Lessing's "Hundred
Thoughts on the Education of the Human Race," which had taken my
fancy amazingly, in the course of my German studies,--fancy then being
the faculty most concerned in my religious views. Though my mind was
already largely prepared for this piece of work by study, and by having
treated the theory in the "Monthly Repository," and though I
enjoyed the task in a certain sense, it became very onerous before it was
done. I was by that time nearly as thin as possible; and I dreamed of the
destruction of Jerusalem, and saw the burning of the Temple, almost every
night. I might well be exhausted by that great and portentous first of
March; for the year had been one of tremendous labour. I think it was in
that year that a prize was offered by some Unitarian authority or other for
any Essay on Baptism, for which I competed, but came in only third. If that
was the year, my work stood thus:--my literary work, I
mean; for, in that season of poverty, I made and mended every thing I wore,--knitting stockings while reading aloud to my mother and aunt, and never sitting idle a minute. I may add that I made considerable progress in the study of German that year. My writings within the twelve months were as follows:
"Traditions of Palestine" (except the first tale).
"Five Years of Youth."
Seven tracts for Houlston.
Essay on Baptism.
Three Theological Essays for prizes, and
Fifty-two articles for the Monthly Repository.
By this time my mother was becoming aware of the necessity of my being a
good deal in London, if I was to have any chance in the field of
literature; and she consented to spare me for three months in the spring of
every year. An arrangement was made for my boarding at the house of a
cousin for three months from the first of March; and up I went, little
dreaming what would be happening, and how life would be opening before me,
by that day twelvemonths. One of my objects in the first instance was
improving myself in German. An admirable master brought me forward very
rapidly, on extremely low terms, in consideration of my helping him with
his English prefaces to some of his works. After a few weeks of hard work,
writing and studying, I accepted an invitation to spend a few days with
some old friends in Kent. There I refreshed myself among pretty scenery,
fresh air, and pleasant drives with hospitable friends, and with the study
of Faust at night, till a certain day, early in May, which was to prove
very eventful to me. I returned on the outside of the coach, and got down,
with my heavy bag, at my German master's door, where I took a lesson.
It was very hot; and I dragged myself and my bag home, in great fatigue,
and very hungry. Dinner was ordered up again by my hostess, and I sat an
hour, eating my dinner, resting and talking. Then I was leaving the room,
bonnet in hand, when a daughter of my hostess seemed to recollect
something, and called after me to say, "O, I forgot! I suppose"
(she was a very slow
and hesitating speaker)-"I suppose......you know......you know about......those prizes......those prize essays, you know."
"No ...... not I! What do you mean?"
"O! well, we thought ......... we thought you knew ......
"
"Well,--but what?"
"O! you have ......... why, ... you have got all the
prizes."
"Why J! why did you not tell me so before?"
"O! I thought ...... I thought you might know."
"How should I,--just up from the country? But what do
you know?"
"Why, only ......... only the Secretary of the Unitarian
Association has been here,--with a message,--with the news from
the Committee."--It was even so.
The next day was the Unitarian May Meeting; and I had come up from Kent
to attend it. I was shocked to hear, after the morning service, that, in
reading the Report in the evening, the whole story of the Essays must be
told, with the announcement of the result. I had reckoned for weeks on that
meeting, at which Rammohun Roy was to be present, and where the speaking
was expected to be particularly interesting; and neither liked to stay away
nor to encounter the telling of my story. Mr. and Mrs. Fox promised to put
me into a quiet pew if I would go as soon as the gates were opened. I did
so; but the Secretary came, among others, to be introduced, and to
congratulate; and I knew when the dreaded moment was coming, amidst his
reading of the Report, by a glance which he sent in my direction, to see if
his wife, who sat next me, was keeping up my attention. I thought the story
of all the measures and all the precautions taken by the various Committees
the longest I had ever sat under, and the silence with which it was
listened to the very deadest. I heard little indeed but the beating of my
own heart. Then came the catastrophe, and the clapping and the "Hear!
Hear!" I knew that many of my family connexions must be present, who
would be surprised and gratified. But there was one person more than I
expected. I slipped out before the meeting was over, and in the vestibule
was met by my young sister with open arms, and with an offer to go home
with me for the night. She was in the midst of an uncomfortable brief experiment of governessing, a few miles from town, and had been kindly indulged with a permission to go to this meeting, too late to let me know. She had arrived late, and got into the gallery; and before she had been seated many minutes, heard my news, so strangely told! She went home with me; and, after we had written my mother the account of the day, we talked away nearly all the rest of that May night.--It was truly a great event to me,--the greatest since my brother's reception of my first attempt in print. I had now found that I could write, and I might rationally believe that authorship was my legitimate career.
Of course, I had no conception at that time of the thorough weakness and
falseness of the views I had been conveying with so much pains and so much
complacency. This last act in connexion with the Unitarian body was a
bonâ fide one; but all was prepared for
that which ensued,--a withdrawal from the body through those regions
of metaphysical fog in which most deserters from Unitarianism abide for the
rest of their time. The Catholic essay was ignorant and metaphysical, if my
recollection of it is at all correct; and the other two mere fancy
pieces: and I can only say that if either Mohammedans or Jews have
ever been converted by them, such converts can hardly be rational enough to
be worth having. I had now plunged fairly into the spirit of my
time,--that of self-analysis, pathetic self-pity,
typical interpretation of objective matters, and scheme-making, in
the name of God and Man. That such was the stage then reached by my mind,
in its struggles upward and onward, there is outstanding proof in that
series of papers called "Sabbath Musings" which may be found in
the "Monthly Repository" of 1831. There are the papers:
and I hereby declare that I considered them my best production, and
expected they would outlive every thing else I had written or should write.
I was, in truth, satisfied that they were very fine writing, and believed
it for long after,--little aware that the time could ever come when I
should write them down, as I do now, to be morbid, fantastical, and
therefore unphilosophical and untrue. I cannot wonder that it
did not occur to the Unitarians (as far as they thought of me at all) that I was really not of them, at the time that I had picked up their gauntlet, and assumed their championship. If it did not occur to me, no wonder it did not to them. But the clear-sighted among them might and should have seen, by the evidence of those essays themselves, that I was one of those merely nominal Christians who refuse whatever they see to be impossible, absurd or immoral in the scheme or the records of Christianity, and pick out and appropriate what they like, or interpolate it with views, desires and imaginations of their own. I had already ceased to be an Unitarian in the technical sense. I was now one in the dreamy way of metaphysical accommodation, and on the ground of dissent from every other form of Christianity: the time was approaching when, if I called myself so at all, it was only in the free-thinking sense. Then came a few years during which I remonstrated with Unitarians in vain against being claimed by them, which I considered even more injurious to them than to me. They were unwilling, as they said, and as I saw, to recognize the complete severance of the theological bond between us: and I was careful to assert, in every practicable way, that it was no doing of mine if they were taunted by the orthodox with their sectarian fellowship with the writer of "Eastern Life." At length, I hope and believe my old co-religionists understand and admit that I disclaim their theology in toto, and that by no twisting of language or darkening of its meanings can I be made out to have any thing whatever in common with them about religious matters. I perceive that they do not at all understand my views or the grounds of them, or the road to them: but they will not deny that I understand theirs,--chosen expositor as I was of them in the year 1831; and they must take my word for it that there is nothing in common between their theology and my philosophy. Our stand-point is different; and all our views and estimates are different accordingly. Of course, I consider my stand-point the truer one; and my views and estimates the higher, wider, and more accurate, as I shall have occasion to show. I consider myself the best qualified of the two parties to judge of the relative value of the views
of either, because I have the experience of both, while I see that they have no comprehension of mine: but the point on which we may and ought to agree is that my severance from their faith was complete and necessarily final when I wrote "Eastern Life," though many of them could not be brought to admit it, nor some (whom I asked) to assert it at the time. While I saw that many Unitarians resented as a slander the popular imputation that their sect is "a harbourage for infidels," I did not choose that they should have that said of them in my case: and it is clear that if they were unwilling to exchange a disownment with me, they could have no right to quarrel with that imputation in future.
resolved to sustain my health under the suspense, if possible, by keeping up a mood of steady determination, and unfaltering hope. Next, I resolved never to lose my temper, in the whole course of the business. I knew I was right; and people who are aware that they are in the right need never lose temper. Lastly, I resolved to refuse, under any temptation whatever, to accept any loan from my kind mother and aunt. I felt that I could never get over causing them any pecuniary loss,--my mother having really nothing to spare, and my aunt having been abundantly generous to the family already. My own small remnant of property (which came to nothing after all) I determined to risk; and, when the scheme began to take form, I accepted small loans from two opulent friends, whom I was able presently to repay. They knew the risks as well as I; and they were men of business; and there was no reason for declining the timely aid, so freely and kindly granted. What those months of suspense were like, it is necessary now to tell.
I wrote to two or three publishers from Dublin, opening my scheme; but
one after another declined having any thing to do with it, on the ground of
the disturbed state of the public mind, which afforded no encouragement to
put out new books. The bishops had recently thrown out the Reform Bill; and
every body was watching the progress of the Cholera,--then regarded
with as much horror as a plague of the middle ages. The terrifying Order in
Council which froze men's hearts by its doleful commands and
recommendations, was issued just at the same time with my poor proposals;
and no wonder that I met only refusals. Messrs. Baldwin and Cradock,
however, requested me to take London on my way back to Norwich, that we
might discuss the subject. I did so; and I took with me as a witness a
lawyer cousin who told me long afterwards what an amusing scene it was to
him. Messrs. Baldwin and Cradock sat superb in their arm-chairs, in
their brown wigs, looking as cautious as possible, but relaxing visibly
under the influence of my confidence. My cousin said that, in their place,
he should have felt my confidence a sufficient guarantee,--so fully as
I assigned the grounds of it: and Messrs. Baldwin and Cradock seemed
to be
nearly of the same mind, though they brought out a long string of objections, beginning with my proposed title, and ending with the Reform Bill and the Cholera. They wanted to suppress the words Political Economy altogether: but I knew that science could not be smuggled in anonymously. I gave up the point for the time, feeling assured that they would find their smuggling scheme impracticable. "Live and let live" was their title; and its inadequacy was vexatious enough, as showing their imperfect conception of the plan: but it was necessary to let them have their own way in the matter of preliminary advertising. They put out a sort of feeler in the form of an advertisement in some of the Diffusion Society's publications; but an intimation so vague and obscure attracted no notice. This melancholy fact Messrs. Baldwin and Cradock duly and dolefully announced to me. Still, they did not let go for some time; and I afterwards heard that they were so near becoming my publishers that they had actually engaged a stitcher for my monthly numbers. Fortunately for me, as it turned out, but most discouragingly at the time, they withdrew, after a hesitation of many weeks. They had read and approved of a part of the manuscript of "Life in the Wilds,"--my first number: but they went on doubting; and at last wrote to me that, considering the public excitement about the Reform Bill and the Cholera, they dared not venture.
Here was the whole work to begin again. I stifled my sighs, and
swallowed my tears, and wrote to one publisher after another, receiving
instant refusals from all, except Messrs. Whittaker. They kept up the
negotiation for a few posts, but at length joined the general chorus about
the Reform Bill and the Cholera. They offered, however, to do their best
for the work as mere publishers, on the usual terms of commission. My
mother and aunt re-urged my accepting a loan from them of money
which they were willing to risk in such a cause: but of course I
would not hear of this. Mr. Fox appeared at that time earnest in the
project; and a letter from him came by the same post with Messrs.
Whittakers' last, saying that booksellers might be found to share the
risk; and he named one (who, like Baldwin and Cradock, afterwards failed)
who would be likely to go
halves with me in risk and profit. I did not much relish either the plan or the proposed publisher; but I was in no condition to refuse suggestions. I said to my mother, "You know what a man of business would do in my case."--"What?"--"Go up to town by the next mail, and see what is to be done."--"My dear, you would not think of doing such a thing, alone, and in this weather!"--"I wish it."--"Well, then, let us show Henry the letters after dinner, and see what he will say."--As soon as the cloth was removed, and we had drawn round the fire, I showed my brother Henry the letters, with the same remark I had made to my mother. He sat looking into the fire for several minutes, while nobody spoke: and then he turned to me, and said oracularly "Go!"--I sprang up,--sent to have my place taken by the early morning coach, tied up and dispatched borrowed books, and then ran to my room to pack. There I found a fire, and my trunk airing before it. All was finished an hour before tea time; and I was at leisure to read to my old ladies for the rest of the evening. On my mother observing that she could not have done it, my aunt patted me on the shoulder, and said that, at least, the back was fitted to the burden. This domestic sympathy was most supporting to me; but, at the same time, it rendered success more stringently necessary.
My scheme of going to London was not at all a wild one, unless the speed
of the movement, and the state of the weather made it so. It was the
beginning of December, foggy and sleety. I was always sure of a home in
London, with or without notice; and without notice I presented myself at my
cousin's door that dreary December Saturday night. It was a great
Brewery house, always kept open, and cooking daily going on, for the use of
the partners. My kind cousin and his family were to leave home the next
morning, for three weeks: but, as he observed, this would rather aid
than hinder my purposes, as I went for work. I was really glad to be alone
during those three eventful weeks,--feeling myself no intruder, all
the while, and being under the care of attentive servants.
My first step on Monday was seeing the publisher mentioned
by Mr. Fox. He shook his head; his wife smiled; and he begged to see the opening chapters, promising to return them, with a reply, in twenty-four hours. His reply was what was already burnt in upon my brain. He had "no doubt of the excellence,--wished it success--but feared that the excitement of the public mind about the Reform Bill and the Cholera would afford it no chance," &c., &c. I was growing as sick of the Reform Bill as poor King William himself. I need not detail, even if I could remember, the many applications I made in the course of the next few days. Suffice it that they were all unsuccessful, and for the same alleged reasons. Day after day, I came home weary with disappointment, and with trudging many miles through the clay of the streets, and the fog of the gloomiest December I ever saw. I came home only to work; for I must be ready with two first numbers in case of a publisher turning up any day. All the while, too, I was as determined as ever that my scheme should be fulfilled. Night after night, the Brewery clock struck twelve, while the pen was still pushing on in my trembling hand. I had promised to take one day's rest, and dine and sleep at the Foxes'. Then, for the first time, I gave way, in spite of all my efforts. Some trifle having touched my feelings before saying "Good-night," the sluices burst open, and I cried all night. In the morning, Mr. Fox looked at me with great concern, stepped into the next room, and brought a folded paper to the breakfast table, saying "Don't read this now. I can't bear it. These are what may be called terms from my brother." (A young bookseller who did not pretend to have any business, at that time.) "I do not ask you even to consider them; but they will enable you to tell publishers that you hold in your hand terms offered by a publisher: and this may at least procure attention to your scheme." These were, to the subsequent regret of half a score of publishers, the terms on which my work was issued at last.
I immediately returned to town, and went straight to Whittaker's.
Mr. Whittaker looked bored, fidgeted, yawned, and then said, with extreme
rudeness, "I have told you already that these are not times for new
enterprises." "Then," said I, rising,
"it is now time for me to consider the terms from another publisher which I hold in my hand." "O, indeed,--really, Ma'am?" said he, reviving. "Do me the favour to give me a short time for consideration. Only twenty-four hours, Ma'am." I refreshed his memory about the particulars, and endeavoured to make him see why the times were not unseasonable for this special work, though they might be for light literature.
It was next necessary to look at the paper I had been carrying. I read
it with dismay. The very first stipulation was that the work should be
published by subscription: and, moreover, the subscription must be
for five hundred copies before the work began. Subscribers were to be
provided by both parties; and Charles Fox was to have half the profits,
besides the usual bookseller's commission and privileges. The
agreement was to cease at the end of any five numbers, at the wish of
either party. As Charles Fox had neither money nor connexion, I felt that
the whole risk was thrown upon me; and that I should have all the peril, as
well as the toil, while Charles Fox would enjoy the greater part of the
proceeds, in case of success, and be just where he was before, in case of
failure. In fact, he never procured a single subscriber; and he told me
afterwards that he knew from the beginning that he never should. After
pondering this heart-sickening Memorandum, I looked with no small
anxiety for Whittaker's final reply. I seemed to see the dreaded
words through the envelope; and there they were within. Mr. Whittaker
expressed his "regrets that the public mind being so engrossed with
the Reform Bill and the approach of the Cholera," &c., &c.
The same story to the end! Even now, in this low depth of disappointment,
there were lower depth to be explored. The fiercest trial was now at
hand.
I remonstrated strongly with Mr. Fox about the subscription stipulation;
but in vain. The mortification to my pride was not the worst part of it,
though that was severe enough. I told him that I could not stoop to that
method, if any other means were left; to which he replied "You will
stoop to conquer." But he had no consolation to offer under the far
more serious anxiety which I strove to impress on his mind as my main
ob-
jection to the scheme. Those persons from whom I might hope for pecuniary support were precisely those to whom I despaired of conveying any conception of my aim, or of the object and scope of my work. Those who would, I believed, support it were, precisely, persons who had never seen or heard of me, and whose support could not be solicited. My view was the true one, as I might prove by many pages of anecdote. Suffice it that, at the very time when certain members of parliament were eagerly inquiring about the announced work, the wife of one of them, a rich lady of my acquaintance, to whom a prospectus had been sent, returned it, telling me that she "knew too well what she was about to buy a pig in a poke:" and the husband of a cousin of mine, a literary man in his way, sent me, in return for the prospectus, a letter, enclosing two sovereigns, and a lecture against my rashness and presumption in supposing that I was adequate to such work as authorship, and offering the enclosed sum as his mite towards the subscription; but recommending rather a family subscription which might eke out my earnings by my needle. I returned the two sovereigns, with a declaration that I wished for no subscribers but those who expected full value for their payment, and that I would depend upon my needle and upon charity when I found I could not do better, and not before. This gentleman apologised handsomely afterwards. The lady never did. It should be remembered that it is easy enough to laugh at these incidents now; but that it was a very different matter then, when success seemed to be growing more and more questionable and difficult every day. I had no resource, however, but to try the method I heartily disapproved and abhorred. I drew up a Prospectus, in which I avoided all mention of a subscription, in the hope that it might soon be dispensed with, but fully explanatory of the nature and object of the work. To this I added in my own handwriting an urgent appeal to all whom I could ask to be subscribers. I went to Mr. Fox's, one foggy morning, to show him one of these, and the advertisement intended for the next day's papers, announcing the first of February as the day of publication: (for it was now too late to open with the year). I found Mr. Fox in a mood as gloomy
as the day. He had seen Mr. James Mill, who had assured him that my method of exemplification,--(the grand principle of the whole scheme) could not possibly succeed; and Mr. Fox now required of me to change my plan entirely, and issue my Political Economy in a didactic form! Of course, I refused. He started a multitude of objections,--feared every thing, and hoped nothing. I saw, with anguish and no little resentment, my last poor chance slipping from me. I commanded myself while in his presence. The occasion was too serious to be misused. I said to him "I see you have taken fright. If you wish that your brother should draw back, say so now. Here is the advertisement. Make up your mind before it goes to press." He replied, "I do not wish altogether to draw back." "Yes, you do," said I: "and I had rather you would say so at once. But I tell you this:---the people want this book, and they shall have it." "I know that is your intention," he replied: "but I own I do not see how it is to come to pass."--"Nor I: but it shall. So, say that you have done with it, and I will find other means." "I tell you, I do not wish altogether to draw out of it; but I cannot think of my brother going on without decisive success at the outset." "What do you mean, precisely?" "I mean that he withdraws at the end of two numbers, unless the success of the work is secured in a fortnight." "What do you mean by success being secured?" "You must sell a thousand in a fortnight." "In a fortnight! That is unreasonable! Is this your ultimatum?" "Yes." "We shall not sell a thousand in the first fortnight: nevertheless, the work shall not stop at two numbers. It shall go on to five, with or without your brother." "So I perceive you say." "What is to be done with this advertisement?" I inquired. "Shall I send it,--yes or no?" "Yes: but remember Charles gives up at the end of two numbers, unless you sell a thousand in the first fortnight."
I set out to walk the four miles and a half to the Brewery. I could not
afford to ride, more or less; but, weary already, I now felt almost too ill
to walk at all. On the road, not far from Shoreditch, I became too giddy to
stand without support; and I leaned over some dirty palings, pretending to
look at a cabbage
bed, but saying to myself, as I stood with closed eyes, "My book will do yet." I moved on as soon as I could, apprehending that the passers-by took me to be drunk: but the pavement swam before my eyes so that I was glad enough to get to the Brewery. I tried to eat some dinner; but the vast rooms, the plate and the liveried servant were too touching a contrast to my present condition; and I was glad to go to work, to drown my disappointment in a flow of ideas. Perhaps the piece of work that I did may show that I succeeded. I wrote the Preface to my "Illustrations of Political Economy" that evening; and I hardly think that any one would discover from it that I had that day sunk to the lowest point of discouragement about my scheme.--At eleven o'clock, I sent the servants to bed. I finished the Preface just after the Brewery clock had struck two. I was chilly and hungry: the lamp burned low, and the fire was small. I knew it would not do to go to bed, to dream over again the bitter disappointment of the morning. I began now, at last, to doubt whether my work would ever see the light. I thought of the multitudes who needed it,--and especially of the poor,--to assist them in managing their own welfare. I thought too of my own conscious power of doing this very thing. Here was the thing wanting to be done, and I wanting to do it; and the one person who had seemed best to understand the whole affair now urged me to give up either the whole scheme, or, what was worse, its main principle! It was an inferior consideration, but still, no small matter to me, that I had no hope or prospect of usefulness or independence if this project failed: and I did not feel that night that I could put my heart into any that might arise. As the fire crumbled, I put it together till nothing but dust and ashes remained; and when the lamp went out, I lighted the chamber candle; but at last it was necessary to go to bed; and at four o'clock I went, after crying for two hours, with my feet on the fender. I cried in bed till six, when I fell asleep; but I was at the breakfast table by half-past eight, and ready for the work of the day.
The work of the day was to prepare and send out my Circulars. After
preparing enough for my family, I took into my
confidence the before-mentioned cousin,--my benefactor and my host at that time. He was regarded by the whole clan as a prudent and experienced man of business; and I knew that his countenance would be of great value to me. That countenance he gave me, and some good suggestions, and no discouragement.--It was very disagreeable to have to appeal to monied relations whose very confidence and generosity would be a burden on my mind till I had redeemed my virtual pledges; while the slightest indulgence of a critical spirit by any of them must be exceedingly injurious to my enterprise. It was indeed not very long before I had warnings from various quarters that some of my relations were doing me "more harm by their tongues than they could ever do good by their guineas." This was true, as the censors themselves have since spontaneously and handsomely told me. I could not blame them much for saying what they thought of my rashness and conceit, while I cordially honer the candour of their subsequent confession: but their sayings were so much added to the enormous obstructions of the case. From my first act of appeal to my monied relations, however, I derived such singular solace that every incident remains fresh in my mind, and I may fairly indulge in going over it once more.
My oldest surviving uncle and his large family, living near Clapham, had
always been ready and kind in their sympathy; and I was now to find the
worth of it more than ever in connexion with the greatest of my
enterprises. On the next Sunday, I returned with them when they went home
from Chapel. While at luncheon, my uncle told me that he understood I had
some new plan, and he was anxious to know what it was. His daughters
proposed that I should explain it after dinner, when their brothers would
be present. After dinner, accordingly, I was called upon for my
explanation, which I gave in a very detailed way. All were silent, waiting
for my uncle to make his remark, the very words of which I distinctly
remember, at the distance of nearly a quarter of a century. In his gentle
and gracious manner he said, "You are a better judge, my dear, than
we of this scheme; but we know that your industry and energy are the pride
of us all, and ought to have our support." When we
ladies went to the drawing-room, I knew there would be a consultation between my uncle and his sons: and so there was. At the close of the pleasant evening, he beckoned to me, and made me sit beside him on the sofa, and told me of the confidence of his family and himself that what I was doing would be very useful: that his daughters wished for each a copy of the Series, his sons two each; and that he himself must have five. "And," he concluded, "as you will like to pay your printer immediately, you shall not wait for our money." So saying, he slipped a packet of bank notes and gold into my hand, to the amount of payment for fourteen copies of the whole series! To complete the grace of his hospitality, he told me that he should go to town late the next morning, and would escort me; and he desired me to sleep as late as I liked. And I did sleep,--the whole night through, and awoke a new creature. Other members of the family did what they thought proper, in the course of the week; and then I had only to go home, and await the result.
I was rather afraid to show myself to my mother,--thin as I was,
and yellow, and coughing with every breath; and she was panic-struck
at the evident symptoms of liver-complaint which the first
half-hour disclosed. I was indeed in wretched health; and during the
month of April following, when I was writing "Demerara," I was
particularly ill. I do not think I was ever well again till, at the close
of 1833, I was entirely laid aside, and confined to my bed for a month, by
inflammation of the liver. I am confident that that serious illness began
with the toils and anxieties, and long walks in fog and mud, of two years
before. My mother took my health in hand anxiously and most tenderly. In
spite of my entreaties, she would never allow me to be wakened in the
morning; and on Sundays, the day when Charles Fox's dispatches came
by a manufacturer's parcel, my breakfast was sent up to me, and I was
not allowed to rise till the middle of the day. For several weeks I dreaded
the arrival of the publisher's weekly letter. He always wrote
gloomily, and sometimes rudely. The subscription proceeded very little
better than I had anticipated. From first to last, about three hundred
copies were subscribed for: and before that number had been reached,
the
success of the work was such as to make the subscription a mere burden. It was a thoroughly vexatious part of the business altogether,--that subscription. A clever suggestion of mother's, at this time, had, I believe, much to do with the immediate success of the book. By her advice, I sent, by post, a copy of my Prospectus (without a word about subscription in it) to almost every member of both Houses of Parliament. There was nothing of puffery in this,--nothing that I had the least objection to do. It was merely informing our legislators that a book was coming out on their particular class of subjects.
I may as well mention in this place, that I had offered (I cannot at all
remember when) one of my tales,--the one which now stands as
"Brooke and Brooke Farm,"--to the Diffusion Society,
whence it had been returned. Absurd as were some the stories afterwards set
afloat about this transaction, there was thus much foundation for them. Mr.
Knight, then the publisher of the Society, sent me a note of cordial and
generous encouragement; but a sub-committee, to whose judgment the
manuscript was consigned, thought it "dull," and pronounced
against its reception accordingly. I knew nothing about this
sub-committee, or about the method employed, and had in fact
forgotten, among so many failures, that particular one, when, long after, I
found to my regret and surprise, that the gentlemen concerned had been
supposing me offended and angry all the while, and somehow an accomplice in
Lord Brougham's mockery of their decision. In vain I told them that I
now thought them perfectly right to form and express their own judgment,
and that I had never before heard who had been my judges. I fear the
soreness remains in their minds to this day, though there never was any in
mine. Lord Brougham's words travelled far and wide, and were
certainly anything but comfortable to the subcommittee. He said he should
revive the torture for their sakes, as hanging was too good for them. He
tore his hair over the tales, he added, unable to endure that the whole
Society, "instituted for the very purpose, should be driven out of
the field by a little deaf woman at Norwich."--As I have said, I
cannot remember at what time I made my application; but I imagine
it must have been during that eventful year 1831,--in which case the writing of that story must come into the estimate of the work of that year.
A cheering incident occurred during the interval of awaiting the effects
of the Circular. Every body knows that the Gurneys are the great bankers of
Norwich. Richard Hanbury Gurney, at that time one of the Members for
Norfolk, was in the firm; and he was considered to be one of the
best-informed men in England on the subject of Currency. The head
officer of the bank, Mr. Simon Martin, deserved the same reputation, and
had it, among all who knew him. He sent for my brother Henry, who found him
with my Circular before him. He said that he had a message to communicate
to me from the firm: and the message was duly delivered, when Mr.
Martin had satisfied himself that my brother conscientiously believed me
adequate to my enterprise. Messrs. Gurney considered the scheme an
important one, promising public benefit: they doubted whether it
would be immediately appreciated: they knew that I could not afford
to go on at a loss, but thought it a pity that a beneficial enterprise
should fall to the ground for want of immediate support: and they
therefore requested that, in case of discouragement in regard to the sale,
I should apply to them before giving up. "Before she gives up, let
her come to us," were their words: words which were as pleasant
to me in the midst of my success as they could have been if I had needed
the support so generously offered.
Meantime the weekly letter grew worse and worse. But on the Sunday
preceding the day of publication came a bit of encouragement in the shape
of a sentence in these, or nearly these words. "I see no chance of
the work succeeding unless the trade take it up better. We have only one
considerable booksellers' order--from A and B for a hundred
copies." "Why, there," said my mother, "is a
hundred towards your thousand!" "Ah, but," said I,
"where are the other nine hundred to come from, in a
fortnight?" The edition consisted of fifteen hundred.
To the best of my recollection, I waited ten days from the day
of publication, before I had another line from the publisher. My mother, judging from his ill-humour, inferred that he had good news to tell: whereas I supposed the contrary. My mother was right; and I could now be amused at his last attempts to be discouraging in the midst of splendid success. At the end of those ten days, he sent with his letter a copy of my first number, desiring me to make with all speed any corrections I might wish to make, as he had scarcely any copies left. He added that the demand led him to proposed that we should now print two thousand. A postscript informed me that since he wrote the above, he had found that we should want three thousand. A second postscript proposed four thousand, and a third five thousand. The letter was worth having, now it had come. There was immense relief in this; but I remember nothing like intoxication;--like any painful reaction whatever. I remember walking up and down the grassplat in the garden (I think it was on the tenth of February) feeling that my cares were over. And so they were. From that hour, I have never had any other anxiety about employment than what to choose, nor any real care about money. Eight or nine years after, I found myself entirely cut off by illness from the power of working; and then my relations and friends aided me in ways so generous as to make it easy for me to accept the assistance. But even then, I was never actually pinched for money; and, from the time that the power of working was restored, I was at once as prosperous as ever, and became more and more so till now, when illness has finally visited me in a condition of independence. I think I may date my release from pecuniary care from that tenth of February, 1832.
The entire periodical press, daily, weekly, and, as soon as possible,
monthly, came out in my favour; and I was overwhelmed with newspapers and
letters, containing every sort of flattery. The Diffusion Society wanted to
have the Series now; and Mr. Hume offered, on behalf of a new society of
which he was the head, any price I would name for the purchase of the
whole. I cannot precisely answer for the date of these and other
applications; but, as far as I remember, there was, from the middle of
February onwards, no remission of such applications, the meanest of which I should have clutched at a few weeks before. Members of Parliament sent down blue books through the post-office, to the astonishment of the postmaster, who one day sent word that I must send for my own share of the mail, for it could not be carried without a barrow;--an announcement which, spreading in the town, caused me to be stared at in the streets. Thus began that sort of experience. Half the hobbies of the House of Commons, and numberless notions of individuals, anonymous and other, were commended to me for treatment in my Series, with which some of them had no more to do than geometry or the atomic theory. I had not calculated on this additional labour, in the form of correspondence; and very weary I often was of it, in the midst of the amusement. One necessity arose out of it which soon became very clear,--that I must reside in London, for the sake of the extensive and varied information which I now found was at my service there, and which the public encouragement of my work made it my duty to avail myself of.
It seemed hard upon my kind mother and aunt that the first consequence
of the success they buoyed me up in hoping for should be to take me to
London, after all: but the events of the summer showed them the
necessity of the removal. We treated it as for a time; and I felt that my
mother would not endure a permanent separation. The matter ended in their
joining me in a small house in London, before many months were over:
and meantime, my mother stipulated for my being in the house of some family
well known to her. I obtained lodgings in the house of a tailor in Conduit
Street, whose excellent wife had been an acquaintance of ours from her
childhood to her marriage. There I arrived in November, 1832; and there I
lodged till the following September, when I went, with my mother and aunt,
into a house (No. 17) in Fludyer Street, Westminster, where I resided till
the breakdown of my health (which took place in 1839) removed me from
London altogether.
Here I stop, thinking that the third period of my life may be considered
as closing with the conquest of all difficulty about
getting a hearing from the public for what I felt I had to say. Each period of my life has had its trials and heart-wearing difficulties,--except (as will be seen) the last; but in none had the pains and penalties of life a more intimate connexion with the formation of character than in the one which closes here. And now the summer of my life was bursting forth without any interval of spring. My life began with winter, burst suddenly into summer, and is now ending with autumn,--mild and sunny. I have had no spring: but that cannot be helped now. It was a moral disadvantage, as well as a great loss of happiness: but we all have our moral disadvantages to make the best of; and "happiness" is not, as the poet says, "our being's end and aim," but the result of one faculty among many, which must be occasionally overborne by others, if there is to be any effectual exercise of the whole being. So I am satisfied in a higher sense than that in which the Necessarian is always satisfied. I cannot but know that in my life there has been a great waste of precious time and material: but I had now, by thirty years of age, ascertained my career, found occupation, and achieved independence; and thus the rest of my life was provided with its duties and its interests. Any one to whom that happens by thirty years of age may be satisfied; and I was so.
strongest call of duty could make me now live in a street; and if I allowed myself to give way to distress at the mysteries of human life, one of my greatest perplexities would be at so many people being obliged so to live. Now that I have dwelt for nine years in a field, where there is never any dust, never any smoke, never any noise; where my visitors laugh at the idea of the house ever being cleaned, because it never gets dirty; where there is beauty to be seen from every window, and in bad weather it is a treat to stand in the porch and see it rain, I cannot but wonder at my former contentment. I have visited and gone over our old house in Magdalen Street, at Norwich, within a few years; and I could not but wonder how my romantic days could ever have come on in such a place. There it stands,--a handsome, plain brick house, in a narrow street,--Norwich having nothing but narrow streets. There it is,--roomy and good-looking enough; but prosaic to the last degree. Except the vine on its back gable, there is not an element of naturalness or poetry about it. Yet there were my dreamy years passed. In my London lodging, a splendid vision was to open upon me,--one which I am glad to have enjoyed, because it was enjoyment; and because a diversified experience is good; and because I really gained much knowledge of human life and character from it. I became the fashion, and I might have been the "lion" of several seasons, if I had chosen to permit it. I detested the idea, and absolutely put down the practice in my own case: but I saw as much of a very varied society as if I had allowed myself to be lionised, and with a more open mind than if I had not insisted on being treated simply as a lady or let alone. The change from my life in Norwich to my life in London was certainly prodigious, and such as I did not dream of when I exchanged the one for the other. Before we lost our money, and when I was a young lady "just introduced," my mother insisted on taking me to balls and parties, though that sort of visiting was the misery of my life. My deafness was terribly in the way, both because it made me shy, and because underbred people, like the card-players and dancers of a provincial town, are awkward in such a case. Very few people spoke to me; and I
dare say I looked as if I did not wish to be spoken to. From the time when I went to London, all that was changed. People began with me as with a deaf person; and there was little more awkwardness about hearing, when they had once reconciled themselves to my trumpet. They came to me in good will, or they would not have come at all. They and I were not jumbled together by mere propinquity; we met purposely; and, if we continued our intercourse, it was through some sort of affinity. I now found what the real pleasures of social intercourse are, and was deeply sensible of its benefits: but it really does not appear to me that I was intoxicated with the pleasure, or that I over-rated the benefit. I think so because I always preferred my work to this sort of play. I think so because some sober friends,--two or three whom I could trust,--said, first, that I might and probably should say and do some foolish things, but that I should "prove ultimately unspoilable;" and afterwards that I was not spoiled. I think so because I altered no plan or aim in life on account of any social distinction; and I think so, finally, because, while vividly remembering the seven years from 1832 to 1839, and feeling as gratefully and complacently as ever the kindness and attachment of friends, and the good-will of a multitude of acquaintances, I had no inclination to return to literary life in London after my recovery at Tynemouth, and have for ten years rejoiced, without pause or doubt, in my seclusion and repose in my quiet valley. There is an article of mine on "Literary Lionism" in the London and Westminster Review of April, 1839, which was written when the subject was fresh in my thoughts and feelings. In consideration of this, and of my strong repugnance to detailing the incidents of my own reception in society, on entering the London world, while such an experience cannot be wholly passed over in an account of my life, I think the best way will be to cite that article,--omitting those passages only which are of a reviewing character. By this method, it will appear what my impressions were while in conflict with the practice of literary lionism; and I shall be spared the disgusting task of detailing old absurdities and dwelling on old flatterice, which had myself for their subject.
Many of the stories which I could tell are comic enough; and a few are exceedingly interesting: but they would be all spoiled, to myself and every body else, by their relating to myself. The result on my own convictions and feelings is all that it is necessary to give; and that result can be given in no form so trustworthy as in the record penned at the time. It must be remembered that the article appeared in an anonymous form, or some appearance of conceit and bad taste may hang about even that form of disclosure.--The statement and treatment of the subject will however lead forward so far into my London life that I must fill up an intermediate space. I must give some account of my work before I proceed to treat of my playhours.
In meditating on my course of life at that time, and gathering together
the evidences of what I was learning and doing, I am less disposed than I
used to be to be impatient with my friends for their incessant rebukes and
remonstrances about over-work. From the age of fifteen to the moment
in which I am writing, I have been scolded in one form or another, for
working too hard; and I wonder my friends did not find out thirty years ago
that there is no use in their fault-finding. I am heartily sick of
it, I own; and there may be some little malice in the satisfaction with
which I find myself dying, after all, of a disease which nobody can
possibly attribute to over-work. Though knowing all along that my
friends were mistaken as to what was moderate and what immoderate work, in
other cases than their own (and I have always left them free
to judge and act for themselves) I have never denied that less toil and
more leisure would be wholesome and agreeable to me. My pleas have been
that I have had no power of choice, and that my critics misjudged the
particular case. Almost every one of them has proceeded on the supposition
that the labour of authorship involved immense "excitement;"
and I, who am the quietest of quiet bodies, when let alone in my business,
have been warned against "excitement" till I am fairly sick of
the word. One comfort has always been that those who were witnesses of my
work-a-day life always came round to an agreement with me
that literary labour is not necessarily more hurtfully exciting than any
other
serious occupation. My mother, alarmed at a distance, and always expecting to hear of a brain fever, used to say, amidst the whirl of our London spring days, "My dear, I envy your calmness." And a very intimate friend, one of the strongest remonstrants, told me spontaneously, when I had got through a vast pressure of work in her country house, that she should never trouble me more on that head, as she saw that my authorship was the fulfillment of a natural function,--conducive to health of body and mind, instead of injurious to either. It would have saved me from much annoyance (kindly intended) if others had observed with the same good sense, and admitted conviction with equal candour. Authorship has never been with me a matter of choice. I have not done it for amusement, or for money, or for fame, or for any reason but because I could not help it. Things were pressing to be said; and there was more or less evidence that I was the person to say them. In such a ease, it was always impossible to decline the duty for such reasons as that I should like more leisure, or more amusement, or more sleep, or more of any thing whatever. If my life had depended on more leisure and holiday, I could not have taken it. What wanted to be said must be said, for the sake of the many, whatever might be the consequences to the one worker concerned. Nor could the immediate task be put aside, from the remote consideration, for ever pressed upon me, of lengthening my life. The work called for to-day must not be refused for the possible sake of next month or next year. While feeling far less injured by toil than my friends took for granted I must be, I yet was always aware of the strong probability that my life would end as the lives of hard literary workers usually end,--in paralysis, with months or years of imbecility. Every one must recoil from the prospect of being thus burdensome to friends and attendants; and it certainly was a matter of keen satisfaction to me, when my present fatal disease was ascertained, that I was released from that liability, and should die of something else, far less formidable to witnesses and nurses. Yet, the contemplation of such a probability in the future was no reason for declining the duty of the time; and I could not have written
a volume the less if I had foreknown that, at a certain future day and hour, I should be struck down like Scott and Southey, and many another faithful labourer in the field of literature.
One deep and steady conviction, obtained from my own experience and
observation, largely qualified any apprehensions I might have, and was
earnestly impressed by me upon my remonstrating friends; that enormous loss
of strength, energy and time is occasioned by the way in which people go to
work in literature, as if its labours were in all respects different from
any other kind of toil. I am confident that intellectual industry and
intellectual punctuality are as practicable as industry and punctuality in
any other direction. I have seen vast misery of conscience and temper arise
from the irresolution and delay caused by waiting for congenial moods,
favourable circumstances, and so forth. I can speak, after long experience,
without any doubt on this matter. I have suffered, like other writers, from
indolence, irresolution, distaste to my work, absence of
"inspiration," and all that: but I have also found that
sitting down, however reluctantly, with the pen in my hand, I have never
worked for one quarter of an hour without finding myself in full
train: so that all the quarter hours, arguing, doubting and
hesitation as to whether I should work or not which I gave way to in my
inexperience, I now regard as so much waste, not only of time but, far
worse, of energy. To the best of my belief, never but once in my life left
my work because I could not do it: and that single occasion was on
the opening day of an illness. When once experience had taught me that I
could work when I chose, and within a quarter of an hour of my determining
to do so, I was relieved, in a great measure, from those embarrassments and
depressions which I see afflicting many an author who waits for a mood
instead of summoning it, and is the sport, instead of the master, of his
own impressions and ideas.--As far as the grosser physical influences
are concerned, an author has his lot pretty much in his own hands, because
it is in his power to shape his habits in accordance with the laws of
nature: and an author who does not do this has no business with the
lofty vocation. I am very far indeed from desiring to set up my own practices as an example for others; and I do not pretend that they are wholly rational, or the best possible: but. as the facts are clear--that I have, without particular advantages of health and strength, done an unusual amount of work without fatal, perhaps without injurious consequences, and without the need of pernicious stimulants and peculiar habits,--it may be as well to explain what my methods were, that others may test them experimentally, if they choose.
As for my hours,--it has always been my practice to devote my best
strength to my work; and the morning hours have therefore been sacred to
it, from the beginning. I really do not know what it is to take any thing
but the pen in hand, the first thing after breakfast, except of course, in
travelling. I never pass a day without writing; and the writing is always
done in the morning. There have been times when I have been obliged to
"work double tides," and therefore to work at night: but
it has never been a practice; and I have seldom written any thing more
serious than letters by candlelight. In London, I boiled my coffee at seven
or haft-past, and went to work immediately till two, when it was
necessary to be at liberty for visitors till four o'clock. It was
impossible for me to make calls. I had an immense acquaintance, no
carriage, and no time: and I therefore remained at home always from
two till four, to receive all who came; and I called on nobody. I knew that
I should be quizzed or blamed for giving myself airs: but I could not
help that. I had engaged before I came to London to write a number of my
Series every month for two years; and I could not have fulfilled my
engagement and made morning visits too. Sydney Smith was one of the
quizzers. He thought I might have managed the thing better, by
"sending round an inferior authoress in a carriage to drop the
cards."
When my last visitor departed, I ran out for an hour's walk,
returning in time to dress and read the newspaper, before the carriage
came,--somebody's carriage being always sent--to take me
out to dinner. An evening visit or two closed the day's engagements.
I tried my best to get home by twelve or half-
past, in order to answer the notes I was sure to find on my table, or to get a little reading before going to rest between one and two. A very refreshing kind of visit was (and it happened pretty often) when I walked to the country, or semi-country house of an intimate friend, and slept there,--returning before breakfast, or in time to sit down to my morning's work. After my mother and aunt joined me in London, I refused Sunday visiting altogether, and devoted that evening to my old ladies. So much for the times of working.
I was deeply impressed by something which an excellent clergyman told me
one day, when there was nobody by to bring mischief on the head of the
relater. This clergyman knew the literary world of his time so thoroughly
that there was probably no author of any mark then living in England, with
whom he was not more or less acquainted. It must be remembered that a new
generation has now grown up. He told me that he had reason to believe that
there was no author or authoress who was free from the habit of taking some
pernicious stimulant;--either strong green tea, or strong coffee at
night, or wine or spirits or laudanum. The amount of opium taken, to
relieve the wear and tear of authorship, was, he said, greater than most
people had any conception of: and all literary workers
took something. "Why, I do not," said I. "Fresh air and
cold water are my stimulants."--"I believe you," he
replied. "But you work in the morning; and there is much in
that." I then remembered that when, for a short time, I had to work
at night (probably on one of the Poor-law tales, while my regular
work occupied the mornings) a physician who called on me observed that I
must not allow myself to be exhausted at the end of the day. He would not
advise any alcoholic wine; but any light wine that I liked might do me
good. "You have a cupboard there at your right hand," said he.
"Keep a bottle of hock and a wine-glass there, and help
yourself when you feel you want it."--"No, thank
you," said I. "If I took wine, it should not be when alone; nor
would I help myself to a glass. I might take a little more and a little
more, till my solitary glass might become a regular tippling habit. I shall
avoid the temptation altogether."
Physicians should consider well before they give such advice to brain-worn workers.
As for the method, in regard to the Political Economy Tales, I am not
sorry to have an opportunity of putting it on record.--When I began, I
furnished myself with aH the standard works on the subject of what I then
took to be a science. I had made a skeleton plan of the course,
comprehending the four divisions, Production, Distribution, Exchange and
Consumption: and, in order to save my nerves from being overwhelmed
with the thought of what I had undertaken, I resolved not to look beyond
the department on which I was engaged. The subdivisions arranged themselves
as naturally as the primary ones; and when any subject was episodical (as
Slave Labour) I announced it as such.--Having noted my own leading
ideas on the topic before me, I took down my books, and read the treatment
of that particular subject in each of them, making notes of reference on a
separate sheet for each book, and restraining myself from glancing even in
thought towards the scene and nature of my story till it should be
suggested by my collective didactic materials. It was about a
morning's work to gather hints by this reading. The next process,
occupying an evening, when I had one to spare, or the next morning, was
making the Summary of Principles which is found at the end of each number.
This was the most laborious part of the work, and that which I certainly
considered the most valuable.--By this time, I perceived in what part
of the world, and among what sort of people, the principles of my number
appeared to operate the most manifestly. Such a scene I chose, be it where
it might.
The next process was to embody each leading principle in a
character: and the mutual operation of these embodied principles
supplied the action of the story. It was necessary to have some
accessories,--some out-works to the scientific erection; but I
limited these as much as possible; and I believe that in every instance,
they really were rendered subordinate. An hour or two sufficed for the
outline of my story. If the scene was foreign, or in any part of England
with which I was not familiar, I sent to the library for books of travel or
topography: and the
collecting and noting down hints from these finished the second day's work. The third day's toil was the severest. I reduced my materials to chapters, making a copious table of contents for each chapter on a separate sheet, on which I noted down, not only the action of the personages and the features of the scene, but all the political economy which it was their business to convey, whether by exemplification or conversation,--so as to absorb all the materials provided. This was not always completed at one sitting, and it made me sometimes sick with fatigue: but it was usually done in one day. After that, all the rest was easy. I paged my paper; and then the story went off like a letter. I never could decide whether I most enjoyed writing the descriptions, the narrative, or the argumentative or expository conversations. I liked each best while I was about it.
As to the actual writing,--I did it as I write letters, and as I am
writing this Memoir,--never altering the expression as it came fresh
from my brain. On an average I wrote twelve pages a day,--on large
letter paper (quarto, I believe it is called) the page containing
thirty-three lines. In spite of all precautions, interruptions
occurred very often. The proof-correcting occupied some time; and so
did sitting for five portraits in the year and half before I went to
America. The correspondence threatened to become infinite. Many letters,
particularly anonymous ones, required or deserved no answer: but
there were others from operatives, young persons, and others which could be
answered without much expenditure of thought, and wear and tear of
interest: said I could not find in my heart to resist such clients.
Till my mother joined me, I never failed to send her a bulky packet weekly;
as much for my own satisfaction as for her's,--needing as I did
to speak freely to some one of the wonderful scenes which life was now
opening to me. Having no maid, I had a good deal of the business of common
life upon my hands. On the conclusion of a number, I sometimes took two
days' respite; employing it in visiting some country house for the
day and night, and indulging in eight hours' sleep, instead of the
five, or five and a half, with which I was otherwise obliged to be
satisfied: but it happened more than once that I finished one
num-
ber at two in the morning, and was at work upon another by nine. During the whole period of the writing of the three Series,--the Political Economy, Taxation, and Poor Laws,--I never remember but once sitting down to read whatever I pleased. That was a summer evening, when I was at home and my old ladies were out, and I had two hours to do what I liked with. I was about to go to the United States; and I sat down to study the geography and relations of the States of the American Union; and extremely interesting I found it,--so soon as I was hoping to travel through them.
The mode of scheming and constructing my stories having been explained,
it remains to be seen whence the materials were drawn. A review of the
sources of my material will involve some anecdotes which may be worth
telling, if I may judge by my own interest, and that which I witness in
others, in the history of the composition of any well-known
work.
If I remember right, I was busy about the twelfth
number,--"French Wines and Politics,"--when I went to
London, in November, 1832. That is, I had done with the department of
Production, and was finishing that of Distribution. The first three numbers
were written before the stir of success began: and the scenery was
furnished by books of travel obtained from the Public Library, and of
farming by the late Dr. Rigby of Norwich,--a friend of the late Lord
Leicester, (when Mr. Coke). The books of travel were Lichtenstein's
South Africa for "Life in the Wilds:" Edwards's
(and others') "West Indies" for
"Demerara:" and McCulloch's "Highlands and
Islands of Scotland" for the two Garveloch stories. Mr. Cropper of
Liverpool heard of the Series early enough to furnish me with some
statistics of Shvery for "Demerara;" and Mr. Hume, in time to
send me Blue Books on the Fisheries, for "Ella of
Garveloch."--My correspondence with Mr. Cropper deserves
mention, in honer of that excellent and devoted man. About the time that
the success of my scheme began to be apparent, there arrived in Norwich a
person who presented himself as an anti-slavery agent. It was the
well-known Elliott Cresson, associated with the American
Colonization scheme, which he
hoped to pass upon us innocent provincial Britons as the same thing as anti-slavery. Many even of the Quakers were taken in; and indeed there were none but experienced abolitionists, like the Croppers, who were qualified even to suspect,--much less to detect,--this agent of the slaveholders and his false pretenses. Kind-hearted people, hearing from Mr. Cresson that a slave could be bought and settled blissfully in Liberia for seven pounds ten shillings, raised the ransom in their own families and among their neighbours, and thought all was right. Mr. Cresson obtained an introduction to my mother and me, and came to tea, and described what certainly interested us very much, and offered to furnish me with plenty of evidence of the productiveness of Liberia, and the capabilities of the scheme, with a view to my making it the scene and subject of one of my tales. I was willing, thinking it would make an admirable framework for one of my pieces of doctrine; and I promised, not to write a story, but to consider of it when the evidence should have arrived. The papers arrived; and my conclusion was--not to write about Liberia. Some time after, I had a letter from Mr. Cropper, who was a perfect stranger to me, saying that Eliott Cresson was announcing every where from the platform in his public lectures that I had promised him to make the colony of Liberia one of my Illustrations of Political Economy: and it was the fact that the announcement was made in many places. Mr. Cropper offered to prove to me the unreliableness of Cresson's representations, and the true scope and aim of the Colonization scheme. He appealed to me not to publish in its favour till I had heard the other side; and offered to bear the expense of suppressing the whole edition, if the story was already printed. I had the pleasure of telling him by return of post that I had given no such promise to Mr. Cresson, and that I had not written, nor intended to write, any story about Liberia or American Colonization. Before I went to the United States, this agent of the slaveholders had exposed his true character by lecturing, all over England, in a libellous tone, against Garrison and the true abolitionists of America. When I had begun to see into the character and policy of the enterprise, and before
I had met a single abolitionist in America, I encountered Mr. Cresson, face to face, in the Senate Chamber at Washington. He was very obsequious; but I would have nothing to say to him. He was, I believe, the only acquaintance whom I ever "cut." It was out of this incident that grew the correspondence with Mr. Cropper which ended in his furnishing me with material for an object precisely the reverse of Elliott Cresson's.
On five occasions in my life I have found myself obliged to write and
publish what I entirely believed would be ruinous to my reputation and
prosperity. In no one of the five cases has the result been what I
anticipated. I find myself at the close of my life prosperous in name and
fame, in my friendships and in my affairs. But it may be considered to have
been a narrow escape in the first instance; for every thing was done that
low-minded recklessness and malice could do to destroy my credit and
influence by gross appeals to the prudery, timidity, and ignorance of the
middle classes of England. My own innocence of intention, and my refusal to
conceal what I thought and meant, carried me through: but there is no
doubt that the circulation of my works was much and long restricted by the
prejudices indecently and maliciously raised against me by Mr. Croker and
Mr. Lockhart, in the Quarterly Review. I mention these two names, because
Messrs. Croker and Lockhart openly assumed the honour of the wit which they
(if nobody else) saw in the deed; and there is no occasion to suppose any
one else concerned in it. As there is, I believe, some lingering feeling
still,--some doubt about my being once held in horror as a
"Malthusian," I had better tell simply all I know of the
matter.
When the course of my exposition brought me to the Population subject,
I, with my youthful and provincial mode of thought and
feeling,--brought up too amidst the prudery which is found in its
great force in our middle class,--could not but be sensible that I
risked much in writing and publishing on a subject which was not
universally treated in the pure, benevolent, and scientific spirit of
Malthus himself. I fell that the subject was one of science, and therefore
perfectly easy to treat in itself; but I was aware that some evil
associations had gathered about it,--though
I did not know what they were. While writing "Weal and Woe in Garveloch," the perspiration many a time streamed down my face, though I knew there was not a line in it which might not be read aloud in any family. The misery arose from my seeing how the simplest statements and reasoning might and probably would be perverted. I said nothing to any body; and, when the number was finished, I read it aloud to my mother and aunt. If there had been any opening whatever for doubt or dread, I was sure that these two ladies would have given me abundant warning and exhortation,--both from their very keen sense of propriety and their anxious affection for me. But they were as complacent and easy as they had been interested and attentive. I saw that all ought to be safe. But it was evidently very doubtful whether all would be safe. A few words in a letter from Mr. Fox put me on my guard. In the course of some remarks on the sequence of my topics, he wrote, "As for the Population question, let no one interfere with you. Go straight through it, or you'll catch it." I did go straight through it; and happily I had nearly done when a letter arrived from a literary woman, who had the impertinence to write to me now that I was growing famous, after having scarcely noticed me before, and (of all subjects) on this, though she tried to make her letter decent by putting in a few little matters besides. I will call her Mrs. Z. as I have no desire to point out to notice one for whom I never had any respect or regard. She expressed, on the part of herself and others, an anxious desire to know how I should deal with the Population question; said that they did not know what to wish about my treating or omitting it;--desiring it for the sake of society, but dreading it for me; and she finished by informing me that a Member of Parliament, who was a perfect stranger to me, had assured her that I already felt my difficulty; and that he and she awaited my decision with anxiety. Without seeing at the moment the whole drift of this letter, I was abundantly disgusted by it, and fully sensible of the importance of its being answered immediately, and in a way which should admit of no mistake. I knew my I reply was wanted for show; and I sent one by return of post which was
shown to some purpose. It stopped speculation in one dangerous quarter. I showed my letter to my mother and brother; and they emphatically approved it, though it was rather sharp. They thought, as I did, that some sharpness was well directed towards a lady who professed to have talked over difficulties of this nature, on my behalf, with an unknown Member of Parliament by her own fireside. My answer was this. I believe I am giving the very words; for the business impressed itself deeply on my mind. "As for the questions you put about the principles of my Series,--if you believe the Population question to be, as you say, the most serious now agitating society, you can hardly suppose that I shall omit it, or that I can have been heedless of it in forming my plan. I consider it, as treated by Malthus, a strictly philosophical question. So treating it, I find no difficulty in it; and there can be no difficulty in it for those who approach it with a single mind. To such I address myself. If any others should come whispering to me what I need not listen to, I shall shift my trumpet, and take up my knitting." I afterwards became acquainted with the Member of Parliament whom my undesired correspondent quoted; and I feel confident that his name was used very unwarrantably, for the convenience of the lady's prurient curiosity.--I also saw her. She called on me at my lodgings (to catch a couple of franks from a Member of Parliament) and she mentioned my letter,--obtaining no response from me. She was then a near neighbour and an acquaintance of an intimate friend of mine. One winter morning, I was surprised by a note from this friend, sent three miles by a special messenger, to say, "Mrs. Z. purposes to visit you this morning. I conjure you to take my advice. On the subject which she will certainly introduce, be deaf, dumb, blind and stupid. I will explain hereafter." The morning was so stormy that no Mrs. Anybody could come. My friend's explanation to me was this. Mrs. Z. had declared her anxiety to her, in a morning call, to obtain from me, for her own satisfaction and other people's, an avowal which might be reported as to the degree of my knowledge of the controversies which secretly agitated society on the true bearings of the Population question.
All this was no concern of mine; and much of it was beyond my comprehension. The whole interference of Mrs. Z. and her friends (if indeed there was anybody concerned in it but herself) was odious and impertinent nonsense in my eyes; and the fussy lady ever found me, as well as my friend, ready to be as "deaf, dumb, blind and stupid" as occasion might require.--I rather suspect that Mrs. Z. herself was made a tool of for the purposes of Mr. Lockhart, who employed his then-existing intimacy with her to get materials for turning her into ridicule afterwards. The connexion of Mr. Lockhart with this business presently appeared.
In an evening party in the course of the winter, I was introduced to a
lady whose name and connexions I had heard a good deal of. Instead of being
so civil as might be anticipated from her eagerness for an introduction,
she was singularly rude and violent, so as to make my hostess very
uncomfortable. She called me "cruel" and "brutal,"
and scolded me for my story--"Cousin Marshall." I saw that
she was talking at random, and asked her whether she had read the story.
She had not. I good-humouredly, but decidedly, told her that when
she had read it, we would discuss it, if she pleased; and that meantime we
would drop it. She declared she would not read it for the world; but she
presently followed me about, was kind and courteous, and finished by
begging to be allowed to set me down at my lodgings. When I alighted, she
requested leave to call. She did so, when my mother was with me for two or
three weeks, and invited us to dine at her house in the country, on the
first disengaged day. She called for us, and told us during our drive that
she had resisted the strongest entreaties from Mr. Lockhart to be allowed
to meet me that day. She had some misgiving, it appeared, which made her
steadily refuse; but she invited Lady G--, a relative of
Lockhart's, and an intimate friend of her own. Lady G. was as
unwilling as Lockhart was eager to come; and very surly she looked when
introduced. She sat within hearing of my host and me at dinner; and as soon
as we returned to the drawing-room, she took her seat by me, with a
totally changed manner, and conversed kindly and
agreeably. I was wholly unaware what lay under all this: but the fact soon came out that the atrocious article in the Quarterly Review which was avowedly intended to "destroy Miss Martineau," was at that time actually printed; and Mr. Lockhart wanted to seize an opportunity which might be the last for meeting me,--all unsuspecting as I was, and trusting to his being a gentleman, on the strength of meeting him in that house. I was long afterwards informed that Lady G. went to him early the next day, (which was Sunday) and told him that he would repent of the article, if it was what he had represented to her; and I know from the printers that Mr. Lockhart went down at once to the office, and cut out "all the worst passages of the review," at great inconvenience and expense. What he could have cut out that was worse than what stands, it is not easy to conceive.
While all this was going on without my knowledge, warnings came to me
from two quarters that something prodigious was about to happen. Mr. Croker
had declared at a dinner party that he expected a revolution under the
whigs, and to lose his pension; and that he intended to lay by his pension
while he could get it, and maintain himself by his pen; and that he had
"begun by tomahawking Miss Martineau in the Quarterly." An old
gentleman present, Mr. Whishaw, was disgusted at the announcement and at
the manner of it, and, after consulting with a friend or two, called to
tell me of this, and put me on my guard. On the same day, another friend
called to tell me that my printers (who also printed the Quarterly) thought
I ought to know that "the filthiest thing that had passed through the
press for a quarter of a century" was coming out against me in the
Quarterly. I could not conceive what all this meant; and I do not half
understand it now: but it was enough to perceive that the design was
to discredit me by some sort of evil imputation. I saw at ones what to do.
I wrote to my brothers, telling them what I had heard, and earnestly
desiring that they would not read the next Quarterly. I told them that the
inevitable consequence of my brothers taking up my quarrels would be to
close my career. I had entered upon it independently, and I would
pursue it alone. From the moment that any of them stirred about my affairs, I would throw away my pen; for I would not be answerable for any mischief or trouble to them. I made it my particular request that we might all be able to say that they had not read the article. I believe I am, in fact, the only member of the family who ever read it.--The day before publication, which happened to be Good Friday, a friend called on me,--a clergyman who occasionally wrote for the Quarterly,--and produced the forthcoming number from under his cloak. "Now," said he, "I am going to leave this with you. Do not tell me a word of what you think of it; but just mark all the lies in the margin: and I will call at the door for it, on my way home in the afternoon." I did it; sat down to my work again (secure from visitors on a Good Friday) and then went out, walking and by omnibus, to dine in the country. I remember thinking in the omnibus that the feelings called forth by such usage are, after all, more pleasurable than painful; and again, when I went to bed, that the day had been a very happy one. The testing of one's power of endurance is pleasurable; and the testing of one's power of forgiveness is yet sweeter: and it is no small benefit to learn something more of one's faults and weaknesses than friends and sympathisers either will or can tell. The compassion that I felt on this occasion for the low-minded and foul-mouthed creatures who could use their education and position as gentlemen to "destroy" a woman whom they knew to be innocent of even comprehending their imputations, was very painful: but, on the other hand, my first trial in the shape of hostile reviewing was over, and I stood unharmed, and somewhat enlightened and strengthened. I mentioned the review to nobody; and therefore nobody mentioned it to me. I heard, some years after, that one or two literary ladies had said that they, in my place, would have gone into the mountains or to the antipodes, and never have shown their faces again; and that there were inquiries in abundance of my friends how I stood it. But I gave no sign. The reply always was that I looked very well and happy,--just as usual.--The sequel of the story is that the writer of the original article, Mr. Poulett Scrope, requested a
mutual friend to tell me that he was ready to acknowledge the political economy of the article to be his; but that he hoped he was too much of a gentleman to have stooped to ribaldry, or even jest; and that I must understand that he was not more or less responsible for any thing in the article which we could not discuss face to face with satisfaction. Messrs. Lockhart and Croker made no secret of the ribaldry being theirs. When the indignation of the literary world was strong in regard to this and other offenses of the same kind, and Mr. Lockhart found he had gone too far in my case, he spared no intreaties to the lady who made Lady G. meet me to invite him,--professing great admiration and good-will, and declaring that I must know his insults to be mere joking. She was won upon at last, and came one day with her husband, to persuade me to go over to dinner to meet Mr. Lockhart. When I persisted in my refusal, she said, in some vexation,--"But what am I to say to Lockhart?--because I promised him." I replied, "I have nothing to do with what you say to Mr. Lockhart: but I will tell you that I will never knowingly meet Mr. Lockhart; and that, if I find myself in the same house with him, I will go out at one door of the drawing-room when he comes in at the other." Her husband, hitherto silent, said, "You are quite right. I would on no account allow you to be drawn in to an acquaintance with Lockhart at our house: and the only excuse I can offer for my wife's rashness is that she has never read that Quarterly article." From other quarters I had friendly warnings that Lockhart had set his mind on making my acquaintance, in order to be able to say that I did not mind what he had done. He was the only person but two whose acquaintance I ever refused. I never saw him but once; and that was twenty years afterwards, when he wore a gloomy and painful expression of countenance, and walked listlessly along the street and the square, near his own house, swinging his cane. My companion told me who he was; and we walked along the other side of the street, having a good and unobserved view of him till he reached his own house. The sorrows of his later years had then closed down upon him, and he was sinking under them: but the pity which I felt for him
then was not more hearty, I believe, than that which filled my mind on that Good Friday, 1833, when he believed he had "destroyed" me.
As for destroying me,--it was too late, for one thing. I had won my
public before Croker took up his "tomahawk." The simple fact,
in regard to the circulation of my Series, was that the sale increased
largely after the appearance of the Quarterly review of it, and diminished
markedly and immediately on the publication of the flattering article on it
in the Edinburgh Review. The Whigs were then falling into disrepute among
the great body of the people; and every token of favour from whig quarters
was damaging to me, for a time. In the long run, there is no doubt that the
Quarterly injured me seriously. For ten years there was seldom a number
which had not some indecent jest about me,--some insulting
introduction of my name. The wonder is what could be gained that was worth
the trouble: but it certainly seems to me that this course of
imputation originated some obscure dread of me and my works among timid and
superficial readers. For one instance among many:--a lady,
calling on a friend of mine, wondered at seeing books of mine on the table,
within the children's reach;--they being "improper
books," she had been told,--declared to be so by the Quarterly
Review. My friend said "Though I don't agree with you, I know
what you are thinking of. You must carry this home, and read
it,"--taking down from the shelf the volume which contained the
Garveloch stories. The visitor hesitated, but yielded, and a few days
after, brought back the book, saying that this could not be the one, for it
was so harmless that her husband had read it aloud to the young people in
the evening. "Well," said my friend, "try another."
The lady and her husband read the whole series through in this way, and
never could find out the "improper book."
And what was all this for? I do not at all know. All that I know is that
a more simple-minded, virtuous man, full of domestic affections,
than Mr. Malthus, could not be found in all England; and that the desire of
his heart and the aim of his work were that domestic virtue and happiness
should be placed
within the reach of all, as Nature intended them to be. He found, in his day, that a portion of the people were underfed; and that one consequence of this was a fearful mortality among infants; and another consequence, the growth of a recklessness among the destitute which caused infanticide, corruption of morals, and, at best, marriage between pauper boys and girls, while multitudes of respectable men and women, who paid rates instead of consuming them, were unmarried at forty, or never married at all. Prudence as to the time of marriage, and to making due provision for it was, one would think, a harmless recommendation enough, under the circumstances. Such is the moral aspect of Malthus's work. As to its mathematical basis, there is no one, as I have heard Mr. Hallam say, who could question it that might not as well dispute the multiplication table. As for whether Mr. Malthus's doctrine, while mathematically indisputable, and therefore assailable in itself only by ribaldry and corrupt misrepresentation, may not be attacking a difficulty at the wrong end,--that is a fair matter of opinion. In my opinion, recent experience shows that it does attack a difficulty at the wrong end. The repeal of the corn-laws, with the consequent improvement in agriculture, and the prodigious increase of emigration have extinguished all present apprehension and talk of "surplus population,"--that great difficulty of forty or fifty years ago. And it should be remembered, as far as I am concerned in the controversy, that I advocated in my Series a free trade in corn, and exhibited the certainty of agricultural improvement, as a consequence; and urged a carefully conducted emigration; and, above all, education without limit. It was my business, in illustrating Political Economy, to exemplify Malthus's doctrine among the rest. It was that doctrine "pure and simple," as it came from his virtuous and benevolent mind, that I presented; and the presentment was accompanied by an earnest advocacy of the remedies which the great natural laws of Society put into our power,--freedom for bringing food to men, and freedom for men to go where food is plentiful; and enlightenment for all, that they may provide for themselves under the guidance of the best intelligence. Mr. Malthus, who did more
for social ease and virtue than perhaps any other man of his time, was the "best-abused man" of the age. I was aware of this; and I saw in him, when I afterwards knew him, one of the serenest and most cheerful men that society can produce. When I became intimate enough with the family to talk over such matters, I asked Mr. Malthus one day whether he had suffered in spirits from the abuse lavished on him. "Only just at first," he answered.--"I wonder whether it ever kept you awake a minute."--"Never after the first fortnight," was his reply. The spectacle of the good man tn his daily life in contrast with the representations of him in the periodical literature of the time, impressed upon me, more forcibly than anything in my own experience, the everlasting fact that the reformers of morality, personal and social, are always subject at the outset to the imputation of immorality from those interested in the continuance of corruption.--I need only add that all suspicious speculation, in regard to my social doctrines, seems to have died out long ago. I was not ruined by this first risk, any more than by any subsequent enterprises; but I was probably never so near it as when my path of duty led me among the snares and pitfalls prepared for the innocent and defenseless by Messrs. Croker and Lockhart, behind the screen of the Quarterly Review.
The behaviour of the Edinburgh was widely different. From the time of my
becoming acquainted with the literary Whigs who were paramount at that
time, I had heard the name of William Empson on all hands: and it
once or twice crossed my mind that it was odd that I never saw him. Once he
left the room as I entered it unexpectedly: and another time, he ran
in among us at dessert, at a dinner party, to deliver a message to the
hostess, and was gone, without an introduction to me,--the only
stranger in company. When his review of my Series in the Edinburgh was out,
and he had ascertained that I had read it, he caused me to he informed that
he had declined an introduction to me hitherto, because he wished to render
impossible all allegations that I had been favourably reviewed by a
personal friend: but that he was now only awaiting my permission to
pay his respects to me. The review was, to be sure extraordinarily
laudatory; but the praise did not seem to me to be very rational and sound; while the nature of the criticism showed that all accordance between Mr. Empson and me on some important principles of social morals was wholly out of the question. His objection to the supposition that society could exist without capital punishment is one instance of what I mean; and his view of the morality or immorality of opinions (apart from the process of forming them) is another. But there was some literary criticism which I was thankful for; and there was such kindliness and generosity in the whole character of the man's mind;--his deeds of delicate goodness came to my knowledge so abUndantly; and he bore so well certain mortifications about the review with which he had taken his best pains, that I was as ready as himself to be friends. And friends we were, for several years. We were never otherwise than perfectly friendly, though I could not help feeling that every year, and every experience, separated us more widely in regard to intellectual and moral sympathy. He was not, from the character of his mind, capable of having opinions; and he was, as is usual in such cases, disposed to be afraid of those who had. He was in a perpetual course of being swayed about by the companions of the day, on all matters but politics. There he was safe; for he was hedged in on every side by the dogmatic Whigs, who made him their chief dogmatist. He was full of literary knowledge;--an omnivorous reader with a weak intellectual digestion. He was not personally the wiser for his reading; but the profusion that he could pour out gave a certain charm to his conversation, and even to his articles, which had no other merit, except indeed that of a general kindliness of spirit. During my intercourse with him and his set, he married the only child of his old friend, Lord Jeffrey: and after the death of Mr. Napier, who succeeded Jeffrey in the editorship of the Edinburgh Review, Mr. Empson accepted the offer of it,--rather to the consternation of some of his best friends. He had been wont to shake his head over the misfortunes of the review in Napier's time, saying that that gentleman had no literary faculty or cultivation whatever. When he himself assumed the management, people said we should now have nothing but liter-
ature. Both he and his predecessor, however, inserted (it was understood) as a matter of course, all articles sent by Whig Ministers, or by their underlings, however those articles might contradict each other even in the same number. All hope of real editorship, of political and moral consistency, was now over; and an unlooked-for failure in modesty and manners in good Mr. Empson spoiled the literary prospect; so that the review lost character and reputation quarter by quarter, while under his charge. His health had so far, and so fatally, failed before he became Editor, that he ought not to have gone into the enterprise; and so his oldest and best friends told him. But the temptation was strong; and, unfortunately, he could not resist it. Unfortunately, if indeed it is desirable that the Edinburgh Review should live,--which may be a question. It is a great evil for such a publication to change its politics radically; and this must be done if the Edinburgh is to live; for Whiggism has become mere death in life,--a mere transitional state, now nearly worn out. When Mr. Empson's review of me appeared, however, the Whigs were new in office, Jeffrey's parliamentary career was an object of high hope to his party, and the Edinburgh was more regarded than the younger generation can now easily believe. Mr. Empson's work was therefore of some consequence to him, to me, and to the public. As I have said, the sale of my Series declined immediately,--under the popular notion that I was to be a pet of the Whigs. As for ourselves, we met very pleasantly at dinner, at his old friend, Lady S.'s, where nobody else was invited. Thence we all went together to an evening party; and I seldom entered a drawing-room afterwards without meeting my kind-hearted reviewer.--Such were the opposite histories of my first appearance in the Edinburgh and Quarterly Reviews.--I may as well add that I speak under no bias, in either case, of contributor or candidate interest; for I never wrote or desired to write for either review. I do not remember that I was ever asked; and I certainly never offered. I think I may trust my memory so far as to say this confidently.
To return to the subject of the materials furnished to me as I proceeded
in my work. There were still three more numbers
written in Norwich, besides those which I have mentioned. The Manchester operatives were eager to interest me in their controversies about Machinery and Wages; and it was from them that I received the bundles of documents which qualified me to write "A Manchester Strike."
It was while I was about this number that the crisis of the Reform Bill
happened. One May morning, I remember, the people of Norwich went out, by
hundreds and thousands, to meet the mail. At that time, little Willie
B--, the son of the Unitarian Minister at Norwich, used to come every
morning to say certain lessons to my mother, with whom he was a great
favourite. On that morning, after breakfast, in came Willie, looking solemn
and business-like, and stood before my mother with his arms by his
sides, as if about to say a lesson, and said, "Ma'am, papa
sends you his regards, and the Ministry has resigned." "Well,
Willie, what does that mean?" "I don't know,
Ma'am." We, however, knew so well that, for once, and I believe
for the only time in those busy years, I could not work. When my mother
came in from ordering dinner, she found me sitting beside Willie, mending
stockings. She expressed her amazement: and I told her, what pleased
her highly, that I really could not write about twopenny galloons, the
topic of the morning, after hearing of Lord Grey's resignation. We
went out early into the town, where the people were all in the streets, and
the church bells were muffled and tolling. I do not remember a more
exciting day. My publisher wrote a day or two afterwards, that the London
booksellers need not have been afraid of the Reform Bill, any more than the
Cholera, for that during this crisis, he had sold more of my books than
ever. Every thing, indeed, justified my determination not to defer a work
which was the more wanted the more critical became the affairs of the
nation,
In spite of all I could say, the men of Manchester persisted that
my hero was their hero, whose name however I had
never heard. It gratified me to find that my doctrine was well received,
and I may say, cordially agreed in, even at that time, by the leaders of
the genuine Manchester operatives; and they, for
their part, were gratified by their great topics of interest being discussed by one whom they supposed to have "spent all her life in a cotton-mill," as one of their favourite Members of Parliament told me they did.--It occurs to me that my life ought indeed to be written by myself or some one else who can speak to its facts; for, if the reports afloat about me from time to time were to find their way into print after my death, it would appear the strangest life in the world. I have been assigned a humbler life than that of the Cotton-mill. A friend of mine heard a passenger in a stage-coach tell another that I was "of very low origin,--having been a maid-of-all-work." This was after the publication of my model number of the "Guide to Service," done at the request of the Poor-law Commissioners. My reply to the request was that I would try, if the Maid-of-all-work might be my subject. I considered it a compliment, when I found I was supposed to have been relating my own experience. One aunt of mine heard my Series extolled (also in a coach) as wonderful for a young creature, seventeen and no more on her last birthday; and another aunt heard the same praise, in the same way, but on the opposite ground that I was wonderfully energetic for eighty-four! So many people beard that I was dreadfully conceited, and that my head was turned with success, that I began to think, in spite of very sober feelings and of abundant self-distrust, that the account must be true. A shopman at a printseller's was heard by a cousin of mine, after the publication of "Vanderput and Snoek," giving an impressive account of my residence in Holland: and, long after, Mr. Laing made inquiries of a relation about how long I had lived in Norway,--of which "Feats on the Fiord" were supposed to be an evidence: but I had visited neither country when I wrote of them, and shall die without seeing Norway now. Every body believed at one time that I had sought Lord Brougham's patronage;--and this report I did not like at all. Another,--that he had written the chief part of the books,--was merely amusing. Another gave me some little trouble, in the midst of the amusement;--that I had been married for two years before the Series was finished, and that I concealed the fact for conven-
ience. More than one of my own relations required the most express and serious assurance from me that this was not true before they would acquit me of an act of trickery so unlike me,--who never had any secrets. The husband thus assigned to me was a gentleman whom I had then never heard of, and whom I never saw till some years afterwards, when he had long been a married man. After my Eastern journey in 1846, it was widely reported, and believed in Paris, that my party and I had quarrelled, as soon as we landed in France; and that I had gone on by myself, and travelled through those eastern countries entirely alone. I could not conceive what could be the meaning of the compliments I received on my "wonderful courage," till I found how unwilling people were to credit that I had been well taken care of. My "Eastern Life" disabused all believers in this nonsense; and I hope this Memoir will discredit all the absurd reports which may yet be connected with my station and my doings in life, in the minds of those who know me only from rumour.
"Cousin Marshall," which treats of the Poor-laws, was
written and at press before Lord Brougham had devised his scheme of
engaging me to illustrate the operation of the Poor-laws. I obtained
my material, as to details, from a brother who was a Guardian, and from a
lady who took an interest in workhouse management. For
"Ireland" and "Homes Abroad," I obtained facts from
Blue-books on Ireland and Colonization which were among the many by
this time sent me by people who had "hobbies." These were all
that I wrote at Norwich.
Five of my numbers had appeared before Lord Brougham saw any of them, or
knew any thing about them. He was at Brougham in June, 1832, when Mr.
Drummond,--the Thomas Drummond of sacred memory in Ireland,--sent
him my numbers, up to "Ella of Garveloch" (inclusive). A friend
of both was at that time at Norwich, canvassing for the representation; and
Lord Brougham wrote to him, with his customary vehemence, extolling me and
my work, and desiring him to engage me to illustrate the poor-laws,
in aid of the Commission then appointed to the work of poor-law
inquiry. It was hardly right
in me to listen to any invitation to further work. That I should have done so for any considerations of fame or money can never have been believed by any who knew what proposals and solicitations from all manner of editors and publishers I refused. It was the extreme need and difficulty of poor-law reform that won me to the additional task. I had for many years been in a state of despair about national affairs, on account of this "gangrene of the state," as the French commissioners had reported it, "which it was equally impossible to remove and to let alone." When Lord Brougham wrote to his friend an account of the evidence which was actually obtained, and which would be placed at my disposal; and when he added that there was an apparent possibility of cure, declaring that his "hopes would be doubled" if I could be induced to help the scheme, the temptation to over-work was irresistible. When I met Lord Brougham in town, he urged me strongly to promise six numbers within a year. I was steady in refusing to do more than four altogether: and truly, that was quite enough, in addition to the thirty numbers of my own Series, (including the "Illustrations of Taxation.") These thirty-four little volumes were produced in two years and a half,--the greater part of the time being one unceasing whirl of business and social excitement. After my settlement in London, Lord Brougham called on me to arrange the plan. He informed me that the evidence would be all placed in my hands; and that my Illustrations would be published by the Diffusion Society. He then requested me to name my terms. I declined. He proceeded to assign the grounds of the estimate he was about to propose, telling me what his Society and others had given for various works, and why he considered mine worth more than some to which I likened it. Finally, he told me I ought not to have less than one hundred pounds apiece for my four numbers. He said that the Society would pay me seventy-five pounds on the day of publication of each; and that he then and there guaranteed to me the remaining twenty-five pounds for each. If I did not receive it from the Society, I should from him. He afterwards told the Secretary of the Society and two personal friends of his and mine that these were the terms he
had offered, and meant to see fulfilled. I supplied the works which, he declared, fully answered his expectations; and indeed he sent me earnest and repeated thanks for them. The Society fulfilled its engagements completely and punctually: but Lord Brougham did not fulfil his own, more or less. I never saw or heard any thing of the four times twenty-five pounds I was to receive to make up my four hundred pounds. I believe that he was reminded of his engagement, while I was in America, by those to whom he had avowed it: but I have never received any part of the money, to this day. I never made direct application to him for it; partly because I never esteemed or liked him, or relished being implicated in business with him, after the first flutter was over, and I could judge of him for myself; and partly because such an amount of unfulfilled promises lay at his door, at the time of his enforced retirement from power, that I felt that my application would be, like other people's applications, as fruitless as it would be disagreeable. I do not repent doing those tales, because I hope and believe they were useful at a special crisis: but they never succeeded to any thing like the extent of my own Series; and it certainly appeared that all connexion with the Diffusion Society, and Lord Brougham, and the Whig government, was so much mere detriment to my usefulness and my influence.
I had better relate here all that I have to say about that batch of
Tales. Lord Brougham sent me all the evidence as it was delivered in by the
Commissioners of Inquiry into the operation of the Poor-laws. There
can be no stronger proof of the strength of this evidence than the
uniformity of the suggestions to which it gave rise in all the minds which
were then intent on finding the remedy. I was requested to furnish my share
of conclusions and suggestions. I did so, in the form of a programme of
doctrine for my illustrations, some of which expose the evils of the old
system, while others pourtray the features of its proposed successor. My
document actually crossed in the street one sent me by a Member of the
government detailing the heads of the new Bill. I sat down to read it with
no little emotion, and some apprehension; and the moment when, arriving at
the end,
I found that the government scheme and my own were identical, point by point, was not one to be easily forgotten. I never wrote any thing with more glee than "The Hamlets,"--the number in which the proposed reform is exemplified: and the spirit of the work carried me through the great effort of writing that number and "Cinnamon and Pearls" in one month,--during a country visit in glorious summer weather.
Soon after my Poor-law Tales began to appear, I received a
message from Mr. Barnes, Editor-in-chief of the
"Times," intimating that the "Times" was prepared
to support my work, which would be a valuable auxiliary of the proposed
reform. I returned no answer, not seeing that any was required from an
author who had never had any thing to do with her reviewers, or made any
interest in reviews. I said this to the friend who delivered the message,
expressing at the same time my satisfaction that the government measure was
to have the all-powerful support of the "Times." The
Ministers were assured of the same support by the same potentate. How the
other newspapers would go there was no saying, because the proposed reform
was not a party measure; but, with the "Times" on our side we
felt pretty safe. It was on the seventeenth of April, 1834, that Lord
Althorp introduced the Bill. His speech, full of facts, earnest, and deeply
impressive, produced a strong effect on the House; and the Ministers went
home to bed with easy minds,--little imagining what awaited them at
the breakfast table. It was no small vexation to me, on opening the
"Times" at breakfast on the eighteenth, to find a vehement and
total condemnation of the New Poor-law. Every body in London was
asking how it happened. I do not know, except in as far as I was told by
some people who knew more of the management of the paper than the world in
general. Their account was that the intention had really been, up to the
preceding day, to support the measure; but that such reports arrived of the
hostility of the country-justices,--a most important class of
customers,--that a meeting of proprietors was held in the evening,
when the question of supporting or opposing the measure was put to the
vote. The policy of humouring the country-justices was carried by
one vote. So went the story.
Another anecdote, less openly spoken of, I believe to have been true. Lord Brougham wrote a note, I was told, to Lord Althorp, the same morning, urging him to timely attendance at the Cabinet Council, as it must be immediately decided whether Barnes, (who was not very favourably described,) and the "Times" should be propitiated or defied. A letter or message arriving from Lord Althorp which rendered the sending the note unnecessary, Lord Brougham tore it up, and threw it into the waste-basket under the table. The fragments were by somebody or other abstracted from the basket, pasted together, and sent to Mr. Barnes, whose personal susceptibility was extreme. From that day began the baiting of Lord Brougham in the "Times" which set every body inquiring what so fierce a persecution could mean; and the wonder ceased only when the undisciplined politician finally fell from his rank as a statesman, and forfeited the remains of his reputation within two years afterwards. A searching domestic inquiry was instituted; but, up to the time of my being told the story, no discovery had been made of the mischief-maker who had picked up the scraps of the note.
After talking over the debate and the comment on it with my mother and
aunt, that April morning, I went up to my study to work, and was presently
interrupted by a note which surprised me so much that I carried it to my
mother. It was from a lady with whom I had only a very slight
acquaintance,--the wife of a Member of Parliament of high
consideration. This lady invited me to take a drive with her that morning,
and mentioned that she was going to buy plants at a nursery. My mother
advised me to leave my work early, for once, and go, for the fresh air and
the pleasure. My correspondent called for me, and, before we were off the
stones, out came the reason of the invitation. Her husband was aghast at
the course of the "Times," and had been into the City to buy
the "Morning Chronicle,"--then a far superior paper to
what it has been since. He and a friend were now the proprietors of the
"Chronicle," and no time was to be lost in finding writers who
could and would support the New Poor-law. I was the first to be
invited, because I was known to have been acquainted with the principles
and pro-
visions of the measure from the beginning. The invitation to me was to write "leaders" on the New Poor-law, as long as such support should be wanted. I asked why the proprietor did not do it himself, and found that he was really so engaged in parliamentary committees as to be already over-worked. I declared myself over-worked too; but I was entreated to take a few hours for consideration. An answer was to be sent for at five o'clock. My mother and I talked the matter over. The inducements were very strong; for I could not but see that I was the person for the work: but my mother said it would kill me,--busy as I was at present. I believed that it would injure my own Series; and I therefore declined.--For many months afterwards, even for years, it was a distasteful task to read the "Times" on the New Poor-law,--so venomous, so unscrupulous, so pertinacious, so mischievous in intention, and so vicious in principle was its opposition to a reform which has saved the state. But, as the reform was strong enough to stand, this hostility has been eventually a very great benefit. Bad as was the spirit of the opposition, it assumed the name of humanity, and did some of the work of humanity. Every weak point of the measure was exposed, and every extravagance chastised. Its righteousness and principled humanity were ignored; and every accidental pressure or inconvenience was made the most of. The faults of the old law were represented (as by Mr. Dickens in "Oliver Twist") as those of the new, and every effort was made to protract the exercise of irresponsible power by the country justices: but the measure was working, all the while, for the extinction of the law-made vices and miseries of the old system; and the process was aided by the stimulating vigilance of the "Times," which evoked at once the watchfulness and activity of officials and the spirit of humanity in society,--both essential conditions of the true working of the new law.--My share in the punishment I could never understand. Neither my mother nor I mentioned to any person whatever the transaction of that morning: but in a few days appeared a venomous attack on the Member of Parliament who had bought the "Chronicle," in the course of which he was taunted with going to a young lady in
Fludyer Street for direction in his political conduct. After that, there were many such allusions:--my friends were appealed to to check my propensity to write about all things whatsoever,--the world having by this time quite books enough of mine: and the explanation given of the ill success and bad working of the Whig measures was that the Ministers came to me for them. This sort of treatment gave me no pain, because I was not acquainted with any body belonging to the "Times," and I was safe enough with the public by this time: but I thought it rather too much when Mr. Sterling, "the Thunderer of the Times," and at that period editor-in-chief, obtained an invitation to meet me, after the publication of my books on America, alleging that he himself had never written a disrespectful word of me. My reply was that he was responsible, as editor, and that I used the only method of self-defence possible to a woman under a course of insult like that, in declining his acquaintance. Not long afterwards, when I was at Tynemouth, hopelessly ill, poor and helpless, the "Times" abused and insulted me for privately refusing a pension. Again Mr. Sterling made a push for my acquaintance; and I repeated what I had said before: whereupon he declared that "it cut him to the heart" that I should impute to him the ribaldry and coarse insults of scoundrels and ruffians who treated me as I had been treated in the "Times." I dare say what he said of his own feelings was true enough; but it will never do for responsible editors, like Sterling and Lockhart, to shirk their natural retribution for the sins of their publications by laying the blame on some impalpable offender who, on his part, has very properly relied on their responsibility. It appears to me that social honesty and good faith can be preserved only by thus enforcing integrity in the matter of editorial responsibility.
A curious incident occurred, much to the delight of my Edinburgh
reviewer, in connexion with that story,--"The
Hamlets,"--which, as I have said, I enjoyed writing exceedingly.
While I was preparing its doctrine and main facts, I went early one summer
morning, with a sister, to the Exhibition at Somerset House, (as it was in
those days). I stopped before a picture by
Collins,--"Children at the Haunts of the Sea-fowl;" and, after a good study of it, I told my sister that I had before thought of laying the scene by the sea-side, and that this bewitching picture decided me. The girl in the corner, in the red petticoat, was irresistible; and she should be my heroine. There should be a heroine,--a girl and a boy, instead of two boys. I did this, and, incited by old associations, described myself and a brother (in regard to character) in these two personages. Soon after, at a music-party, my hostess begged to introduce to me Mr. Collins the artist, who wished to make his acknowledgments for some special obligation he was under to me. This seemed odd, when I was hailing the opportunity for precisely the same reason. Mr. Collins begged to shake hands with me because I had helped him to his great success at the Academy that year. He explained that Mrs. Marcet had paid him a visit when he had fully sketched, and actually begun his picture, and had said to him "Before you go on with this, you ought to read Miss Martineau's description in 'Ella of Garveloch' of destroying the eagle's nest." Mr. Collins did so, and in consequence altered his picture in almost every part; and now, in telling me the incident, he said that his chief discontent with his work was not having effaced the figure of the girl in the corner. He was reconciled to her, however, when I told him that the girl in the red petticoat was the heroine of the story I was then writing. This incident strikes me as a curious illustration of the way in which minds play into one another when their faculties of conception and suggestion are kindred, whatever may be their several modes of expression. One of my chief social pleasures was meeting Wilkie, and planning pictures with him, after his old manner, though alas! he was now painting in his new. He had returned from Spain, with his portfolios filled with sketches of Spanish ladies, peasants and children; and he enjoyed showing these treasures of his, I remember, to my mother and me one day when we went by invitation to Kensington, to see them. But his heart was, I am sure, in his old style. He used to watch his opportunity,--being very shy,--to get a bit of talk with me unheard, about what illustrations of my stories should be,
saying that nothing would make him so happy, if he were but able, as to spend the rest of his painting-life in making a gallery from my Series. He told me which group or action he should select from each number, as far as then published, and dwelt particularly, I remember, on the one in "Ireland," which was Dora letting down her petticoat from her shoulders as she entered the cabin. I write this in full recollection of Wilkie's countenance, voice and words, but in total forgetfulness of my own story, Dora, and the cabin. I have not the book at hand for reference, but I am sure I am reporting Wilkie truly. He told me that he thought the resemblance of our respective mind's-eyes was perfectly singular; and that, for aught he saw, each of us might, as well as not, have done the other's work, as for as the pictorial faculties were concerned.
I have one more little anecdote to tell about the heroine "The
Hamlets." I was closely questioned by Miss Berry, one day when dining
there, about the sources of my draughts of character,--especially of
children,--and above all, of Harriet and Ben in "The
Hamlets." I acknowledged that these last were more like myself and my
brother than any body else. Whereupon the lively old lady exclaimed, loud
enough to be heard by the whole party, "My God! did you go out
shrimping?" "No," I replied: "nor were we
workhouse children, What you asked me about was the characters."
While these Poor-law tales were appearing, I received a letter
from Mrs. Fry, requesting an interview for purposes of importance, at any
time and place I might appoint. I appointed a meeting in Newgate, at the
hour on a Tuesday morning when Mrs. Fry was usually at that post of sublime
duty. Wishing for a witness, as our interview was to be one of business, I
took with me a clerical friend of mine as an appropriate person. After the
usual services, Mrs. Fry led the way into the Matron's room, where we
three sat down for our conference. Mrs. Fry's objects were two. The
inferior one was to engage me to interest the government in her newly
planned District Societies. The higher one was connected with the
poor-law reform then in preparation. She told me that her brother,
J.J. Gurney, and other
members of her family had become convinced by reading "Cousin Marshall" and others of my tales that they had been for a long course of years unsuspectingly doing mischief where they meant to do good; that they were now convinced that the true way of benefitting the poor was to reform the Poor-law system; and that they were fully sensible of the importance of the measure to be brought forward, some months hence, in parliament. Understanding that I was in the confidence of the government as to this measure, they desired to know whether I could honourably give them an insight into the principles on which it was to be founded. Their object in this request was good. They desired that their section of the House of Commons should have time and opportunity to consider the subject, which might not be attainable in the hurry of a busy session. On consideration, I had no scruple in communicating the principles, without, of course, any disclosure of the measures. Mrs. Fry noted them down, with cheerful thanks, and assurances that they would not be thrown away. They were not thrown away. That section of Members came well prepared for the hearing of the measure, and one and all unflinchingly supported it.
From the time of my settlement in London, there was no fear of any
dearth of information on any subject which I wished to treat. Every party,
and every body who desired to push any object, forwarded to me all the
information they held. It was, in fact, rather ridiculous to see the onset
on my acquaintances made by riders of hobbies. One acquaintance of mine
told me, as I was going to his house to dinner, that three gentlemen had
been at his office that morning;--one beseeching him to get me to
write a number on the navigable rivers of Ireland; a second on (I think)
the Hamiltonian (or other) system of Education; and a third, who was
confident that the welfare of the nation depended on it, on the
encouragement of flax-growing in the interior of Guiana. Among such
applicants, the Socialists were sure to be found; and Mr. Owen was
presently at my ear, laying down the law in the way which he calls
"proof," and really interesting me by the candour and
cheerfulness, the benevolence and charming manners which would make him the
most
popular man in England if he could but distinguish between assertion and argument, and abstain from wearying his friends with his monotonous doctrine. If I remember right, it was after my anti-socialist story, "For Each and for All," that I became acquainted with Mr. Owen himself; but the material was supplied by his disciples,--for the chance of what use I might make of it: so that I was perfectly free to come out as their opponent. Mr. Owen was not at all offended at my doing so. Having still strong hopes of Prince Metternich for a convert, he might well have hopes of me: and, believing Metternich to be, if the truth were known, a disciple of his, it is no wonder if I also was given out as being so. For many months, my pleasant visitor had that hope of me; and when he was obliged to give it up, it was with a kindly sigh. He was sure that I desired to perceive the truth; but I had got unfortunately bewildered. I was like the traveller who could not see the wood for the trees. I cannot recal that story, more or less; ("For Each and All;") but I know it must have contained the stereotyped doctrine of the Economists of that day. What I witnessed in America considerably modified my views on the subject of Property; and from that time forward I saw social modifications taking place which have already altered the tone of leading Economists, and opened a prospect of further changes which will probably work out in time a totally new social state. If that should ever happen, it ought to be remembered that Robert Owen was the sole apostle of the principle in England at the beginning of our century. Now that the Economy of Association is a fact acknowledged by some of our most important recent institutions,--as the London Clubs, our Model Lodging-houses, and dozens of new methods of Assurance, every one would willingly assign his due share of honour to Robert Owen, but for his unfortunate persistency in his other characteristic doctrine,--that Man is the creature of circumstances,--his notion of "circumstances" being literally surroundings, no allowance, or a wholly insufficient allowance, being made for constitutional structure and differences. His certainty that we might make life a heaven, and his hallucination that we are going to do so
immediately, under his guidance, have caused his wisdom to be overlooked in his absurdity, and his services to be too nearly forgotten in vexation and fatigue at his eccentricity. I own I became weary of him, while ashamed, every time I witnessed his fine temper and manners, of having felt so. One compact that we made, three parts in earnest, seems to me, at this distance of time, excessively ludicrous. I saw that he was often wide of the mark, in his structures on the religious world, through his ignorance of the Bible; and I told him so. He said he knew the Bible so well as to have been heartily sick of it in his early youth. He owned that he had never read it since. He promised to read the four Gospels carefully, if I would read "Hamlet," with a running commentary of Necessarian doctrine in my own mind. My share was the easier, inasmuch as I was as thoroughgoing a Necessarian as he could desire. I fulfilled my engagement, internally laughing all the while at what Shakspere would be thinking, if he could know what I was about. No doubt, Mr. Owen did his part too, like an honourable man; and no doubt with as much effect produced on him by this book as by every other, as a blind man in the presence of the sunrise, or a deaf one of an oratorio. Robert Owen is not the man to think differently of a book for having read it; and this from no want of candour, but simply from more than the usual human inability to see any thing but what he has made up his mind to see.
I cannot remember what put the scene and story of my twelfth number,
"French Wines and Politics," into my head: but I recall
some circumstances about that and the following number, "The Charmed
Sea," which amused me extremely at the time. Among the very first of
my visitors at my lodgings was Mrs. Marcet, whose
"Conversations" had revealed to me the curious fact that, in my
early tales about Wages and Machinery, I had been writing Political Economy
without knowing it. Nothing could be more kindly and generous than her
acknowledgment and enjoyment of what she called my "honours."
The best of it was, she could never see the generosity on which her old
friends complimented her, because, by her own account, there was no sort of
rivalship between us. She had a great opinion
of great people;--of people great by any distinction,--ability, office, birth and what not: and she innocently supposed her own taste to be universal. Her great pleasure in regard to me was to climb the two flights of stairs at my lodgings (asthma notwithstanding) to tell me of great people who were admiring, or at least reading, my Series. She brought me "hommages" and all that sort of thing, from French savans, foreign ambassadors, and others; and, above all the rest was her satisfaction in telling me that the then new and popular sovereign, Louis Philippe, had ordered a copy of my Series for each member of his family, and had desired M. Guizot to introduce a translation of it into the national schools. This was confirmed, in due time, by the translator, who wrote to me for some particulars of my personal history, and announced a very large order for the work from M. Guizot. Before I received this letter, my twelfth number was written, and I think in the press. About the same time, I heard from some other quarter, (I forget what) that the Emperor of Russia had ordered a copy of the Series for every member of his family; and my French translator wrote to me, some time afterwards, that a great number of copies had been bought, by the Czar's order, for his schools in Russia. While my twelfth number was printing, I was writing the thirteenth, "The Charmed Sea,"--that sea being the Baikal Lake, the scenery Siberian, and the personages exiled Poles. The Edinburgh Review charged me with relaxing my Political Economy for the sake of the fiction, in this case,--the reviewer having kept his article open for the appearance of the latest number obtainable before the publication of the review. There was some little mistake about this; the fact being that the bit of doctrine I had to deal with,--the origin of currency,--hardly admitted of any exemplification at all. Wherever the scene had been laid, the doctrine would have been equally impracticable in action, and must have been conveyed mainly by express explanation or colloquial commentary. If any action were practicable at all, it must be in some scene where the people were at the first remove from a state of barter: and the Poles in Siberia, among Mongolian neighbours, were perhaps as good for my purpose as any other
personages. Marco Polo's account of the stamped leather currency he met with in his travels determined me in regard to Asiatic scenery, in the first place; and the poet Campbell's appeals to me in behalf of the Poles, before I left Norwich, and the visits of the venerable Niemcewicz, and other Poles and their friends, when I went to London, made me write of the Charmed Sea of Siberia. My reviewer was right as to the want of the due subordination of other interests to that of the science; but he failed to perceive that that particular bit of science was abstract and uninteresting. I took the hint, however; and from that time I was on my guard against making my Series a vehicle for any of the "causes" of the time. I saw that if my Edinburgh reviewer could not perceive that some portions of doctrine were more susceptible of exemplification than others, such discrimination was not to be expected of the whole public; and I must afford no occasion for being supposed to be forsaking my main object for such temporary interests as came in my way.--Meantime, the incidents occurred which amused my friends and myself so much, in connexion with these two numbers. On the day of publication of the twelfth, Mrs. Marcet climbed my stair-case, and appeared, more breathless than ever, at a somewhat early hour,--as soon as my door was open to visitors. She was in a state of distress and vexation. "I thought I had told you," said she, in the midst of her panting,--"but I suppose you did not hear me:--I thought I had told you that the King of the French read all your stories, and made all his family read them: and now you have been writing about Egalité; and they will never read you again." I told her I had heard her very well; but it was not convenient to me to alter my story, for no better reason than that. It was from history, and not from private communication, that I drew my materials; and I had no doubt that Louis Philippe and his family thought of his father very much as I did. My good friend could not see how I could hope to be presented at the Tuileries after this: and I could only say that it had never entered my head to wish it. I tried to turn the conversation to account by impressing on my anxious friend the hopelessness of all attempts to induce me to alter my stories
from such considerations as she urged. I wrote with a view to the people, and especially the most suffering of them; and the crowned heads must, for once, take their chance for their feelings. A month after, I was subjected to similar reproaches about the Emperor of Russia. He was, in truth, highly offended. He ordered every copy of my Series to be delivered up, and then burnt or deported; and I was immediately forbidden the empire. His example was followed in Austria; and thus, I was personally excluded, before my Series was half done, from two of the three greatest countries in Europe, and in disfavour with the third--supposing I wished to go there. My friends, Mr. and Mrs. F--, invited me to go to the south of Europe with them on the conclusion of my work: and our plan was nearly settled when reasons appeared for my going to America instead. My friends went south when I went west. Being detained by inundation on the borders of Austrian Italy, they were weary of their dull hotel. All other amusement being exhausted, Mr. F-- sauntered round the open part of the house, reading whatever was hung against the walls. One document contained the names and description of persons who were not to be allowed to pass the frontier; and mine was among them. If I had been with my friends, our predicament would have been disagreeable. They could not have deserted me; and I must have deprived them of the best part of their journey.
In planning my next story, "Berkeley the Banker," I
submitted myself to my reviewer's warning, and spared no pains in
thoroughly incorporating the doctrine and the tale. I remember that, for
two days, I sat over my materials from seven in the morning till two the
next morning, with an interval of only twenty minutes for dinner. At the
end of my plotting, I found that, after all, I had contrived little but
relationships, and that I must trust to the uprising of new involutions in
the course of my narrative. I had believed before, and I went on during my
whole career of fiction-writing to be more and more thoroughly
convinced, that the creating a plot is a task above human faculties. It is
indeed evidently the same power as that of prophecy: that is, if all
human action is (as we know it to be) the
inevita-
ble result of antecedents, all the antecedents must be thoroughly comprehended in order to discover the inevitable catastrophe. A mind which can do this must be, in the nature of things, a prophetic mind, in the strictest sense; and no human mind is that. The only thing to be done, therefore, is to derive the plot from actual life, where the work is achieved for us: and, accordingly, it seems that every perfect plot in fiction is taken bodily from real life. The best we know are so derived. Shakspere's are so: Scott's one perfect plot ("the Bride of Lammermoor") is so; and if we could know where Boccaccio and other old narrators got theirs, we should certainly find that they took them from their predecessors, or from the life before their eyes. I say this from no mortification at my own utter inability to make a plot. I should say the same, (after equal study of the subject) if I had never tried to write a tale. I see the inequality of this kind of power in contemporary writers; an inequality wholly independent of their merits in other respects; and I see that the writers (often inferior ones) who have the power of making the best plots do it by their greater facility in forming analogous narratives with those of actual experience. They may be, and often are, so inferior as writers of fiction to others who cannot make plots that one is tempted to wish that they and their superiors could be rolled into one, so as to make a perfect novelist or dramatist. For instance, Dickens cannot make a plot,--nor Bulwer,--nor Douglas Jerrold, nor perhaps Thackeray; while Fanny Kemble's forgotten "Francis the First," written in her teens, contains mines of plot, sufficient to furnish a groundwork for a score of fine fictions. As for me, my incapacity in this direction is so absolute that I always worked under a sense of despair about it. In "the Hour and the Man," for instance, there are prominent personages who have no necessary connexion whatever with the story; and the personages fall out of sight, till at last, my hero is alone in his dungeon, and the story ends with his solitary death. I was not careless, nor unconscious of my inability. It was inability, "pure and simple." My only resource therefore was taking suggestion from facts, witnessed by myself, or gathered in any way I could. That tale of "Berke-
ley the Banker" owed its remarkable success, not to my hard work of those two days; but to my taking some facts from the crisis of 1825-6 for the basis of my story. The toil of those two days was not thrown away, because the amalgamation of doctrine and narrative was more complete than it would otherwise have been: but no protraction of the effort would have brought out a really good plot, any more than the most prodigious amount of labour in practicing would bring out good music from a performer unendowed with musical faculty.
That story was, in a great degree, as I have already said, our own
family history of four years before. The most amusing thing to me was that
the relative (not one of my nearest relations) who was presented as
Berkeley,--(by no means exactly, but in the main characteristics and
in some conspicuous speeches) was particularly delighted with that story.
He seized it eagerly, as being about banking, and expressed his admiration,
far and wide, of the character of the banker, as being so extremely
natural! His unconscious pleasure was a great relief to me: for,
while I could not resist the temptation his salient points offered me, I
dreaded the consequences of my free use of them.
About the next number, "Vanderput and Snoek," I have a
curious confession to make. It was necessary to advertise on the cover of
each tale the title of the next. There had never been any difficulty thus
far,--it being my practice, as I have said, to sit down to the study
of a new number within a day or two, or a few hours, of finishing its
predecessor. My banking story was, however, an arduous affair; and I had to
write the first of my Poor-law series. I was thus driven so close
that when urged by the printer for the title of my next number, I was
wholly unprepared. All I knew was that my subject was to be Bills of
Exchange. The choice of scene lay between Holland and South America, where
Bills of Exchange are, or then were, either more numerous or more important
than any where else. I thought Holland on the whole the more convenient of
the two; so I dipped into some book about that country (Sir William Temple,
I believe it was) picked out the two ugliest Dutch names I could find, made
them into a firm, and boldly
advertised them. Next, I had to consider how to work up to my title: and in this I met with most welcome assistance from my friends, Mr. and Mrs. F--, of Highbury. They were well acquainted with the late British Consul at Rotterdam, then residing in their neighbourhood. They had previously proposed to introduce me to this gentleman, for the sake of the information he could give me about Dutch affairs: and I now hastened to avail myself of the opportunity. The ex-consul was made fully aware of my object, and was delighted to be of use. We met at Mr. F.'s breakfast table; and in the course of the morning he gave me all imaginable information about the aspect and habits of the country and people. When I called on his lady, some time afterwards, I was struck by the pretty picture presented by his twin daughters, who were more exactly alike than any other twins I have ever seen. They sat beside a worktable, at precisely the same angle with it: each had a foot on a footstool, for the sake of her netting. They drew their silk through precisely at the same instant, and really conveyed a perplexing impression of a mirror where mirror there was none. The Dromios could not be more puzzling. The temptation to put these girls into a story was too strong to be resisted: but, as I knew the family were interested in my Series at the moment, I waited a while. After a decent interval, they appeared in "The Park and the Paddock;" and then only in regard to externals; for I knew nothing more of them whatever.
When I had to treat of Free Trade, I took advantage, of course, of the
picturesque scenery and incidents connected with smuggling. The only
question was what part of the coast I should choose for my seventeenth and
eighteenth numbers, "The Loom and the Lugger." I questioned all
my relations and friends who had frequented Eastbourne and that
neighbourhood about the particulars of the locality and scenery. It struck
me as curious that, of all the many whom I asked, no one could tell me
whether there was a lighthouse at Beachy Head. A cousin told me that she
was acquainted with a farmer's family living close by Beachy Head,
and in the very midst of the haunts of the smugglers. This farmer was under
some obligation to my
uncle, and would be delighted at the opportunity of rendering a service to any of the name. My publisher was willing to set down the trip to the account of the expenses of the Series; and I went down, with a letter of introduction in my hand, to see and learn all I could in the course of a couple of days. My time was limited, not only by the exigencies of my work, but by an engagement to meet my Edinburgh reviewer for the first time,--as I have mentioned above,--and to another very especial party for the same evening. On a fine May evening, therefore, I presented myself at the farm-house door, with my letter in my hand. I was received with surpassing grace by two young girls,--their father and elder sister being absent at market. Tea was ready presently; and then, one of the girls proposed a walk to "the Head" before dark. When we returned, every thing was arranged; and the guest chamber looked most tempting to an overworked Londoner. The farmer and one daughter devoted the whole of the next day to me. We set forth, carrying a new loaf and a bottle of beer, that we might not be hurried in our explorations. I then and there learned all that appears in "The Loom and the Lugger" about localities and the doings of smugglers. Early the following morning I went to see Pevensey Castle, and in the forenoon was in the coach on my way back to town. I was so cruelly pressed for time that, finding myself alone in the coach, I wrote on my knees all the way to London, in spite of the jolting. At my lodging, I was in consternation at seeing my large round table heaped with the letters and parcels which had arrived during those two days. I dispatched fourteen notes, dressed, and was at Lady S.'s by the time the clock struck six. The quiet, friendly dinner was a pure refreshment: but the evening party was a singular trial. I had been compelled to name the day for this party, as I had always been engaged when invited by my hostess. I thought it odd that my name was shouted by the servants, in preference to that of Lady C--, with whom I entered the room: and the way in which my hostess took possession of me, and began to parade me before her noble and learned guests showed me that I must at once take my part, if I
desired to escape the doom of "lionising." The lady, having two drawing-rooms open, had provided a "lion" for each. Rammohun Roy was stationed in the very middle of one, meek and perspiring; and I was intended for the same place in the other. I saw it just in time. I took my stand with two or three acquaintances behind the folding-doors, and maintained my retirement till the carriage was announced. If this was bad manners, it was the only alternative to worse. I owe to that incident a friendship which has lasted my life. That friend, till that evening known to me only by name, had been behind the scenes, and had witnessed all the preparations; and very curious she was to see what I should do. If I had permitted the lionising, she would not have been introduced to me. When I got behind the door, she joined our trio; and we have been intimate friends to this day. Long years after, she gave me her account of that memorable evening. What a day it was! When Lady S. set me down at midnight, and I began to undress, and feel how weary I was, it seemed incredible that it was that very morning that I had seen Pevensey Castle, and heard the dash of the sea, and listened to the larks on the down. The concluding thought, I believe, before I fell into the deep sleep I needed, was that I would never visit a second time at any house where I was "lionised."
The Anti-corn law tale, "Sowers not Reapers," cost me
great labour,--clear as was the doctrine, and familiar to me for many
a year past. I believe it is one of the most successful for the
incorporation of the doctrine with the narrative: and the story of
the Kays is true, except that, in real life, the personages were gentry. I
had been touched by that story when told it, some years before; and now it
seemed to fit in well with my other materials. Two years afterwards I met
with a bit of strong evidence of the monstrous vice and absurdity of our
corn-laws in the eyes of Americans. This story, "Sowers not
Reapers," was republished in America while I was there; and Judge
Story, who knew more about English laws, manners and customs, condition,
literature, and even topography than any other man in the United States,
told me that I need not expect his country-
men in general to understand the book, as even he, after all his preparedness, was obliged to read it twice,--first to familiarise himself with the conception, and then to study the doctrine. Thus incredible was it that so proud and eminent a nation as ours should persist in so insane and suicidal a policy as that of protection, in regard to the most indispensable article of food.
Among the multitude of letters of suggestion which had by this time been
sent me, was an anonymous one from Oxford, which gave me the novel
information that the East India Company constituted a great monopoly. While
thinking that, instead of being one, it was a nest of monopolies (in 1833)
I speculated on which of them I might best take for an illustration of my
anti-monopoly doctrine. I feared an opium story might prove immoral,
and I did not choose to be answerable for the fate of any
Opium-eaters. Salt was too thirsty a subject for a July number.
Cinnamon was fragrant, and pearls pretty and cool: and these, of
course, led me to Ceylon for my scenery. I gathered what I could from
books, but really feared being obliged to give up a singularly good
illustrative scene for want of the commonest facts concerning the social
life of the Cingalese. I found scarcely any thing even in Maria Graham and
Heber. At this precise time, a friend happened to bring to my lodging, for
a call, the person who could be most useful to me,--Sir Alexander
Johnstone, who had just returned from governing Ceylon, where he had
abolished Slavery, established Trial by Jury, and become more thoroughly
acquainted with the Cingalese than perhaps any other man then in England.
It was a remarkable chance; and we made the most of it; for Sir Alexander
Johnstone was as well pleased to have the cause of the Cingalese pleaded as
I was to become qualified to do it. Before we had known one another half an
hour, I confided to him my difficulty. He started off, promising to return
presently; and he was soon at the door again, with his carriage full of
books, prints and other illustrations, affording information not to be
found in any ordinarily accessible books. Among the volumes he left with me
was a Colombo almanack, which furnished me with names, notices of customs,
and other valuable matters. The friend who
had brought us together was highly delighted with the success of the introduction, and bestirred himself to see what else he could do. He invited me to dinner the next day (aware that there was no time to lose;) and at his table I met as many persons as he could pick up who had recently been in Ceylon. Besides Sir Alexander Johnstone, there was Holman, the blind traveller, and Captain Mangles, and two or three more; and a curiously oriental day we had of it, in regard to conversation and train of thought. I remember learning a lesson that day on other than Cingalese matters. Poor Holman boasted of his achievements in climbing mountains, and of his always reaching the top quicker than his comrades; and he threw out some sarcasms against the folly of climbing mountains at all, as waste of time, because there were no people to be found there, and there was generally rain and cold. It evidently never occurred to him that people with eyes climb mountains for another purpose than a race against time; and that his comrades were pausing to look about them when he outstripped them. It was a hint to me never to be critical in like manner about the pleasures of the ear.--After I had become a traveller, Sydney Smith amused himself about my acquaintance with Holman; and I believe it was reading what I said in the preface to my American book which put his harmless jokes into his head. In that preface I explained the extent to which my deafness was a disqualification for travel, and for reporting of it: and I did it because I knew that, if I did not, the slaveholders would make my deafness a pretext for setting aside any part of my testimony which they did not like. Soon after this preface appeared, and when he had heard from me of my previous meeting with Holman, Sydney Smith undertook to answer a question asked by somebody at a dinner party, what I was at that time about. "She is writing a book," said Sydney Smith, "to prove that the only travellers who are fit to write books must be both blind and deaf."
My number on the monopolies in cinnamon and pearls went off pleasantly
after my auspicious beginning. Sir A. Johnstone watched over its progress,
and seriously assured me afterwards,
in a call made for the purpose, that there was, to the best of his belief, not a single error in the tale. There was much wrath about it in Ceylon, however; and one man published a book to show that every statement of mine, on every point, from the highest scientific to the lowest descriptive, was absolutely the opposite of the truth. This personage was an Englishman, interested in the monopoly: and the violence of his opposition was of service to the right side.
Soon after I went to my London lodgings, my mother came up, and spent
two or three weeks with me. I saw at once that she would never settle
comfortably at Norwich again; and I had great difficulty in dissuading her
from at once taking a house which was very far beyond any means that I
considered it right to reckon on. For the moment, and on occasion of her
finding the particular house she had set her mind on quite out of the
question, I prevailed on her to wait. I could not wonder at her desire to
come up, and enjoy such society as she found me in the midst of; and I
thought it, on the whole, a fortunate arrangement when, under the sanction
of two of my brothers, she took the small house in Fludyer Street,
Westminster, where the rest of my London life was passed. That small house
had, for a wonder, three sitting-rooms; and we three ladies needed
this. The house had no nuisances, and was as airy as a house in Fludyer
Street could well be: and its being on the verge of St James's
Park was a prodigious advantage for us all,--the Park being to us, in
fact, like our own garden. We were in the midst of the offices, people and
books which it was most desirable for me to have at hand; and the house was
exactly the right size for us; and of the right cost,--now that I was
able to pay the same amount as my aunt towards the expenses of our
household. My mother's little income, with these additions, just
sufficed;--allowance being made for the generosity which she loved to
exercise. I may as well finish at once what I have to say about this
matter. For a time, as I anticipated, all went well. My mother's
delight in her new social sphere was extreme. But, as I had also
anticipated, troubles arose. For one of two great troubles, meddlers and
mischief-makers were mainly answerable.
The other could not be helped. It was, (to pass it over as lightly as possible) that my mother, who loved power and had always been in the habit of exercising it, was hurt at confidence being reposed in me, and distinctions shown, and visits paid to me; and I, with every desire to be passive, and being in fact wholly passive in the matter, was kept in a state of constant agitation at the influx of distinctions which I never sought, and which it was impossible to impart. What the meddlers and mischief-makers did was to render my old ladies, and especially my mother, discontented with the lowliness of our home. They were for ever suggesting that I ought to live in some sort of style,--to have a larger house in a better street, and lay out our mode of living for the society in which I was moving. Of course they were not my own earned friends who made such suggestions. Their officiousness proved their vulgarity: and my mother saw and said this. Yet, every word told upon her heart; and thence, every word helped to pull down my health and strength. No change could be made but by my providing the money; and I could not conscientiously engage to do it. It was my fixed resolution never to mortgage my brains. Scott's recent death impressed upon me an awful lesson about that. Such an effort as that of producing my Series was one which could never be repeated. Such a strain was quite enough for one lifetime. I did not receive any thing like what I ought for the Series, owing to the hard terms under which it was published. I had found much to do with my first gains from it; and I was bound in conscience to lay by for a time of sickness or adversity, and for means of recreation, when my task should be done. I therefore steadily refused to countenance any scheme of ambition, or to alter a plan of life which had been settled with deliberation, and with the sanction of the family. To all remonstrances about my own dignity my reply was that if my acquaintance cared for me, they would come and see me in a small house and a narrow street: and all who objected to the smallness of either might stay away. I could not expose myself to the temptation to write in a money-getting spirit; nor yet to the terrible anxieties of assuming a position which could be maintained only by ex-
cessive toil. It was necessary to preserve my independence of thought and speech, and my power of resting, if necessary;--to have, in short, the world under my feet instead of hanging round my neck: and therefore did I refuse all intreaty and remonstrance about our house and mode of living. I was supported, very cordially, by the good cousin who managed my affairs for me: but an appeal to my brothers became necessary, at last. They simply elicited by questions the facts that the circumstances were unchanged;--that the house was exactly what we had expected; that our expenses had been accurately calculated; and that my mother's income was the same as when she had considered the house a proper one for our purposes: in short, that there was no one good reason for a change. The controversy was thus closed; but not before the train was laid for its being closed in another manner. The anxieties of my home were too much for me, and I was by that time wearing down fast. The illness which laid me low for nearly six years at length ensued; and when it did, there could be no doubt in any mind of its being most fortunate that I had contracted no responsibilities which I could not fulfil. It was a great fault in me, (and I always knew that it was) that I could not take these things more lightly. I did strive to be superior to them: but I began life, as I have said, with a most beggarly set of nerves; I had gone through such an amount of suffering and vicissitude as had weakened my physique, if it had strengthened my morale; and now, I was under a pressure of toil which left me no resource wherewith to meet any constant troubling of the affections. I held my purpose, because it was clearly right: but I could not hold my health and nerve. They gave way; and all questions about London residence were settled a few years after by our leaving London altogether. Soon after my illness laid me low, my dear old aunt died; and my mother removed to Liverpool, to be taken care of by three of her children who were settled there.
I was entering upon the first stage of this career of anxiety when I was
writing my twenty-first number,--"A Tale of the
Tyne." The preparation of it was terribly laborious, for I had
to superintend at that time the removal into the Fludyer Street house. The weather was hot, and the unsettlement extreme. I had to hire and initiate the servants, to receive and unpack the furniture; and to sit down at night, when all this was done, to write my number. At that time, of all seasons, arose a very serious trouble, which not only added to my fatigue of correspondence in the day, but kept me awake at night by very painful feelings of indignation, grief and disappointment. It was thought desirable, by myself as well as by others, that my plan of Illustration of Political Economy should be rendered complete by some numbers on modes of Taxation. The friends with whom I discussed the plan reminded me that I must make fresh terms with Charles Fox, the publisher. They were of opinion that I had already done more than enough for him by continuing the original terms through the whole series thus far, the agreement being dissoluble at the end of every five numbers, and he having never fulfilled, more or less, the original condition of obtaining subscribers. He had never obtained one. I accordingly wrote to Mr. Charles Fox, to inquire whether he was willing to publish five additional number on the usual terms of booksellers' commission. The reply was from his brother; and it was long before I got over the astonishment and pain that it caused. He claimed, for Charles, half the profits of the series, to whatever length it might extend. He supported the claim by a statement of eight reasons, so manifestly unsound that I was equally ashamed for myself and for him that he should have ventured to try them upon me. In my reply, I said that there was no foundation in law or equity for such a claim. As Mr. Charles Fox wrote boastfully of the legal advice he should proceed upon, I gladly placed this affair in the hands of a sound lawyer,--under the advice of my counsellors in the business. I put all the documents,--the original agreement and the whole correspondence,--into my lawyer's hands; and his decision was that my publisher, in making this claim, had "not a leg to stand upon." I was very sure of this; but the pain was not lessened thereby. I could not but feel that I had thrown away my consideration and my money upon a man who made this
consideration the ground of an attempt to extort more. The whole invention and production of the work had been mine; and the entire sale was, by his own admission, owing to me. The publisher, holding himself free to back out of a losing bargain if I had not instantly succeeded, had complacently pocketed his commission of thirty per cent (on the whole) and half the profits, for simply selling the book to the public whom I sent to his shop: and now he was threatening to go to law with me for a prolongation of his unparalleled bargain. I sent him my lawyer's decision, and added that, as I disliked squabbles between acquaintances on money matters, I should obviate all pretence of a claim on his part by making the new numbers a supplement, with a new title,--calling them "Illustrations of Taxation." I did not take the work out of his hands, from considerations of convenience to all parties: but I made no secret of his having lost me for a client thenceforth. He owed to me such fortune as he had; and he had now precluded himself from all chance of further connexion. He published the Supplement, on the ordinary terms of commission: and there was an end. I remember nothing of that story,--"A Tale of the Tyne;" and I should be rather surprised if I did under the circumstances. The only incident that I read about it is that Mr. Malthus called on purpose to thank me for a passage, or a chapter, (which has left no trace in my memory) on the glory and beauty of love and the blessedness of domestic life; and that others, called stern Benthamites, sent round messages to me to the same effect. They said, as Mr. Malthus did, that they had met with a faithful expositor at last.
In "Briery Creek" I indulged my life-long sentiment
of admiration and love of Dr. Priestley, by making him, under a thin
disguise, the hero of my tale. I was staying at Lambton Castle when that
number appeared; and I was extremely surprised by being asked by Lady
Durham who Dr. Priestley was, and all that I could tell her about him. She
had seen in the newspapers that my hero was the Doctor; and I found that
she, the daughter of the Prime Minister, had never heard of the Birmingham
riots! I was struck by this evidence of what
fear-
ful things may take place in a country, unknown to the families of the chief men in it.
Of number twenty-three, "The Three Ages," I remember
scarcely any thing. The impression remaining is that I mightily enjoyed the
portraiture of Wolsey and More, and especially a soliloquy or speech of Sir
Thomas More's. What it is about I have no recollection
whatever: and I need not say that I have never looked at the story
from the day of publication till now: but I have a strong impression
that I should condemn it, if I were to read it now. I have become convinced
that it is a mistake of serious importance attempt to put one's mind
of the nineteenth century into the thought of the sixteenth; and wrong, as
a matter of taste, to fall into a sort of slang style, or mannerism, under
the notion of talking old English. The temptation is strong to young people
whose historical associations are vivid, while their intellectual sympathy
is least discriminating; and young writers of a quarter of a century ago
may claim special allowance from the fact that Scott's historical
novels were then at the height of their popularity; but I believe that, all
allowance being made, I should feel strong disgust at the affectations
which not only made me very complacent at the time, but brought to me not a
few urgent requests that I would write historical novels. Somewhere in that
number there is a passage which Lord John Russell declared to be treason,
saying that it would undoubtedly bear a prosecution. The publisher smirked
at this, and heartily wished somebody would prosecute. We could not make
out what passage his Lordship meant; but we supposed it was probably that
part which expresses pity for the Royal Family in regard to the mode in
which their subsistence is provided;--such of them, I mean, as have
not official duties. If it be that passage, I can only say that every man
and every woman who is conscious of the blessing of living either by
personal exertion or on hereditary property is thus declared guilty of
treason in thought, whenever the contrast of a pensioned or eleemosynary
condition and an independent one presents itself, in connexion with the
royal family, as it was in the last generation. It might be in some other
passage, however, that the lia-
bility lurked. I did not look very closely; for I cannot say that I should have at all relished the prosecution,--the idea of which was so exhilarating to my publisher.
Number twenty-four, "The Farrers of Budge Row," seems
on the whole to be considered the best story of the Series. I have been
repeatedly exhorted to reproduce the character of Jane in a novel. This
Jane was so far a personal acquaintance of mine that I had seen her, two or
three times, on her stool behind the books, at the shop where we bought our
cheese, in the neighbourhood of Fludyer Street. Her old father's
pride then was in his cheeses,--which deserved his devotion as much as
cheeses can: but my mother and I were aware that his pride had once a
very different object; and it was this knowledge which made me go to the
shop, to get a sight of the father and daughter. There had been a younger
brother of that quiet woman, who had been sent to college, and educated for
one of the learned professions; but his father changed his mind, and
insisted so cruelly and so long on the young man being his shopman, that
the poor fellow died broken-hearted. This anecdote, and an
observation that I heard on the closeness with which the daughter was
confined to the desk originated the whole story.
I wrote the chief part of the concluding number, "The Moral of
Many Fables," during the journey to the north which I took to see my
old grandmother before my departure for America, and to visit my eldest
sister at Newcastle, and Lord and Lady Durham at Lambton Castle. The
fatigue was excessive; and when at Lambton, I went down a coal-pit,
in order to see some things which I wanted to know. The heats and draughts
of the pit, combined with the fatigue of an unbroken journey by mail from
Newcastle to London, in December, caused me a severe attack of inflammation
of the liver, and compelled the omission of a month in the appearance of my
numbers. The toil and anxiety incurred to obtain the publication of the
work had, as I have related, disordered my liver, two years before. I
believe I had never been quite well, during those two years; and the toils
and domestic anxieties of the autumn of 1833 had prepared me for overthrow
by the first accident.--After struggling for ten
days to rise from my bed, I was compelled to send word to printer and publisher that I must stop for a month. Mr. Fox (the elder) sent a cheering and consolatory note which enabled me to give myself up to the pleasure of being ill, and lying still, (as still as the pain would let me) without doubt or remorse. There was something to be done first, however; for the printer's note was not quite such a holiday matter as Mr. Fox's. It civilly explained that sixteen guineas' worth of paper had been wetted, which would be utterly spoiled, if not worked off immediately. It was absolutely necessary to correct two proofs, which, as it happened, required more attention than any which had ever passed under my eye, from their containing arithmetical statements. Several literary friends had offered to correct my proofs; but these were not of a kind to be so disposed of. So, I set to work, with dizzy eyes and a quivering brain; propped up with pillows, and my mother and the maid alternately sitting by me with sal volatile, when I believed I could work a little. I was amused to hear, long afterwards, that it was reported to be my practice to work in this delightful style,--"when exhausted, to be supported in bed by her mother and her maid." These absurd representations about myself and my ways taught me some caution in receiving such as were offered me about other authors.
It was no small matter, by this time, to have a month's respite
from the fluctuations of mind which I underwent about every number of my
work. These fluctuations were as regular as the tides; but I did not
recognize this fact till my mother pointed it out in a laughing way which
did me a world of good. When I told her, as she declared I did once a
month, that the story I was writing would prove an utter failure, she was
uneasy for the first few months, but afterwards amused: and her
amusement was a great support to me. The process was indeed a pretty
regular one. I was fired with the first conception, and believed that I had
found a treasure. Then, while at work, I alternately admired and despised
what I wrote. When finished, I was in absolute despair; and then, when I
saw it in print, I was surprised to see how well it looked. After an
interval of above
twenty years, I have not courage to look at a single number,--convinced that I should be disgusted by bad taste and metaphysics in almost every page. Long before I had arrived at this closing number, my mother and aunt had got into the way of smiling at each other, and at me, whenever I bade them prepare for disgrace; and they asked me how often I had addressed the same exhortation to them before.--There was another misery of a few hours long which we had to bear once a month: and that was the sending the manuscript to the printing-office. This panic was the tax I have always paid for making no copy of any thing I write. I sent the parcel by a trusty messenger, who waited for a receipt. One day, the messenger did not return for several hours,--the official being absent whose duty it was to receive such packets. My mother said, "I tell you what, Harriet; I can't bear this ........." "Nor I either," I replied. "We must carry it ourselves next time." "So I would every time; but I doubt our being the safest messengers," I was replying, when the note of acknowledgment was brought in. Now, at this new year 1834, I had a whole month of respite from all such cares, and could lie in bed without grudging the hours as they passed. It was indeed a significant yielding when, in 1831, I gave way to solicitations to produce a number a month. I did give way, (though with a trembling heart) because I knew that when I had once plunged into an enterprise, I always got through it, at whatever cost. I could not have asked any body to go into such an undertaking; and the cost was severe: but I got through; and,--if my twenty-fourth number was really the best, as people said,--without disgrace.
I was not through it yet, however. The "Illustrations of
Taxation" had still to be written. I had designed six; and I forget
when and why I determined there should be only five: but I rather
think it was when I found the first series must have an additional number.
All I am sure of is that it was a prodigious relief, which sent my spirits
up sky high, when I resolved to spare myself a month's work. Rest and
leisure had now become far more important to me than fame and money.
Nothing struck me so much, or left so deep and abiding an impression after
the
close of this arduous work, as my new sense of the value of time. A month had never before appeared to me what it now became; and I remember the real joy of finding in February, 1832, that it was leap year, and that I had a day more at my command than I had calculated. The abiding effect has perhaps not been altogether good. No doubt I have done more than I should without such an experience: but I think it has narrowed my mind. When I consider how some who knew me well have represented me as "industrious in my pleasures;" and how some of my American friends had a scheme at Niagara to see whether I could pass a day without asking or telling what o'clock it was, I feel convinced that my respect for "time and the hour" has been too much of a superstition and a bigotry. say this now (1855) while finding that I can be idle; while, in fact, feeling myself free to do what I please,--that is, what illness admits of my doing, for above half of every day. I find, in the last stage of life, that I can play and be idle; and that I enjoy it. But I still think that the conflict between constitutional indolence and an overwrought sense of the value of time has done me some harm in the midst of some important good.
The Taxation numbers had, as I have said, still to be done; and, I
think, the last of the Poor-law tales. I was aware that, of all the
many weak points of the Grey administration, the weakest was Finance. Lord
Althorp, then Chancellor of the Exchequer, complained of the hardship of
being put into that office, when Nature had made him a grazier. It struck
me that some good might be done, and no harm, if my Illustrations proceeded
pari passu with the financial reforms
expected from the Whig government; and I spoke on the subject to Lieutenant
Drummond, who had just become private secretary to Lord Althorp. I was well
acquainted with Mr. Drummond; and it occurred very naturally that I told
him that if he knew of any meditated measure which would be aided by
illustration, would help, in all silence and discretion,--provided
always that I approved of the scheme. About this time, the London
shopkeepers were raising a selfish outcry against the House-tax, one
of the very best on the list of imposts. It was understood on all hands that the clamour was not raised by the house-owners, but by their tenants, whose rents had been fixed in consideration of their payment of the tax. If they could get rid of the tax, the tenants would pocket the amount during the remaining term of their leases. Large and noisy deputations besieged the Treasury; and many feared that the good-natured Lord Althorp would yield. Just at this time, Mr. Drummond called on me, with a private message from Lords Grey and Athorp, to ask whether it would suit my purpose to treat of Tithes at once, instead of later,--the reason for such inquiry being quite at my service. As the principles of Taxation involve no inexorable order, like those of Political Economy at large, I had no objection to take any topic first which might be most useful. When I had said so, Mr. Drummond explained that a tithe measure was prepared by the Cabinet which Ministers would like to have introduced to the people by my Number on that subject, before they themselves introduced it in parliament. Of course, this proceeded on the supposition that the measure would be approved by me. Mr. Drummond said he would bring the document, on my promising that no eye but my own should see it, and that I would not speak of the affair till it was settled;--and, especially, not to any member of any of the Royal Commissions, then so fashionable. It was a thing unheard of, Mr. Drummond said, to commit any cabinet measure to the knowledge of any body out of the Cabinet before it was offered to parliament. Finally, the Secretary intimated that Lord Althorp would be obliged by any suggestion in regard to principles and methods of Taxation.
Mr. Drummond had not been gone five minutes before the Chairman of the
Excise Commission called, to ask in the name of the Commissioners, whether
it would suit my purpose to write immediately on the Excise, offering, on
the part of Lord Congleton (then Sir Henry Parnell) and others, to supply
me with the most extraordinary materials, by my exhibition of which the
people might be enlightened and prepared on the subject before it should be
brought forward in parliament. The
Chairman, Mr. Henry Wickham, required a promise that no eye but my own should see the evidence; and that the secret should be kept with especial care from the Chancellor of the Exchequer and his secretary, as it was a thing unheard of that any party unconcerned should be made acquainted with this evidence before it reached the Chancellor of the Exchequer. I could hardly help laughing in his face; and wondered what would have happened if he and Mr. Drummond had met on the steps, as they very nearly did. Of course, I was glad of the information offered; but I took leave to make my own choice among the materials lent. A few days afterwards I met Mr. Wickham before the Horse Guards, and thought he would not know me,--so deep was he in reverie. Before I was quite past, however, he started, and stopped me with eagerness, saying intensely, "O! Miss Martineau, Starch! Starch!" And he related the wonderful, the amazing evidence that had reached the Commissioners on the mischievousness of the duty on starch. I was obliged, however, to consider some other matters than the force of the evidence, and I declined expatiating on starch, finding the subject of green glass bottles, soap and sweets answer my purpose better. These two last, especially, yielded a very strong case.
At the end of a note to Mr. Drummond on Tithes that evening, I expressed
myself plainly about the house-tax and the shopkeepers, avowing my
dread that Lord Althorp might yield to the clamour. Mr. Drummond called
next day with the promised tithe document; and he told me that he had
handed my note to Lord Althorp, who had said "Tell her that I may be
altogether of her mind; but that if she was here, in my place, with
hundreds of shopkeepers yelling about the doors, she would yield, as I must
do." "Never," was my message back, "so long as the
House-tax is admitted to be the best on the list." And I
fairly told him that the Whig government was perilling the public safety by
yielding every thing to clamour, and nothing without it.
I liked the Tithe measure, and willingly propounded it in my tale
"The Tenth Haycock." It was discussed that session, but
deferred; and it passed, with some modifications, a session or two later.--Mr. Drummond next came to open to me, on the same confidential conditions, Lord Althorp's scheme for the Budget, then due in six weeks. His object was to learn what I thought of certain intended alterations of existing taxes. With some pomp and preface, he announced that a change was contemplated which Lord Althorp hoped would be agreeable to me as a dissenter,--a change which Lord Althorp anticipated would be received as a boon by the dissenters. He proposed to take off the tax upon saddle-horses, in the case of the clergy and dissenting ministers. "What shall I tell Lord Althorp that you think of this?" inquired the Secretary. "Tell him I think the dissenting Ministers would like it very much if they had any saddle-horses," I replied.--"What! do you mean that they will not take it as a boon?"--"If you offer it as a boon, they will be apt to take it as an insult. How should dissenting Ministers have saddle-horses, unless they happen to have private fortunes?" He questioned me closely about the dissenting Ministers I knew; and we found that I could actually point out only two among the Unitarians who kept saddle-hones: and they were men of property.
"What, then, would you substitute?" was the next question.
"I would begin upon the Excise; set free the smallest articles first,
which least repay the expense of collection, and go on to the
greatest."--"The Excise! Ah! Lord Althorp bade me tell you
that the Commission on Excise have collected the most extraordinary
evidence, which he will take care that you shall have, as soon as he gets
it himself." (It was at that moment in the closet, within two feet of
my visitor.) I replied that the evils of the excise system were well known
to be such as to afford employment to any Chancellor of the Exchequer for a
course of years; and I should venture to send Lord Althorp my statement of
them, hoping that he would glance at it before he brought out his Budget, I
worked away at the two Excise stories ("The Jerseymen Meeting"
and "The Jerseymen Parting,") making out a strong case, among
others, about Green Glass Bottles and Sweets, more as illustrative examples
than as individual cases.
I sent the first copy I could get to the Chancellor of the Exchequer, a day and a half before he brought out his Budget. When I opened the "Times," the morning after, I was highly amused at seeing that he had made a curious alteration in his intentions about the saddle-horse duty, applying the remission to those clergymen and ministers only whose income was under two hundred pounds a year,--having evidently no idea of the cost of keeping a horse. Not less amusing was it to see that he had taken off the duty from green glass bottles and sweets. He was in fact open to suggestion and correction from any quarter,--being consciously, as I have mentioned that he said, one of Nature's graziers, and a merely man-made Chancellor of the Exchequer.
By this time, the summer of 1834 was far advanced, and I was much
exhausted with fatigue and hot weather, and the hurry of preparation for my
trip to America. I was drooping in idea over my last number, "The
Scholars of Arneside," when a cordial friend of mine said, "You
will go with great spirit through your last number,--the final task of
such an enterprise." This prophecy wrought its own accomplishment. I
did go through it with spirit; and I found myself, after making my calls,
with one day left for packing and preparation. Many interruptions occurred
during the last few days which deferred my conclusion till I felt and saw
that my mother was so anxious that I must myself keep down worry of nerves.
On the Friday before I was to leave home for above two years, my mother
said, with anxious kindness, "My dear, have you done?"
"No, mother." On Saturday night, she put her head in at my
study door, with "My dear, have you done?" "Indeed I have
not." Sunday came,--my place taken by mail for Tuesday, no
packing done, and my number unfinished! The case seemed desperate. My
mother staid at home, and took every precaution against my being
disturbed: but some one came on indispensable business, and did not
release me till our early Sunday dinner hour. My mother looked anxiously in
my face; and I could only shake my head. After dinner, she in a manner
mounted guard over my study door. At five o'clock I flew down stairs
with the last sheet, with the ink still wet, in my hand. My sister Ellen was with us, and at the moment writing to some Derbyshire friends. By a sudden impulse, I seized her paper, and with the wet pen with which I had just written "The End," I announced the conclusion of my work. My mother could say little but "After all we have gone through about this work, to think how it has ended!" I flew up stairs again to tie up parcels and manuscripts, and put away all my apparatus; and I had just finished this when I was called to tea. After tea I went into St. James's Park for the first thoroughly holiday walk I had taken for two years and a half. It felt very like flying. The grass under foot, the sky overhead, the trees round about, were wholly different from what they had ever appeared before. My business was not, however, entirely closed. There were the proof-sheets of the last Number to be looked over. They followed me to Birmingham, where Ellen and I travelled together, in childish spirits, on the Tuesday.
My mother had reason for her somewhat pathetic exultation on the
conclusion of my Series. Its success was unprecedented, I believe. I am
told that its circulation had reached ten thousand in England before my
return from America. Mr. Babbage, calling on me one day, when he was in
high spirits about the popularity of his own work, "Machinery and
Manufactures," said, "Now there is nobody here to call us vain,
we may tell each other that you and I are the only people in the market. I
find no books are selling but yours and mine." (It was a time of
political agitation.) I replied, "I find no books are selling but
yours and mine." "Well!" said he, "what I came to
say is that we may as well advertise each other. Will you advertise mine if
I advertise yours, &c. &c.?" And this was the work which had
struggled into existence with such extreme difficulty! Under the hard
circumstances of the case, it had not made me rich. I have at this time
received only a little more than two thousand pounds for the whole work.
But I got a hearing,--which was the thing I wanted. The barrier was
down, and the course clear; and the money was a small matter in comparison.
It was pleasant too, to feel the ease of having money, after
my straitened way of life for some years. My first indulgence was buying a good watch,--the same which is before my eyes as I write. I did not trouble myself with close economies while working to such advantage; and I now first learned the bliss of helping the needy effectually. I was able to justify my mother in removing to London, and to refresh myself by travel, at the end of my task. My American journey cost me four hundred pounds, in addition to one hundred which I made when there. I had left at home my usual payment to my mother; but she refused to take it, as she had a boarder in my place. Soon after my return, when my first American book was published, I found myself able to lay by one thousand pounds, in the purchase of a deferred annuity, of which I am now enjoying the benefit in the receipt of one hundred pounds a year. I may finish off the subject of money by saying that I lately calculated that I have earned altogether by my books somewhere about ten thousand pounds. I have had to live on it, of course, for five-and-twenty years; and I have found plenty to do with it: but I have enough, and I am satisfied. I believe I might easily have doubled the amount, if it had been my object to get money; or even, if an international copyright law had secured to me the proceeds of the sale of my works in foreign countries. But such a law was non-existent in my busy time, and still is in regard to America. There is nothing in money that could pay me for the pain of the slightest deflexion from my own convictions, or the most trifling restraint on my freedom of thought and speech. I have therefore obtained the ease and freedom, and let slip the money. I do not speak as one who has resisted temptation, for there has really been none. I have never been at a loss for means, or really suffering from poverty, since the publication of my Series. I explain the case simply that there may be no mystery about my not being rich after such singular success as I so soon met with.
One more explanation will bring this long section to a close. I make it
the more readily because it is possible that an absurd report which I
encountered in America may be still in existence. It was said that I
travelled, not on my own resources, but on
means supplied by Lord Brougham and his relative Lord Henley, to fulfil certain objects of theirs. Nobody acquainted with me would listen to such nonsense; but I may as well explain what Lord Henley had to do with my going to America. Lord Brougham had no concern with it whatever, beyond giving me two or three letters of introduction. The story is simply this. One evening, in a party, Lady Mary Shepherd told me that she was commissioned to bring about an interview between myself and her nephew, Lord Henley, who had something of importance to say to me: and she fixed me to meet Lord Henley at her house at luncheon a day or two after. She told me meantime the thing he chiefly wanted, which was to know how, if I had three hundred pounds a year to spend in charity, I should employ it. When we met, I was struck by his excessive agitation, which his subsequent derangement might account for. His chief interest was in philanthropic subjects; and he told me, with extreme emotion, (what so many others have told me) that he believed he had been doing mischief for many years where he most meant to do good, by his methods of alms-giving. Since reading "Cousin Marshall" and others of my Numbers, he had dropped his subscriptions to some hurtful charities, and had devoted his funds to Education, Benefit Societies and Emigration. Upon his afterwards asking whether I received visitors, and being surprised to find that I could afford the time, some remarks were made about the extent and pressure of my work; and then Lord Henley asked whether I did not mean to travel when my Series was done. Upon my replying that I did, he apologised for the liberty he took in asking where I thought of going. I said I had not thought much about it; but that I supposed it would be the usual route, to Switzerland and Italy. "O! do not go over that beaten track," he exclaimed. "Why should you? Will you not go to America?" I replied, "Give me a good reason, and perhaps I will." His answer was, "Whatever else may or may not be true about the Americans, it is certain that they have got at principles of justice and mercy in their treatment of the least happy classes of society which we should do well to understand. Will you not go, and tell us what they are?" This, after some
meditation, determined me to cross the Atlantic. Before my return, Lord Henley had disappeared from society; and he soon after died. I never saw him, I believe, but that once.
After short visits, with my sister Ellen, at Birmingham, in Derbyshire
and at Liverpool, I sailed (for there were no steamers on the Atlantic in
those days) early in August, 1834.
"This 'Lion' is indeed one of the meanest of his
tribe; but he is one of a tribe which has included, and does now include,
some who are worthy of a higher classification. Byron was an
'interesting creature,' and received blushing thanks for his
last 'divine poem.' Scott lost various little articles which
would answer for laying up in lavender; and Madame de Stael was exhibited
almost as ostensibly at the British Gallery as any of the pictures on the
walls, on the evening when the old Marquis of A-- obtained an
introduction to her, and accosted her with 'Come now, Madame de
Stael, you must talk English to me.' As she scornfully turned from
him, and continued her discourse in her own way, the discomfited Marquis
seemed to think himself extremely ill used in being deprived of the
entertainment he expected from the prima
donna of the company. In as far as such personages as these last
acquiesce in the modern practice of 'Lionism,' they may be
considered to be implicated in whatever reproach attaches to it; But the
truth seems to be that, however
___________________
disgusting and injurious the system, and however guilty some few individuals may be in availing themselves of it for their small, selfish, immediate purposes, the practice, with its slang term, is the birth of events, and is a sign of the times,--like newspaper puffery, which is an evidence of over population, or like joint stock companies and club-houses, which indicate that society has obtained a glimpse of that great principle of the economy of association, by which it will probably, in some future age, reconstitute itself.
"The practice of 'Lionism' originates in some feelings
which are very good,--in veneration for intellectual superiority, and
gratitude for intellectual gifts; and its form and prevalence are
determined by the fact, that literature has reached a larger class, and
interested a different order of people from any who formerly shared its
advantages. A wise man might, at the time of the invention of printing,
have foreseen the age of literary 'Lionism,' and would probably
have smiled at it as a temporary extravagance. The whole course of
literally achievement has prophesied its transient reign. The voluntary,
self-complacent, literary 'Lion' might, in fact, be
better called the mouse issuing from the labouring mountain, which has yet
to give birth to the volcano.
"There was a time when literature was cultivated only in the
seclusion of monasteries. There sat the author of old, alone in his
cell,--alone through days, and months, and years. The echoes of the
world have died away; the voice of praise could not reach him there, and
his grave yawned within the very inclosure whence he should never depart.
He might look abroad from the hill-side, or the pinnacle of rock
where his monastery stood, on
'the
rich leas,
The turfy mountains, where live
nibbling sheep,
And flat meads thatch'd with stover them to
keep:
------ the broom groves,
Whose
shadow the dismissed bachelor loves,
Being lass-lorn:
the pole-clipt vineyard,
And the sea-marge, sterile and
rocky hard.'
On these he might look abroad, but never on the assemblages of men.
Literary achievement in such circumstances might be, to
a certain degree, encouraged by visions of future usefulness and extended fame, but the strongest stimulus must have been the pleasure of intellectual exercise. The toil of composition must there have been its own reward, and we may even now witness with the mind's eye the delight of it painted upon the face under the cowl. One may see the student hastening from the refectory to the cell, drawn thither by the strong desire of solving a problem, of elucidating a fact, of indulging the imagination with heavenly delights, and contemplating the wealth stored in his memory. One may see him coming down with radiant countenance from the heights of speculation, to cast into the worship of the chapel the devotion he had there gained. One may see the glow upon his cheek as he sits alone beside his lamp, noting his discoveries, or elaborating the expression of his ideas. There are many who think that no one ever wrote a line, even in the most private diary, without the belief, or the hope, that it would be read. It might be so with the monastic author; but in his case there could rarely be the appendage of praise to the fact of its being read; and the prospect of influence and applause was too remote to actuate a life of literary toil. It is probable that if an echo of fame came to him on any of the four winds, it was well, and he heartily enjoyed the music of the breeze; but that in some instances he would have passed his days in the same manner, cultivating literature for its own sake, if he had known that his parchments would be buried with him.
"The homage paid to such men when they did come forth into the
world was, on the part of the many, on the ground of their superiority
alone. A handful of students might feel thankfulness towards them for
definite services, but the crowd gazed at them in vague admiration, as
being holier or wiser than other people. As the blessings of literature
spread, strong personal gratitude mingled with the homage--gratitude
not only for increase of fame and honour to the country and nation to which
the author belonged, but for the good which each worshipper derived from
the quickening of his sympathies, the enlargement of his views, the
elevation of his intellectual being. To each of the crowd the author had
opened up a spring of fresh ideas,
furnished a solution of some doubt, a gratification of the fancy or the reason. When, on a certain memorable Easter day in the fourteenth century, Petrarch mounted the stairs of the Capitol, crowned with laurel, and preceded by twelve noble youths, reciting passages of his poetry, the praise was of the noblest kind that it has been the lot of authorship to receive. It was composed of reverence and gratitude, pure from cold selfishness and from sentimental passion, which is cold selfishness in a flame-colored disguise. When, more than four centuries later, Voltaire was overpowered with acclamations in the theatre at Paris, and conveyed home in triumph, crying feebly, 'You suffocate me with roses,' the homage, though inferior in character to that which greeted Petrach, was honourable, and of better origin than popular selfishness. The applauding crowd had been kept ignorant by the superstition which had in other ways so afflicted them, that they were unboundedly grateful to a man of power who promised to relieve them from the yoke. Voltaire had said, 'I am tired of hearing it repeated that twelve men were sufficient to found Christianity: I will show the world that one is sufficient to destroy it;' and he was believed. He was mistaken in his boast, and his adorers in confiding in it; but this proves only that they were ignorant of Christianity, and not that their homage of one whom they believed to have exploded error and disarmed superstition, and whom they knew to have honoured and served them by his literary labours, was otherwise than natural and creditable to their hearts.
"The worship of popular authors at the present time is an
expression of the same thoughts and feelings as were indicated by the
crowning of Petrarch and the greeting of Voltaire in the theatre, but with
alterations and additions.according to the change in the times. Literary
'lions' have become a class,--an inconceivable idea to the
unreflecting in the time of Petrach, and even of Voltaire. This testifies
to the vast spread of literature among our people. How great a number of
readers is required to support, by purchase and by praise, a standing class
of original writers! It testifies to the deterioration of literature as a
whole. If, at any one time, there is a class of persons to
whom the public are grateful for intellectual excitement, how médiocre must be the quality of the intellectual production! It by no means follows that works of merit, equal to any which have yet blessed mankind, are not still in reserve; but it is clear that the great body of literature has entirely changed its character--that books are no longer the scarce fruit of solemn and protracted thought, but rather, as they have been called, 'letters to all whom they may concern.' That literary 'lions' now constitute a class, testifies to the frequency of literary success,--to the extension of the number of minds from which a superficial and transient sympathy may be anticipated. But the newest feature of all is the class of 'lionizers,'--new, not because sordid selfishness is new--not because social vanity is new--not because an inhuman disregard of the feelings of the sensitive, the foibles of the vain, the privileges of the endowed, is new: but because it is somewhat new to see the place of cards, music, masks, my lord's fool, and my lady's monkey, supplied by authors in virtue of their authorship.
"It is, to be sure, quite to be expected that low-minded
persons should take advantage of any prevalent feeling, however
respectable, to answer their own purposes; but the effect, in this
instance, would be odd to a resuscitated gentleman of the fifteenth
century. If he happened to be present at one of the meetings of the British
Association for the Advancement of Science, he would there see the popular
veneration for intellectual achievement under a pretty fair aspect. There
is no harm, and some good, in seeing a group waiting for Sir John Herschel
to come out into the street, or a rush in the rooms to catch a sight of
Faraday,--or ladies sketching Babbage, and Buckland, and
Back,--or a train of gazers following at the heels of Whewell or
Sedgwick, or any popular artist or author who might be present among the
men of science. In all this there is no reproach, and some honour, to both
parties, though of a slight and transient kind. The sordid characteristics
of the modern system appear when the eminent person becomes a guest in a
private house. If the resuscitated gentleman of the fifteenth century were
to walk into a country house in England in com-
pany with a lady of literary distinction, he might see at once what is in the mind of the host and hostess. All the books of the house are lying about--all the gentry in the neighbourhood are collected; the young men peep and stare from the corners of the room; the young ladies crowd together, even sitting five upon three chairs, to avoid the risk of being addressed by the stranger. The lady of the house devotes herself to 'drawing out' the guest, asks for her opinion of this, that, and the other book, and intercedes for her young friends, trembling on their three chairs, that each may be favoured with 'just one line for her album.' The children are kept in the nursery, as being unworthy the notice of a literary person, or brought up severally into the presence, 'that they may have it to say all their lives that they had been introduced,' &c. &c. Some youth in a corner is meantime sketching the guest, and another is noting what she says--probably something about black and green tea, or the state of the roads, or the age of the moon. Such a scene, very common now in English country houses, must present an unfavourable picture of our manners to strangers from another country or another age. The prominent features are the sufferings of one person, and the selfishness of all the rest. They are too much engrossed with the excitement of their own vanity and curiosity to heed the pain they are inflicting on one who, if she happens to have more feeling and less vanity than they, can hardly enjoy being told that children cannot be interesting to her, and that young people do not wish to speak to her.
"In a country town it is yet worse. There may be seen a coterie of
'superior people' of the place, gathered together to make the
most of a literary foreigner who may be passing through. Though he speaks
perfect English, the ladies persist in uttering themselves, after hems and
haws, in French that he can make nothing of,--French as it was taught
in our boarding schools during the war. The children giggle in a corner at
what the boys call 'the jabber;' and the maid who hands the tea
strives to keep the corners of her mouth in order. In vain the guest speaks
to the children, and any old person who may be present, in English almost
as good as their own; he is annoyed
to the last by the 'superior people,' who intend that it should get abroad through the town that they had enjoyed a vast deal of conversation in French with the illustrious stranger.
"Bad as all this is, the case is worse in London,--more
disgusting, if it is impossible to be more ridiculous. There, ladies of
rank made their profit of the woes of the Italian and Polish refugees, the
most eagerly in the days of the deepest unhappiness of the exiles, when the
novelty was strongest. These exiles were collected in the name of
hospitality, but for purposes of attraction, within the doors of
fashionable saloons; there they were stared out of countenance amidst the
sentimental sighs of the gazers; and if any one of them,--any
interesting Count or melancholy-looking Prince, happened
unfortunately to be the author of a 'sweet poem,' or a
'charming tragedy,' he was called out from among the rest to be
flattered by the ladies, and secured for fresh services. It was not
uncommon, during the days of the novelty of the Italian refugees, while
they were yet unprovided with employments by which they might live, (and
for aught we know, it may not be uncommon still,) for ladies to secure the
appearance of one or two of these first-rate 'lions'
with them the next evening at the theatre or opera, and to forget to pay.
Till these gentlemen had learned by experience to estimate the friendship
of the ladies to whom they were so interesting, they often paid away at
public places the money which was to furnish them with bread for the week.
We have witnessed the grief and indignation with which some of them have
announced their discovery that their woes and their accomplishments were
hired with champagne, coffee, and fine words, to amuse a party of languid
fine people.
"These gentlemen, however, are no worse treated than many natives.
A new poet, if he innocently accepts a promising invitation, is liable to
find out afterwards that his name has been inserted in the summonses to the
rest of the company, or sent round from mouth to mouth to secure the rooms
being full. If a woman who has written a successful play or novel attends
the soirée of a 'lionising' lady, she hears her name so
announced on the stairs as to make it certain that the servants have had
their
instructions; she finds herself seized upon at the door by the hostess, and carried about to lord, lady, philosopher, gossip, and dandy, each being assured that she cannot be spared to each for more than ten seconds. She sees a 'lion' placed in the centre of each of the two first rooms she passes through,--a navigator from the North Pole in the one, a dusky Egyptian bey or Hindoo rajah in another; and it flashes upon her that she is to be the centre of attraction in a third apartment. If she is vain enough to like the position, the blame of ministering to a pitiable and destructive weakness remains with the hostess, and she is answerable for some of the failure of power which will be manifest in the next play or novel of her victim. If the guest be meek and modest, there is nothing for it but getting behind a door, or surrounding herself with her friends in a corner. If she be strong enough to assert herself, she will return at once to her carriage, and take care how she enters that house again. A few instances of what may be seen in London during any one season, if brought together, yield but a sorry exhibition of the manners of persons who give parties to gratify their own vanity, instead of enjoying the society and the pleasure of their friends. In one crowded room are three 'lions,'--a new musical composer, an eminent divine who publishes, and a lady poet. These three stand in three corners of the room, faced by a gaping crowd. Weary at length of their position, they all happen to move towards the centre table at the same moment. They find it covered with the composer's music, the divine's sermons, and the lady's last new poem; they laugh in each other's faces, and go back to their corners. A gentleman from the top of Mont Blanc, or from the North Pole, is introduced to a lady who is dying to be able to say that she knows him, but who finds at the critical moment that she has nothing to say to him. In the midst of a triple circle of listeners, she asks him whether he is not surprised at his own preservation; whether it does not prove that Providence is everywhere, but more particularly in barren places? If a sigh or a syllable of remonstrance escapes from any victim, them is one phrase always at hand for use, a phrase which, if it ever contained any truth, or exerted any consolatory influence, has
been long worn out, and become mere words,--'This is a tax you must pay for your eminence.' There may, perhaps, be as much assumption with regard to the necessity of this tax as of some others. Every tax has been called absolutely necessary in its day; and the time may arrive when some shall dispute whether it be really needful that an accomplished actor should be pestered with the flattery of his art, that authors should be favoured with more general conversation only that any opinions they may drop may be gathered up to be reported; and that women, whom the hardest treatment awaits if their heads should be turned, should be compelled to hear what the prime minister, or the Russian ambassador, or the poet laureate, or the 'lion ' of the last season, has said of them. Those on whom the tax is levied would like to have the means of protest, if they should not see its necessity quite so clearly as others do. They would like to know why they are to be unresistingly pillaged of their time by importunity about albums, and despoiled of the privacy of correspondence with their friends by the rage for autographs, so that if they scribble a joke to an acquaintance in the next street, they may hear of its existence five years after in a far corner of Yorkshire, or in a book of curiosities at Hobart Town. They would like to know why they must be civil when a stranger, introduced by an acquaintance at a morning call, makes her curtsey, raises her glass, borrows paper and pencil of the victim, draws a likeness, puts it into her reticule, and departs. They would like to know why they are expected to be gratified when eight or nine third-rate painters beg them to sit for their portraits, to be hung out as signs to entice visitors to the artist's rooms."
* * * * * *
"Authors would like to know why they must receive flattery as if
it were welcome, and be made subject to fine speeches, which presuppose a
disgusting degree of vanity in the listener. They would like to know
whether it is absolutely necessary that they should be accused of pride and
ingratitude if they decline honours of such spurious origin as most of
these, and of absurd vanity if they do not repel them. They would like to
know
whether it is quite necessary, in generous and Christian England, that any class should submit to have is most besetting sin, its peculiar weakness, fostered and aggravated for the proposes of persons whose aim it is to have brilliant parties and a celebrated acquaintance. The being honoured through the broad land, while the soul is sinking under its sense of ignorance and weakness at home, is a tax which a popular author must pay; and so is the being censured for what may prove the best deeds of his life, and the highest thoughts of his mind. He may be obliged to submit to be gazed at in public, and to be annoyed with handfuls of anonymous letters in his study, where he would fain occupy himself with something far higher and better than himself and his doings. These things may be a tax which he must pay; but it may be questionable whether it is equally necessary for him to acquiesce in being the show and attraction of an assemblage to which he is invited as a guest, if not as a friend.
"This matter is not worth losing one's temper
about,--just because nothing is worth it. There is another reason,
too, why indignation would be absurd,--that no individuals or classes
are answerable for the system. It is the birth of the times, as we said
before, and those may laugh who can, and those who must suffer had better
suffer good-humouredly; but not the less is the system a great
mischief, and therefore to be exposed and resisted by those who have the
power. If its effects were merely to insure and hasten the ruin of youthful
poets, who are satisfied to bask in compliments and the lamp-light
of saloons, to complete the resemblance to pet animals of beings who never
were men, the world would lose little, and this species of coxcombry, like
every other, might be left to have its day. But this is far from being all
that is done. There is a grievous waste of time of a higher order of beings
than the rhyming dandy--waste of the precious time of those who have
only too few years in which to think and to live. There is an intrusion
into the independence of their observation of life. If their modesty is not
most painfully outraged, their idea of the literary life is depraved. The
one or the other must be the case, and we generally witness both in the
literary pets of saloons.
"Some plead that the evil is usually so temporary, that it cannot
do much mischief to any one who really has an intellect, and is therefore
of consequence to the world. But the mischief is not over with praise and
publicity. The reverse which ensues may be salutary. As Carlyle says,
'Truly, if Death did not intervene; or, still more happily, if Life
and the Public were not a blockhead, and sudden unreasonable oblivion were
not to follow that sudden unreasonable glory, and beneficently, though most
painfully, damp it down, one sees not where many a poor glorious man, still
more, many a poor glorious woman (for it falls harder on the distinguished
female), could terminate, far short of Bedlam.' Such reverse may be
the best thing to be hoped; but it does not leave things as they were
before the season of flattery set in. The safe feeling of equality is gone;
habits of industry are impaired; the delicacy of modesty is exhaled; and it
is a great wonder if the temper is not spoiled. The sense of elevation is
followed by a consciousness of depression: those who have been the
idols of society feel, when deposed, like its slaves; and the natural
consequence is contempt and repining. Hear Dryden at the end of a long
course of mutual flatteries between himself and his patrons, and of
authorship to please others, often to the severe mortification of his
better nature:--'It will continue to be the ingratitude of
mankind, that they who teach wisdom by the surest means shall generally
live poor and unregarded, as if they were born only for the public, and had
no interest in their own well-being, but were to be lighted up like
tapers, and waste themselves for the benefit of others.'"
* * * * * *
"The crowning evil which arises from the system of
'lionism' is, that it cuts off the retreat of literary persons
into the great body of human beings. They are marked out as a class, and
can no longer take refuge from their toils and their publicity in ordinary
life. This is a hardship shared by authors who are far above being directly
injured by the prevalent practice. There are men who continue to enter
society for the sake of the good it yields, enjoying intercourse, despising
homage, smiling at the vanities of those who must needs be vain, and
overlooking the
selfishness of such as are capable of no higher ambition than of being noted for their brilliant parties- there are men thus superior to being 'lions' who yet find themselves injured by 'lionism.' The more they venerate their own vocation, and the more humbly they estimate the influence of their own labours on human affairs, the more distinctly do they perceive the mischief of their separation from others who live and think; of their being isolated as a class. The cabinet-maker is of a different class from the hosier, because one makes furniture and the other stockings. The lawyer is of a different class from the physician, because the science of law is quite a different thing from the science of medicine. But the author has to do with those two things precisely which are common to the whole race--with living and thinking. He is devoted to no exclusive department of science; and the art which he practices--the writing what he thinks--is quite a subordinate part of his business. The very first necessity of his vocation is to live as others live, in order to see and feel, and to sympathize in human thought. In proportion as this sympathy is impaired, will his views be partial, his understanding, both of men and books, be imperfect, and his power be weakened accordingly. A man aware of all this will sigh, however goodnaturedly he may smile, at such lamentations as may often be overheard in 'brilliant parties.' 'How do you like Mrs. --, now you have got an introduction to her?' 'O, I am so disappointed! I don't find that she has anything in her.' 'Nothing in her! Nothing, with all her science!' 'O, I should never have found out who she was, if I had not been told; and she did not say a thing that one could carry away.' Hence--from people not finding out who she was without being told--came Mrs. --'s great wisdom; and of this advantage was all the world trying to deprive her."
* * * * * *
"Amidst the 'lower observances' of life, even the
pedantry of literary coteries, the frivolities of the drawing-room,
and the sentimentalities of 'lion' worship, there is for the
self-relying, 'tuition in the serene and beautiful laws'
of human existence. But the tuition is for the self-relying
alone--for those who, in
the deep interest of their vocation of thought, work from far other considerations than the desire of applause. None but a man who can do without praise can come out safe from the process of being 'lionised:' and no one who cannot do without praise is likely to achieve anything better than he has already done. The newspapers may tell of his 'expanding intellect,' and his publisher may prophecy of the rich fruits of his coming years: but he has done his best. Having gained much applause by a particular quality of his writing, he will be always trying to get more applause by a stronger exhibition of the quality, till it grows into pure extravagance. If he has energy, it will grow into bombast in the hot-house of drawing-room favour. If he is suggestive, and excels in implication, he will probably end in a Lord Burleigh's shake of the head. He deprives himself of the repose and independence of thought, amid which he might become aware of his own tendencies, and nourish his weaker powers into an equality with the stronger. Fashion, with all its lights, its music, its incense, is to him a sepulchre--the cold deep grave in which his powers and his ambition must rot into nothingness. We have often wondered, while witnessing the ministering of the poison to the unwary, the weak and the vain, whether their course began with the same kind of aspiration, felt as early, as that which the greatest of the world's thinkers have confessed. It seems as if any who have risen so far into success as to attract the admiration, (and therefore the sympathy) of numbers, must have had a long training in habits of thought, feeling, and expression; must have early felt admiration of intellectual achievement, and the consciousness of kindred with the masters of intellect; must have early known the stirring of literary ambition, the pleasure of thinking, the luxury of expressing thought, and the heroic longing to create or arouse somewhat in other minds. It is difficult to believe that any one who has succeeded has not gone through brave toils, virtuous struggles of modesty, and a noble glow of confidence: that he has not obtained glimpses of realities unseen by the outward eye, and been animated by a sense of the glory of his vocation: that, up to the precincts of the empire of fashion, he has been, in all essential
respects, on an equality with any of God's peerage. If so, what a sight of ruin is here: aspirations chained down by the fetter of complaisance! desires blown away by the breath of popularity, or the wind of ladies' fans! confidence pampered into conceit; modesty depraved into misgiving and dependence; and the music of the spheres exchanged for opera airs and the rhymes of an album! Instead of 'the scholar beloved of earth and heaven,' we have the mincing dandy courted by the foolish and the vain. Instead of the son of wisdom, standing serene before the world to justify the ways of his parent, we have the spoiled child of fortune, ready to complain, on the first neglect, that all the universe goes wrong because the darkness is settling down upon him after he has used up his little day. What a catastrophe of a mind which must have had promise in its dawn!
"Even where the case is not so mournful as this, the
drawing-room is still the grave of literary promise. There are some
who on the heath, or in the shadow of the wood, whispered to themselves,
with beating hearts, while communing with some mastermind, 'I also am
a poet.' In those days they could not hear the very name of Chaucer
or Shakspere without a glow of personal interest, arising out of a sense of
kindred. Now, lounging on sofas, and quaffing coffee and praise, they are
satisfied with mediocrity, gratified enough that one fair creature has shut
herself up with their works at noon-day, and that another has pored
over them at midnight. They now speak of Chaucer and Shakspere with the
same kind of admiration with which they themselves are addressed by others.
The consciousness, the heart-felt emotion, the feeling of
brotherhood--all that is noble is gone, and is succeeded by a low and
precarious self-complacency, a skeptical preference of mediocrity to
excellence. They underrate their vocation, and are lost."
* * * * * *
"When we think how few writers in a century live for centuries, it
is astonishing to perceive how many in every year dismiss all doubt of
their own greatness, and strut about in the belief that men's minds
are full of them, and will be full of them when a new age has arisen, and
they and their flatterers have
long been gone to learn elsewhere, perhaps, the littleness of all our knowledge. Any degree of delight, any excess of glee may be allowed for, and even respected, in one actually in the intense enjoyment of authorship, when all comparison with them is out of the question for the hour, and the charm of his own conceptions eclipses all other beauty, the fervor of his own persuasions excludes the influence of all other minds; but if a man not immediately subject to the inspiration of his art, deliberately believes that his thoughts are so far beyond his age, or his feelings so universal and so felicitously expressed as that he is even now addressing a remote posterity, no further proof of his ignorance and error is needed. The prophecy forbids its own accomplishment. There is probably no London season when some author is not told by some foolish person that he or she is equal to Shakspere; and it is but too probable that some have believed what they have been told, and in consequence stopped short of what, by patient and humble study and labour, they might have achieved; while it is almost certain, if such could but see it, that whenever Shakspere's equal shall arise, it will be in some unanticipated form, and in such a mode that the parity of glory shall be a secret to himself, and to the world, till he is gone from it.
"Another almost unavoidable effect of literary
'lionism' is to make an author overrate his vocation; which is,
perhaps, as fatal an error as underrating it. All people interested in
their work are liable to overrate their vocation. There may be makers of
dolls' eyes who wonder how society would go on without them. But
almost all men, but popular authors, leave behind them their business and
the ideas which belong to it when they go out to recreate themselves. The
literary 'lion,' however, hears of little but books, and the
kind of books he is interested in. He sees them lining the walls and
strewing the tables wherever he goes: all the ideas he hears are from
books; all the news is about books, till it is no wonder if he fancies that
books govern the affairs of the world. If this fancy once gets fixed in his
brain there is an end of his achievements. His sagacity about human
interests, and his sympathy with human feelings, are If he had not been
enchanted, held captive within
the magic circle of fashion, he might have stepped abroad to see how the
world really goes on. He might have found there philosophers who foresee
the imperishable nature of certain books; who would say to him 'Cast
forth thy word into the everliving, everworking universe; it is a seed
grain that cannot die; unnoticed to-day, it will be found
flourishing as a banyan-grove (perhaps, alas! as a hemlock forest)
after a thousand
years:'* all this,
however, supposing vital perfection in the seed, and a fitting soil for it
to sink into. He might have found some who will say with Fenelon, with all
earnestness, 'If the riches of both Indies, if the crowns of all the
kingdoms of Europe were laid at my feet, in exchange for my love of
reading, I would spurn them all.' But even among these, the reading
and thinking class, he would be wise to observe how much more important are
many things than books; how little literature can compete in influence with
the winds of heaven, with impulses from within, with the possession of land
and game, with professional occupations, with the news of the day, with the
ideas and affections belonging to home and family. All these rank, as they
ought to do, before books in their operation upon minds. If he could have
gone out of the circle of the highly cultivated, he would have found the
merchant on 'change, the shopkeeper at his ledger, mothers in their
nurseries, boys and girls serving their apprenticeships or earning their
bread, with little thought of books. It is true that in this class may be
found those who are, perhaps, the most wrought upon by books--those to
whom literature is a luxury: but to such, two or three books are the
mental food of a whole youth, while two or three more may sustain their
mature years. These are they to whom the vocation of the author, in the
abstract, is beyond comparison for nobleness, but to whom the vocation of
this particular author is of less importance than that of the monkey that
grimaces on Bruin's back, as he paces along Whitechapel or Cheapside.
If he could have gone further still, he would have heard little children
talking to their haggard mothers of some happy possibility of bacon to
their potatoes on some
___________________
future day; he would have seen whole societies where no book is heard of but the 'Newgate Calendar.' How do books act upon the hundreds of thousands of domestic servants--upon the millions of artisans who cannot sever the sentences they speak into the words which compose them--upon the multitude who work on the soil, the bean-setters in spring, the mowers in summer, the reapers in autumn, who cover the broad land? How do books act upon the tribe who traverse the seas, obtaining guidance from the stars, and gathering knowledge from every strand? There is scarcely anything which does not act more powerfully upon them--not a word spoken in their homes, not an act of their handicraft, not a rumour of the town, not a glimpse of the green fields. The time will doubtless come when books will influence the life of such; but then this influence will be only one among many, and the books which will give it forth will hardly be of the class in which the literary 'lion' has an interest. Meantime, unless he goes abroad, in imagination at least, from the enchanted circle of which he is, for the time, the centre, he is in imminent peril, while relaxing in his intellectual toil, of overrating his vocation.
"This, however, is sometimes a preparation for being ashamed of
the vocation. Some of the anxiety which popular authors have shown, towards
the end of their career, to be considered as gentlemen rather than as
authors, is no doubt owing to the desire, in aristocratic England, to be on
a par with their admirers in the qualifications which most distinguish
them: and much also to the universal tendency to
depreciate what we possess in longing for something else--the tendency
which inclines so many men of rank to distinguish themselves as authors,
statesmen, or even sportsmen, while authors and legislators are struggling
for rank. But there can be no doubt that the subsidence of enthusiasm,
which must sooner or later follow the excitement caused by popular
authorship, the mortifications which succeed the transports of popularity,
have a large share in producing the desire of aristocratic station, the
shame of their vocation, by which some favourites of the
drawing-room cast a shadow over their own fame. Johnson says of
Congreve--'But he treated
the muses with ingratitude; for, having long conversed familiarly with the great, he wished to be considered rather as a man of fashion than of wit; and when he received a visit from Voltaire, disgusted him by the despicable foppery of desiring to be considered, not as an author, but a gentleman: to which the Frenchman replied, "that if he had been only a gentleman, he should not have come to visit him."'
"He must be a strong man who escapes all the pitfalls into this
tomb of ambition and of powers. He must have not only great force of
intellect to advance amidst such hindrances, but a fine moral vigour to
hold the purpose of his life amidst the voices which are crying to him all
the way up the mountain of his toil; syren voices, in which he must have an
accurate ear to discover that there is little of the sympathy he needs,
however much of the blandishment that he cannot but distrust.
"To any one strong enough to stand it, however, the experience of
literary 'lionism' yields much that is worth having. If
authorship be the accomplishment of early and steady aspiration; if the
author feels that it is the business of his life to think and say what he
thinks, while he is far from supposing it the business of other
people's lives to read what he says: if he holds to his aim,
regarding the patronage of fashion, and the flattery of the crowd only as a
piece of his life, like a journey abroad, or a fit of sickness, or a
legacy, or anything which makes him feel for the time, without having any
immediate connexion with the chief interest of his existence, he is likely
to profit rather than suffer by his drawing-room reputation. Some
essential conditions must be observed. It is essential that his mind should
not be spent and dissipated amidst a crowd of pleasures; that his social
engagements should not interfere with his labours of the study. He must
keep his morning hours (and they must be many) not only free but bright. He
must have ready for them a clear head and a light heart. His solitude must
be true solitude while it lasts, unprofaned by the intrusions of vanities,
(which are cares in masquerade) and undisturbed by the echoes of applause.
It is essential that he should be active in some common business of life,
not dividing the whole of his time
between the study and the drawing-room, and so confining himself to the narrow world of books and readers."
* * * * * *
"A man so seriously devoted to an object is not likely to find
himself the guest of the coarsest perpetrators of 'lionism.' He
is not likely to accept the hospitality on condition of being made a show;
but he need not part with his good humour. Those who give feasts, and hire
the talents of their neighbours to make those feasts agreeable, are
fulfilling their little part--are doing what they are fit for, and
what might be expected of them, as the dispensers of intellectual feasts
are doing their part in bringing together beauty and
attraction from the starry skies, and the green earth, and the acts and
thoughts of men. When once it is discerned that it is useless to look for
the grapes and figs of these last among the thorns and thistles of the
first, the whole matter is settled. Literary 'lionism' is a
sign of the times; and it is the function of certain small people to
exhibit it and there is an end. Neither it nor they are to be quarrelled
with for what cannot be helped.
"It will be hard upon the author faithful to his vocation, and it
will be strange, if some valuable friendships do not arise out of the
intercourses of the drawing-room where his probation goes forward.
This is one of the advantages which his popularity, however temporary, is
likely to leave behind. He is likely, moreover, to shake off a few
prejudices, educational, or engendered in the study. He can hardly fail to
learn something of the ways of thinking and feeling of new classes of
persons, or orders of minds before unknown. He is pretty sure, also, to
hear much that is said in his own dispraise that would never have reached
him in retirement; and this kind of information has great weight, if not
great virtue with every one; not only because there is almost invariably
some truth involved in every censure, but because most people agree with
Racine in his experience, that an adverse criticism gives more pain than
the extremist applause can afford pleasure. These things constitute
altogether a great sum of advantages, in addition to the enjoyments of
relaxation and kindly intercourse which are supposed
to be the attributes of all social assemblages. If many small wits and feeble thinkers have been extinguished by the system of literary 'lionism,' it may be hoped that some few have taken what is good and left what is bad in it, deriving from their exposure to it an improved self-reliance and fresh intellectual resources.
"Many are the thousands who have let the man die within them from
cowardly care about meat and drink, and a warm corner in the great asylum
of safety, whose gates have ever been thronged by the multitude who cannot
appreciate the free air and open heaven. And many are the hundreds who have
let the poet die within them that their complacency may be fed, their
vanity intoxicated, and themselves securely harboured in the praise of
their immediate neighbours. Few, very few are they who, 'noble in
reason,' and conscious of being 'infinite in faculties,'
have faith to look before and after--faith to go on to
'reverence the dreams of their youth'--faith to appeal to
the godlike human mind yet unborn--the mind which the series of coming
centuries is to reveal. Among the millions who are now thinking and feeling
on our own soil, is it likely that there is not one who might take up the
song of Homer--not one who might talk the night away with
Socrates,--not one who might be the Shakspere of an age when our
volcanoes shall have become regions of green pasture and still waters, and
new islands shall send forth human speech from the midst of the sea? What
are such men about? If one is pining in want, rusting in ignorance, or
turning from angel to devil under oppression, it is too probable that
another may be undergoing extinction in the
drawing-rooms--surrendering his divine faculties to wither in
lamplight, and be wafted away in perfume and praise. As surely as the human
thought has power to fly abroad over the expanse of a thousand years, it
has need to rest on that far shore, and meditate, 'Where now are the
flatteries, and vanities, and competitions, which seemed so important in
their day? Where are the ephemeral reputations, the glow-worm ideas,
the gossamer sentiments, which the impertinent voice of Fashion pronounced
immortal and divine? The deluge of oblivion has swept over
them all, while the minds which were really immortal and divine are still there, "for ever singing as they shine" in the firmament of thought, and mirrored in the deep of ages out of which they rose.'"*
Among the traits from the life is that paragraph of the foregoing
extracts about the pedantry of the "superior people" of a
provincial town. Norwich, which has now no claims to social superiority at
all, was in my childhood a rival of Lichfield itself, in the time of the
Sewards, for literary pretension and the vulgarity of pedantry. William
Taylor was then at his best; when there was something like fulfillment of
his early promise, when his exemplary filial duty was a fine spectacle to
the whole city, and before the vice which destroyed him had coarsened his
morale, and drowned his intellect. During the
war, it was a great distinction to know any thing of German literature; and
in Mr. Taylor's case it proved a ruinous distinction. He was
completely spoiled by the flatteries of shallow men, pedantic women, and
conceited lads. We girls had the advantage. We could listen and amuse
ourselves, without being called upon to take any part; and heartily amused
we often were, after the example of our mother. When she went to Norwich, a
bonny young bride, with plenty of sense and observation, and a satirical
turn, and more knowledge, even of hooks, than the book people gave her
credit for, she used to carry home her own intense amusement from the
supper-tables of the time, and keep her good stories alive till we
were old enough to enjoy them. We took our cue from her; and the
blue-stocking ladies who crammed themselves from reviews and
publishers' lists in the morning to cut a figure in the evening, as
conversant with all the literature of the day, were little aware how we
children were noting all their vanities and egotisms, to act them
to-morrow in our play. The lady who cleared her throat to obtain a
hearing for her question whether Mr. William Taylor had read the charming
anecdote of the Chinese Emperor Chim-Cham-Chow, was a capital
subject for us: and so was another who brought
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out her literary observations amidst an incessant complacent purring: and so was another who sported youthful vivacity, and political enthusiasm with her scanty skirts and uncovered head to past seventy. These and many more barely condescended to notice my mother, (who, in genuine ability, was worth them all,) except in her quality of hostess. The gentlemen took wine with her, and the ladies ate her fricassees and custards; but they talked vile French in her presence, knowing that she did not understand it, and that the foreigner they had caught could speak English very well. This sort of display, and the contrast which struck us whenever we chanced to meet with genuine superiority, was no doubt of service to us, as a preparation for the higher kind of life which we were afterwards to work out for ourselves. It enabled me, for one, to see, twenty years later, that there is no essential difference between the extreme case of a cathedral city and that of literary London, or any other place, where dissipation takes the turn of book talk instead of dancing or masquerading.
Among the mere pedants were some who were qualified for something
better. Such women as Mrs. Opie and Mrs. John Taylor ought to have been
superior to the nonsense and vanity in which they participated. I do not
remember Dr. Sayers; and I believe he died before I could possibly remember
him; but I always heard of him as a genuine scholar; and I have no doubt he
was superior to his neighbours in modesty and manners. Dr. Enfield, a
feeble and superficial man of letters, was gone also from these literary
supper-tables before my time. There was Sir James Smith, the
botanist,--made much of, and really not pedantic and vulgar, like the
rest, but weak and irritable. There was Dr. Alderson, Mrs. Opie's
father, solemn and sententious and eccentric in manner, but not an able
man, in any way. William Taylor was managed by a regular
process,--first, of feeding, then of wine-bibbing, and
immediately after of poking to make him talk: and then came his
sayings, devoured by the gentlemen, and making ladies and children
aghast;--defences of suicide, avowals that snuff alone had rescued him
from it: information given as certain, that 'God save the
King' was sung
by Jeremiah in the temple of Solomon,--that Christ was watched on the day of his supposed ascension, and observed to hide himself till dusk, and then to make his way down the other side of the mountain; and other such plagiarisms from the German Rationalists. When William Taylor began with "I firmly believe," we knew that something particularly incredible was coming. We escaped without injury from hearing such things half a dozen times in a year; and from a man who was often seen to have taken too much wine: and we knew, too, that he came to our house because he had been my father's schoolfellow, and because there had always been a friendship between his excellent mother and our clan. His virtues as a son were before our eyes when we witnessed his endurance of his father's brutality of temper and manners, and his watchfulness in ministering to the old man's comfort in his infirmities. When we saw, on a Sunday morning, William Taylor guiding his blind mother to chapel, and getting her there with her shoes as clean as if she had crossed no gutters in those flint-paved streets, we could forgive anything that had shocked or disgusted us at the dinner table. But matters grew worse in his old age, when his habits of intemperance kept him out of the sight of ladies, and he got round him a set of ignorant and conceited young men, who thought they could set the world right by their destructive propensities. One of his chief favourites was George Borrow, as George Borrow has himself given the world to understand. When this polyglot gentleman appeared before the public as a devout agent of the Bible-society in foreign parts, there was one burst of laughter from all who remembered the old Norwich days. At intervals, Southey came to see his old friend, William Taylor: and great was the surprise that one who became such a bigot on paper, in religion and politics, could continue the friend of so wild a rover in those fields as William Taylor, who talked more blasphemy, and did more mischief to young men (through his entire lack of conviction and earnestness and truth-speaking) than the Hones and Carliles and others whom Southey abhorred as emissaries of Satan. After reading Southey's Life and Correspondence, the maintenance of that friendship appears to me more singular
than when we young people used to catch a glimpse in the street of the author of 'Thalaba' and 'Kehama.' The great days of the Gurneys were not come yet. The remarkable family from which issued Mrs. Fry, and Priscilla and Joseph John Gurney, were then a set of dashing young people,--dressing in gay riding habits and scarlet boots, as Mrs. Fry told us afterwards, and riding about the country to balls and gaieties of all sorts. Accomplished and charming young ladies they were; and we children used to overhear some whispered gossip about the effects of their charms on heart-stricken young men: but their final characteristics were not yet apparent.
There was one occasional apparition which kept alive in us a sense of
what intellectual superiority ought to be and to produce. Mrs. Barbauld
came to Norwich now and then; and she always made her appearance presently
at our house. In her early married life, before the happiness of the
devoted wife was broken up by her gentle husband's insanity, she had
helped him in his great school at Palgrave in Suffolk, by taking charge of
the very little boys. William Taylor and my father had stood at her knee
with their slates; and when they became men, and my father's children
were older than he was when she first knew him, she retained her interest
in him, and extended it to my mother and us. It was a remarkable day for us
when the comely elderly lady in her black silk cloak and bonnet came and
settled herself for a long morning chat. She used to insist on holding
skeins of silk for my mother to wind, or on winding, while one of us
children was the holder: and well I remember her gentle lively voice,
and the stamp of superiority on all she said. We knew she was very learned,
and we saw she was graceful, and playful, and kindly and womanly: and
we heard with swelling hearts the anecdotes of her heroism when in personal
danger from her husband's hallucinations, and when it was scarcely
possible to separate her from him, when her life and his poor chance of
restoration required it. I still think her one of the first of writers in
our language, and the best example we have of the benefits of a sound
classical education to a woman. When I was old enough to pass a few weeks
with my aunt Lee, at
Stoke Newingion, I went more than once with my aunt to Mrs. Barbauld's to tea, and was almost confounded at the honour of being allowed to make tea. It was owing to her that I had one literary acquaintance when I went to London in 1832. Miss Aikin, niece of Mrs. Barbauld, came to Norwich now and then, and was well-known to my mother: and when I was in the City Road in that memorable spring of the success of the Prize Essays, my mother gave me a letter of introduction to Miss Aikin, then living at Hampstead. She received me with kindness at once, and with distinction when the Prize Essays had come under her eye. When my Series was struggling for publication, I sent her my prospectus. She returned a bare message of acknowledgment. This rather surprised me; and it was not till some years afterwards that I learned how the matter was. The anecdote is so creditable to her candour, that it ought to be told. Naturally regarding me as a youngster, as my friendly elderly critics always did, even when I was long past thirty, she was so struck with the presumption of the enterprise that she thought it her duty to rebuke me for it. She accordingly wrote a letter which she showed to her literary friends, informing me that I could have no idea how far beyond any powers of mine was such a scheme; that large information, an extensive acquaintance with learned persons and with affairs, &c., &c., were indispensable; and that she counselled me to burn my prospectus and programme, and confine myself to humbler tasks, such as a young woman might be competent to. Those who saw the letter admired it much, and hoped I should have the grace to thank my stars that I had so faithful a friend, to interpose between me and exposure. She hesitated, however, about sending it; and she put off the act till my success was decided and notorious. She then burned the letter, and herself told the story with capital grace,--felicitating herself on her having burned the letter, instead of me on being the object of it. I heard unintelligible references to this letter, from time to time, and did not know what they meant, till the complete story, as told by herself, was repeated to me, after the lapse of years.--She rendered me a real service, about the time of the burning
of the letter. Her friend, Mr. Hallam, found fault at her house with two statements of mine about the operation of the law or custom of primogeniture; and she begged of him to make known his criticisms to me, and told me she had done so,--being assured that such an authority as Mr. Hallam would be fitly honoured by me. I was grateful, of course; and I presently received a long letter of pretty sharp criticism from Mr. Hallam. In my reply, I submitted myself to him about one point, but stood my ground in regard to the other,--successfully, as he admitted. He wrote then a very cordial letter,--partly of apology for the roughness of his method, by which he had desired to ascertain whether I could bear criticism, and partly to say that he hoped he might consider our correspondence a sufficient introduction, authorising Mrs. Hallam and himself to call on me. He was from that time forward, and is now, one of the most valued of my literary friends. One more transaction, however, was to take place before I could make him and Miss Aikin quite understand what my intentions and views were in indulging myself with the benefits and pleasures of literary society in London.
Mr. Hallam one day called, when, as it was the first of the month, my
table was spread with new periodicals, sent me by publishers. I was not in
the room when Mr. Hallam entered; and I found him with the "Monthly
Repository" in his hands, turning over the leaves. He pointed to the
Editor's name (Mr. Fox) on the cover, and asked me some questions
about him. After turning over, and remarking upon a few others, he sat down
for a chat. A few days after, I received a note from Miss Aikin, kindly
congratulating me on my "success, thus far, in society," and on
my "honours" generally; and then admonishing me that the
continuance of such "success" and such "honours"
would depend on my showing due deference to the opinions and standing of
persons older and more distinguished than myself; so that she felt it was
an act of friendship to warn me against appearing to know of periodicals so
low as, for instance, the "Monthly Repository," and having any
information to give about dissenting ministers, like Mr. Fox.
I replied without loss of time, that there might be no more mistake as
to my views in going into society. I thanked her for her kindness and her
frankness: told her that I objected to the word
"success," as she had used it, because success implies
endeavour; and I had nothing to strive for in any such direction. I went
into society to learn and to enjoy, and not to obtain suffrages: and
I hoped to be as frank and unrestrained with others as I wished them to be
with me. I told her how I perceived that Mr. Hallam was her informant, and
by what accident it was that he saw the periodical, and heard about its
editor: but I said that I was a dissenter, and acquainted with
dissenting ministers, and should certainly never deny it when asked, as I
was by Mr. Hallam, or object to all the world knowing it. Once for all, I
concluded, I had no social policy, and no personal aims; no concealments,
nor reasons for compromise. Society was very pleasant; but it would cease
to be so from the moment that it was any thing but a simple recreation from
work, accepted without the restraint of politic conditions. She took my
reply in good part; was somewhat aghast at my not being
"destroyed" by hostile reviews, when she trembled at the
prospect of favourable ones of her own books; but was always gracious and
kind when we met,--which seldom happened, however, when she grew old
and I had left London.
Mr. Hallam's call opened to me a curious glimpse into some of the
devices of this same London literary society. He told me that if I had not
considered our correspondence a sufficient introduction, we should yet have
become acquainted,--his friend, Dr.-- having promised him an
introduction. I laughed, and said there must be some mistake, as Dr.--
was an entire stranger to me. Mr. Hallam's surprise was
extreme: Dr. -- had told him we were relations, and had spoken
as if we were quite intimate. I replied that there was a very distant
connexion by marriage; but that we were utter strangers; and in fact, I had
never seen Dr. --. I was less amazed than Mr. Hallam at the stroke of
policy on the part of a courtier-like London physician, and was
amused when Mr. Hallam said he must learn from him where the mistake lay.
My new friends had not
been gone half an hour, when up drove Dr. --. In the presence of other visitors, he took my hand in both his, in true family style, and lavished much affection upon me,--though he had never recognised my existence during any former visits of mine to London. The excess of his humility in asking me to dinner was shocking. He, a physician in immense practice, entreated me to name my own day and hour, which I, of course, declined. When I went, on the first disengaged day, I met a pleasant, small party, and enjoyed the day,--except its close, when my host not only led me through all the servants in the hall, but leaned into my hackney-coach to thank me for the honour, &c., &c. This kind of behaviour was very disagreeable to me; and I never went to the house again but once. My mother and I were incessantly invited; and we really could not go because the invitations were short, and I was always engaged: but I was not very sorry, remembering the beginning of our acquaintance.--The one other time that I visited Dr. -- was the occasion of an incident of which it may be worth while to give a true version, as a false one was industriously spread. I have said above, that there were three persons only to whom I have refused to be introduced; and two of these have been seen to be Mr. Lockhart and Mr. Sterling. The third was the poet Moore. One day my mother was distressed at finding in the "Times" a ribald song addressed to me. She folded it in the innermost part of the paper, and hoped, as I was in the country that morning, that I should not see it. The event showed her that it would not do to conceal any thing of the sort from me, as I could not conduct my own peculiar case without knowing as much of the circumstances of it as other people. The song was copied everywhere, and ascribed so positively to Moore that I was compelled to suppose it his, though there was not a trace of wit to redeem its coarseness. At Dr. --'s party, a few nights after, the host came to me to say that Mr. Rogers and Mr. Moore had come for the purpose of making my acquaintance: and Mr. Moore was standing within earshot, waiting for his introduction. I was obliged to decide in a moment what to do; and I think what I did was best, under such a difficulty. I said I should be happy
to be honoured by Mr. Rogers's acquaintance; but that, if Mr. Moore was, as was generally understood, the author of a recent insult to me in the "Times" newspaper, I did not see how could permit an introduction. I added that there might be a mistake about the authorship; in which case I should be happy to know Mr. Moore. Dr.-- was, of course, very uncomfortable. Having seated Mr. Rogers beside me, he and Moore left the room together for a little while. When they returned, Moore went to the piano, and sang several songs. Then, he screened his little person behind a lady's harp; and all the time she was playing, he was studying me through his eye-glass. When she finished her piece he went away to another party, where a friend of mine happened to be; and there he apologised for being late, on the plea that he had been "singing songs to Harriet Martineau." The story told was that I had asked Dr.-- to introduce us, and had then declined. The incident was, in one sense, a trifle not worth dwelling on: but in another view, it was important to me. At the outset of so very new a course of life, it seemed to me necessary to secure personal respect by the only means in a woman's power;--refusing the acquaintance of persons who have publicly outraged consideration and propriety. My mother thought me right; and so did the other friends who witnessed the transaction: and it was effectual. I never had any trouble of the sort again.
The first sight of Brougham, then just seated on the wool-sack,
and the object of all manner of expectation which he never fulfilled, was
an incident to be remembered. I had not previously shared the general
expectation of great national benefits from him. I believed that much of
his effort for popular objects, even for education, was for party and
personal purposes; and that he had no genuine popular sympathy, or real
desire that the citizens at large should have any effectual political
education. I distrusted his steadiness, and his disinterestedness, and his
knowledge of the men and interests of his own time. I believed him too vain
and selfish, and too low in morals and unrestrained in temper, to turn out
a really great man when his day of action came. Many a time has my mother
said to me, "Har-
riet, you will have much to answer for for speaking as you do if Brougham turns out what the rest of us expect:" to which my answer was "Yes, Mother, indeed I shall." She was at length very glad that I was not among the disappointed. Yet, there was a strong interest in meeting for the first time, and on the safe ground of substantial business, the man of whom I had heard so much from my childhood, and who now had more power over the popular welfare than perhaps any other man in the world. After two or three interviews, he was so manifestly wild, that the old interest was lost in pity and dislike; but at first I knew nothing of the manifestations of eccentricity which he presently made public enough. Those were the days when he uttered from the platform his laments over his folly in accepting a peerage, and when he made no secret to strangers who called on him on business, of his being "the most wretched man on earth." But I first met him when nothing of the sort had taken place so publicly but that his adorers and toadies could conceal it.
A day or two after my arrival in London, I met him at dinner at the
house of the correspondent of his through whom he engaged me to help in
poor-law reform. By his desire, no one else was asked. The first
thing that struck me was his being not only nervous, but
thin-skinned to excess. Our hostess's lap-dog brought
out the nervousness immediately, by jumping up at his knee. He pretended to
play with Gyp, but was obviously annoyed that Gyp would not be called away.
He was not accustomed to lap-dogs, it was clear. Before we went to
dinner, I could not but see how thin-skinned he was. The
"Examiner" newspaper lay on the table; and it chanced to
contain, that week, an impertinent article, warning me against being
flattered out of my own aims by my host, who was Brougham's
cat's-paw. The situation was sufficiently awkward, it must be
owned. Brougham did not read the article now, because he had seen it at
home: but I saw by glances and pointings that the gentlemen were
talking it over, while my hostess and I were consulting about her
embroidery: and Brougham looked, not only very black upon it, but
evidently annoyed and stung. He looked black in another sense, I
remember,--not a morsel of his dress
being anything but black, from the ridge of his stock to the toes of his
polished shoes. Not an inch of white was there to relieve the combined
gloom of his dress and complexion. He was curiously afraid of my
trumpet,* and managed generally
to make me hear without. He talked excessively fast, and ate fast and
prodigiously, stretching out his long arm for any dish he had a mind to,
and getting hold of the largest spoons which would dispatch the most work
in the shortest time. He watched me intently and incessantly when I was
conversing with any body else. For my part, I liked to watch him when he
was conversing with gentlemen, and his mind and its manifestations really
came out. This was never the case, as far as my observation went, when he
talked with ladies. I believe I have never met with more than three men, in
the whole course of my experience; who talked with women in a perfectly
natural manner; that is, precisely as they talked with men: but the
difference in Brougham's case was so great as to be disagreeable. He
knew many cultivated and intellectual women; but this seemed to be of no
effect. If not able to assume with them his ordinary manner towards silly
women, he was awkward and at a loss. This was by no means agreeable, though
the sin of his bad manners must be laid at the door of the vain women who
discarded their ladyhood for his sake, went miles to see him, were early on
platforms where he was to be, and admitted him to very broad flirtations.
He had pretty nearly settled his own business, in regard to conversation
with ladies, before two more years were over. His swearing became so
incessant, and the occasional indecency of his talk so insufferable, that I
have seen even coquettes and adorers turn pale, and the lady of the house
tell her husband that she could not undergo another dinner party with Lord
Brougham for a guest. I, for my part, determined to decline quietly
henceforth any small party where he was expected; and this simply because
there was no pleasure in a visit where every body was o thorns as to what
any one guest might say and do next. My own
im-
___________________
pression that day was that he was either drunk or insane. Drunk he was not; for he had been publicly engaged in business till the last moment. All manner of protestations have been made by his friends, to this day, that he is, with all his eccentricities, "sane enough:" but my impression remains that no man who conducted himself as he did that summer day in 1834 could be sane and sober.
I remember now, with no little emotion, a half hour of my visit at
Lambton Castle, a few months before that uncomfortable dinner. One evening,
when a guest, Lord H--, had been talking with me about some matters of
popular interest which led us to discuss the Society for the Diffusion of
Useful Knowledge, Lord Durham invited me to the room where music was going
on, and where we could not be overheard. He asked me whether Lord H--
had understood me right, that the surest way not to reach the
people was to address them through the Society, and by the agency of the
Whig managers. I replied that I had said so: and I told him why,
giving him evidence of the popular distrust of Lord Brougham and his
teaching and preaching clique. Lord Durham heard me with evident concern,
and said at last, in his earnest, heart-felt way, "Brougham
has done, and will do, foolish things enough: but it would cut me to
the heart to think that Brougham was false." The words and the tone
were impressed on my mind by the contrast which they formed with the way in
which Brougham and his toadies were in the habit of speaking of Lord
Durharm. Brougham's envy and jealousy of the popular confidence
enjoyed by Lord Durham at that time were notorious. If Lord Durham was
unaware of it, he was the only person who was. I need not continue the
story which is remembered by every body of my own generation, and which the
next may read in the records of the time,--the Grey dinner at
Edinburgh when Lord Durham involuntarily triumphed,--the attack on him
at Salisbury and in a traitorous article in the Edinburgh Review, which
revealed Cabinet secrets,--the challenge and anticipated encounter of
the two noblemen on the floor of the House of Lords,--and the terror
of the feeble King, who dissolved parliament to
preclude the encounter, deprived Brougham of the Seals, and sent Lord Durham on a foreign mission. I need not tell over again the terrible story of the triumph of Brougham's evil passions, in perilling the safety, and overthrowing the government of Canada, and in destroying the career and breaking the heart of the generous, sensitive, honest and magnanimous statesman whom he chose to consider his enemy. It was as much as I could well bear to contrast the tones of the two men and their adherents before Lord Durham knew that there was any thing wrong between them: and when the dismal story proceeded, my heart swelled, many a time, when I recalled the moment of Lord Durham's first reception of a doubt of Brougham's honesty, and the serious countenance and sweet voice of remonstrance in which he said "It would cut me to the heart to think that Brougham was false." In seven years from that time he was in his grove,--sent there by Brougham's falseness.
With Brougham, his ancient comrades were naturally associated in the
mind of one who knew them only through books and newspapers. I saw much of
Jeffrey, and the Murrays, and Sydney Smith. My first sight of Jeffrey was
odd enough in its circumstances. It makes me laugh to think of it now. My
mother was with me in my second-floor lodgings in my first London
winter. It happened to be my landlady's cleaning day; and the
stair-carpets were up, and the housemaid on her knees, scouring,
when Mrs. Marcet and Lord Jeffrey made their way as they could between the
pail and the banisters. While Mrs. Marcet panted for breath enough to
introduce us, Jeffrey stood with his arms by his side and his head
depressed,--the drollest spectacle of mock humility:--and
then he made some solemn utterance about "homage," &c., to
which I replied by asking him to sit down. Almost before we had well beam
to talk, in burst Mrs. A.--, a literary woman whose ways were well
known to my mother and me. The moment she saw Lord Jeffrey, she forgot to
speak to us, but so thrust herself between Lord Jeffrey and me as actually
to push me backwards and sit on my knee. I extricated myself as soon as
possible, and left my seat. As she turned her back on me, my mother cast a
droll glance at me
which I fancy Lord Jeffrey saw; for, though one of the most egregious flatterers of this lady,--as of vain women in general,--he played her off in a way which she must have been very complacent not to understand. He showed that he wanted to talk to me, and said, when he saw she was determined to go away with him, that he considered this no visit, and would, if I pleased, come again on the first practicable day. I am convinced that he discovered in that short interview what my mother and I felt about the ways of literary people like Mrs. A--; and, though he could not easily drop, in any one case, his habit of flattery, he soon found that I did not like it, did not believe in it, and thought the worse of him for it. I never made any secret of my opinion of the levity, cruelty and unmanliness of literary men who aggravate the follies, and take advantage of the weakness of vain women; and this was Jeffrey's most conspicuous and very worst fault. As for my mother and me, we had a hearty laugh over this little scene, when our visitors were gone;--it was so very like old Norwich, in the days of the suppers of the "superior people!"
Whatever there might be of artificial in Jeffrey's
manners,--of a set "company state of mind" and mode of
conversation,--there was a warm heart underneath, and an ingenuousness
which added captivation to his intellectual graces. He could be absurd
enough in his devotion to a clever woman; and he could be highly culpable
in drawing out the vanity of a vain one, and then comically making game of
it; but his better nature was always within call; and his generosity was
unimpeachable in every other respect,--as far as I knew him. His
bounties to needy men of letters,--bounties which did not stop to make
ill-timed inquiries about desert,--were so munificent, that the
world, which always knew him to be generous, would be amazed at the extent
of the munificence: and it was done with so much of not only delicacy
but respect,--in such a hearty love of literature, that I quite
understand how easy it would be to accept money from him. If I had needed
assistance of that kind, there is no one from whom I could more freely have
asked it.--As for his conversation, it appeared to me that he cared
more for moralizing than any other
great converser I have known: but this might be adaptation to my likings; and I heard none of his conversation but what was addressed to myself. I must say that while I found, (or perceived) myself regarded as romantic, high-flown, extravagant, and so forth by good Mr. Empson, and the Jeffrey set generally, (even including Sydney Smith,) whenever I opened my mouth on matters of morals,--such as the aims of authorship, the rights and duties of opinion, the true spirit of citizenship, &c.,--I never failed to find cordial sympathy in Jeffrey. If at times he was more foolish and idle than most men of his power would choose to appear, he was always higher than them all when Iris moral sympathies and judgment were appealed to. I remember a small incident which impressed me, in connexion with this view of him; and, as it relates to him, it may be worth noting. At one of Mr. Rogers's breakfasts, I was seated between him and his friend Milman, when the conversation turned on some special case (I forget what) of excessive vanity. I was pitying the person because, whatever flattery he obtained, there was always some censure; and the smallest censure, to the vain, outweighs the largest amount of praise. Milman did not think so, saying that the vain are very happy;--"no people more apt at making themselves happy than the vainest:"--"they feed upon their own praises, and dismiss the censure; and, having no heart, they are out of the way of trouble." I made the obvious remark that if they have no heart they cannot be very happy. Jeffrey's serious assent to this, and remark that it settled the question, discomposed Milton extremely. He set to work to batter his egg and devour it without any reply, and did not speak for some time after. It was amusing that we two heretics should be administering instruction on morals to a Church dignitary of such eminence as a sacred poet as the Dean of St. Paul's.
I have however seen Milman so act, and so preserve a passive state, as
to be a lesson to all present. One incident especially which happened at
Mr. Hallam's dinner table, gave me a hearty respect for his command
of a naturally irritable temper. He behaved incomparably on that occasion.
It was a pleasant party of eight or ten people,--every one, as it
happened, of consider-
able celebrity, and therefore not to be despised in the matter of literary criticism, or verdict on character. I was placed near the top of the table, between Milman and Mr. Rogers; and the subject of animated conversation at the bottom presently took its turn among us. Mrs. Trollope's novel, "Jonathan Jefferson Whitlaw," had just come out, and was pronounced on by everybody present but myself,--I not having read it. As I had lately returned from the United States, I was asked what Mrs. Trollope's position was there. My reply was that I had no scruple in saying that Mrs. Trollope had no opportunity of knowing what good society was in America, generally speaking. I added that I intended to say this, as often as I was inquired of; for the simple reason that Mrs. Trollope had thought proper to libel and slander a whole nation. If she had been an ordinary discontented tourist, her adventures in America would not be worth the trouble of discussing; but her slanderous book made such exposures necessary. Every body, except Milman, asked questions, and I answered them. She certainly had no admirers among the party when she was first mentioned; and the account I gave of her unscrupulous method of reporting surprised nobody. At last, Milman put in a word for her. He could not help thinking that she had been illused:--he knew facts indeed of her having been taken in about her bazaar. "No doubt," said I. "Any English traveller who begins the game of diamond cut diamond with Yankee speculators is likely to get the worst of it. No doubt she was abundantly cheated; and hence this form of vengeance,--a vituperative book." Milman continued that he was aware of what hard usage she had to complain of, by his acquaintance with her. He was proceeding when Rogers broke in with one of his odd tentative speeches,--one of those probings by which he seemed to try how much people could bear. "O yes," said he; "he is acquainted with Mrs. Trollope. He had the forming of her mind." There was a moment of dead pause, and then every body burst into a hearty laugh; every body but Milman. He was beginning with a vehement "No, no;" but he checked himself and said nothing. He had begun to speak on behalf of Mrs. Trollope, and he would not give it up
now that Rogers had so spoken. His high colour and look of distress showed what his magnanimous silence cost him; but not a word more did he say. As I expected and hoped, he called on me the next morning. He often did so, as we were neighbours; but that morning he came as soon as the clock had struck two. His first care was to disclaim having educated Mrs. Trollope, who was, in fact, about his own age. His mother and hers, I think, were friends. At all events, he had known her nearly all his life. He frankly told me now, in the proper place and time, why he thought Mrs. Trollope ill-qualified to write travels and describe a nation: "but," he continued, "the thing is done, and can't be helped now: so that, unless you feel bound in conscience to expose her,--which might be to ruin her,--I would intercede for her." Laying his finger on a proof-sheet of my American book which lay at his elbow, he went on, "Can't you, now, say what you think of the same people, and let that be her answer?" "Why," exclaimed I, "you don't suppose I am going to occupy any of my book with Mrs. Trollope! I would not dirty my pages with her stories, even to refute them. What have I to do with Mrs. Trollope but to say what I know when inquired of?" "O, well, that is all right," said he. "I took for granted you meant to do it in your book: and I don't say that you could be blamed if you did. But if you mean in conversation, you are certainly quite right, and Mrs. Trollope herself could have no title to complain." I thought the candour, kindness and generosity shown in this incident quite remarkable; and I have always recalled it with pleasure.
With Jeffrey his old Edinburgh comrades were naturally associated, as
far as the influences of time and chance yet permitted. Brougham had before
this withdrawn himself almost entirely from those friends of his youth.
Horner's Life and Correspondence had not then been published; but I
had gathered up enough about him to see him, in a spiritual sense, sitting
in the midst of them. "Did you know Horner?" inquired Sydney
Smith. "You should have known Horner: but I suppose he was gone
before you were invented." With Horner's name the most closely
associated of all was that of John A. Murray, (Lord Murray
who was Lord Advocate when I first knew him.) Of all my acquaintance, no one was a greater puzzle to me than Horner's beloved John Murray, whose share of their published correspondence shows why there were once splendid expectations from him. His career as Lord Advocate and Judge was so little successful that the world could not but wonder how there could be such an issue from such promise. Jeffrey's failure in political office and as a parliamentary speaker, was easily accounted for by his uncertain health, his weak voice, his love of ease and literary trifling, and his eminence in a totally different function: and he ended by being an admirable Judge. But in the other case, there was no success in any other direction to account or atone for the failure of Lord Murray, when opportunity opened before him in what should have been the vigour of his years. He was a kind neighbour, however, and a thoroughly good hearted man,--always happy to give pleasure, though reducing the amount he bestowed by a curious little pomposity of manner. His agreeable wife joined her efforts with his to make their guests happy, and enjoyed society as much as he did. When one could once put away the association of Horner and those old Edinburgh days, the Murrays' parties were really delightful. I had a general invitation to their Thursday evenings at St. Stephen's; and their carriage usually came for me and took me home. They lived at the Lord Advocate's Chambers, under the same roof with the Houses of Parliament; and there, on Thursday evenings during the session, was a long broad table spread, with a prodigious Scotch cake, iced and adorned, on a vast trencher in the midst. Members of both Houses dropped in and out, when the debates were tiresome; and there were always a few guests like myself, who went on their way to or from other visits, and gathered up the political news of the night, curiously alternating with political anecdotes or Edinburgh jokes of thirty or forty years before. It was pleasant to see the Jeffreys come in when Sydney Smith was there, and to look on these grey-headed friends as the very men who had made such a noise in the days of my childhood, and who were venerable for what they had done and borne in those days, though they had disappointed expectation
when their opportunity came at last. It was at Lord Murray's table that Sydney Smith told me of the fun the Edinburgh reviewers used to make of their work. I taxed him honestly with the mischief they had done by their ferocity and cruel levity at the outset. It was no small mischief to have silenced Mrs. Barbauld; and how much more utterance they may have prevented, there is no saying. It is all very well to talk sensibly now of the actual importance of reviews, and the real value of reviewers' judgments: but the fact remains that spirits were broken, hearts were sickened, and authorship was cruelly discouraged by the savage and reckless condemnations passed by the Edinburgh review in its early days. "We were savage," replied Sydney Smith. "I remember" (and it was plain that he could not help enjoying the remembrance) "how Brougham and I sat trying one night how we could exasperate our cruelty to the utmost. We had got hold of a poor nervous little vegetarian, who had put out a poor silly little book; and when we had done our review of it, we sat trying,"--(and here he joined his finger and thumb as if dropping from a phial) "to find one more chink, one more crevice, through which we might drop in one more drop of verjuice, to eat into his bones." Very candid always, and sometimes very interesting, were the disclosures about the infant Edinburgh review. In the midst of his jocose talk, Sydney Smith occasionally became suddenly serious, when some ancient topic was brought up, or some life-enduring sensibility touched; and his voice, eye and manner at such times disposed one to tears almost as much as his ordinary discourse did to laughter. Among the subjects which were thus sacred to him was that of the Anti-slavery cause. One evening, at Lord Murray's, he inquired with earnest solicitude about the truth of some news from America, during the "reign of terror," as we used to call the early persecution of the abolitionists. As I had received letters and newspapers just before I left home, I could tell him what he wanted to know. He expressed, with manly concern, his sorrow for the sufferings of my friends in America, and feared it must cause me terrible pain. "Not unmixed pain," I told him; and then I explained how well we knew that that mighty question
could be carried only by the long perseverance of the highest order of abolitionists; and that an occasional purgation of the body was necessary, to ascertain how many of even the well-disposed had soundness of principle and knowledge, as well as strength of nerve, to go through with the enterprise: so that even this cruel persecution was not a pure evil. He listened earnestly, and sympathized in my faith in my personal friends among the abolitionists; and then a merry thought came into his head, as I saw by the change in his eye. "Now, I am surprised at you, I own," said he. "I am surprised at your taste, for yourself and your friends. I can fancy you enjoying a feather (one feather) in your cap; but I cannot imagine you could like a bushel of them down your back with the tar."
My first sight of Sydney Smith was when he called on me, under cover of
a whimsical introduction, as he considered it. At a great music party,
where the drawing-rooms and staircases were one continuous crowd,
the lady who had conveyed me fought her way to my seat,--which was, in
consideration of my deafness, next to Malibran, and near the piano. My
friend brought a message which Sydney Smith had passed up the
staircase;--that he understood we desired one another's
acquaintance, and that he was awaiting it at the bottom of the stairs. He
put it to my judgment whether I, being thin, could not more easily get down
to him than he, being stout, could get up to me: and he would wait
five minutes for my answer. I really could not go, under the circumstances;
and it was a serious thing to give up my seat and the music; so Mr. Smith
sent me a good-night, and promise to call on me, claiming this
negotiation as a proper introduction. He came, and sat down, broad and
comfortable, in the middle of my sofa, with his hands on his stick, as if
to support himself in a vast development of voice; and then he began, like
the great bell of St. Paul's, making me start at the first stroke. He
looked with shy dislike at my trumpet, for which there was truly no
occasion. I was more likely to fly to the furthest corner of the room. It
was always his boast that I did not want my trumpet when he talked with
me.
I do not believe that any body ever took amiss his quizzical
descriptions of his friends. I was sure I never did: and when I now recall his fun of that sort, it seems to me too innocent to raise an uneasy feeling. There were none, I believe, whom he did not quiz; but I never heard of any hurt feelings. He did not like precipitate speech; and among the fastest talkers in England were certain of his friends and acquaintance;--Mr. Hallam, Mr. Empson, Dr. Whewell, Mr. Macaulay and myself. None of us escaped his wit. His account of Mr. Empson's method of out-pouring stands, without the name, in Lady Holland's Life of her father. His praise of Macaulay is well known; "Macaulay is improved! Macaulay improves! I have observed in him of late,--flashes of silence!" His account of Whewell is something more than wit:--"Science is his forte: omniscience is his foible." As for his friend Hallam, he knew he might make free with his characteristics, of oppugnancy and haste among others, without offence. In telling us what a blunder he himself made in going late to a dinner party, and describing how far the dinner had proceeded, and how every body was engaged, he said "And there was Hallam, with his mouth full of cabbage and contradiction!" Nothing could be droller than his description of all his friends in influenza, in the winter of 1832-3; and of these, Hallam was the drollest of all that I remember. "And poor Hallam was tossing and tumbling in his bed when the watchman came by and called 'Twelve o'clock and a starlight night.' Here was an opportunity for controversy when it seemed most out of the question! Up jumped Hallam, with 'I question that,--I question that! Starlight! I see a star, I admit; but I doubt whether that constitutes starlight.' Hours more of tossing and tumbling; and then comes the watchman again: 'Past two o'clock, and a cloudy morning.' 'I question that,--I question that,' says Hallam. And he rushes to the window, and throws up the sash,--influenza notwithstanding. 'Watchman! do you mean to call this a cloudy morning? I see a star. And I question its being past two o'clock;--I question it, I question it!'" And so on. The story of Jeffrey and the North pole, as told by Sydney Smith, appears to me strangely spoiled in the Life. The incident hap-
pened while the Jeffreys were my near neighbours in London; and Mrs. Sydney Smith related the incident to me at the time. Captain (afterwards Sir John) Ross had just returned from an unsuccessful polar expedition, and was bent upon going again. He used all his interest to get the government stirred up to fit out another expedition: and among others, the Lord Advocate was to be applied to, to bespeak his good offices. The mutual friend who undertook to do Captain Ross's errand to Jeffrey arrived at an unfortunate moment. Jeffrey was in delicate health, at that time, and made a great point of his daily ride; and when the applicant reached his door, he was putting his foot in the stirrup, and did not want to be detained. So he pished and pshawed, and cared nothing for the North Pole, and at length "damned" it. The applicant spoke angrily about it to Sydney Smith, wishing that Jeffrey would take care what he was about, and use more civil language. "What do you think he said to me?" cried the complainant. "Why, he damned the North Pole!" "Well, never mind! never mind!" said Sydney Smith, soothingly. "Never mind his damning the North Pole. I have heard him speak disrespectfully of the equator."
Much as I enjoyed the society of both in London, I cared more for the
letters of Sydney Smith and Jeffrey during my long illness at Tynemouth
than I ever did for their glorious conversation. The air of the
drawing-room had some effect on both; or I believed that it
had: but our intercourse when Jeffrey was ill, and I was hopelessly
so, and Sydney Smith old and in failing spirits (as he told me frequently)
was thoroughly genuine. Sydney Smith wrote me that he hated the pen, now in
his old age, when that love of ease was growing on him, common to aged
dogs, asses and clergymen; and his letters were therefore a valuable gift,
and, I am sure, duly prized. There was no drawback on intercourse with him
except his being a clergyman. To a dissenter like myself, who had been
brought up in strict nonconformist notions of the sacredness of the
clerical office, and the absolute unworldliness which was its first
requisite, there was something very painful in the tone always taken by
Sydney Smith about Church matters. The broad avowals in his
"Let-
ters to Singleton" of the necessity of having "prizes" in the Church, to attract gentlemen into it and keep them there;--his treatment of the vocation as a provision, a source of honour, influence, and money, are so offensive as to be really wonderful to earnest dissenters. His drawing-room position and manners were not very clerical; but that did not matter so much as the lowness of view which proved that he was not in his right place, to those who, like me, were unaware that the profession was not his choice. He discharged his duty admirably, as far as his conscience was concerned, and his nature would allow: but he had not the spiritual tendencies and endowments which alone can justify an entrance into the pastoral office.
He was not quite the only one of my new friends who did not use my
trumpet in conversation. Of all people in the world, Malthus was the one
whom I heard quite easily without it;--Malthus, whose speech was
hopelessly imperfect, from defect in the palate. I dreaded meeting him when
invited by a friend of his who made my acquaintance on purpose. He had told
this lady that he should be in town on such a day, and entreated her to get
an introduction, and call and invite me; his reason being that whereas his
friends had done him all manner of mischief by defending him injudiciously,
my tales had represented his views precisely as he could have wished. I
could not decline such an invitation as this: but when I considered
my own deafness, and his inability to pronounce half the consonants in the
alphabet, and his hare-lip which must prevent my offering him my
tube, I feared we should make a terrible business of it. I was delightfully
wrong. His first sentence,--slow and gentle, with the vowels sonorous,
whatever might become of the consonants,--set me at ease completely. I
soon found that the vowels are in fact all that I ever hear. His worst
letter was l: and when I had no difficulty with his
question,--"Would not you like to have a look at the Lakes of
Killarney?" I had nothing more to fear. It really gratified him that
I heard him better than any body else; and whenever we met at dinner, I
somehow found myself beside him, with my best ear next him; and then I
heard all he said to every body at table.
Before we had been long acquainted, Mr. and Mrs. Malthus invited me to
spend some of the hot weather with them at Haileybury, promising that every
facility should be afforded me for work. It was a delightful visit; and the
well planted county of Herts was a welcome change from the pavement of
London in August. Mr. Malthus was one of the professors of the now expiring
College at Haileybury, and Mr. Empson was another: and the families
of the other professors made up a very pleasant society,--to say
nothing of the interest of seeing in the students the future administrators
of India. On my arrival, I found that every facility was indeed afforded
for my work. My room was a large and airy one, with a bay-window and
a charming view; and the window side of the room was fitted up with all
completeness, with desk, books, and every thing I could possibly want.
Something else was provided which showed even more markedly the spirit of
hospitality. A habit and whip lay on the bed. My friends had somehow
discovered from my tales that I was fond of riding; and horse, habit and
whip were prepared for me. Almost daily we went forth when work was
done,--a pleasant riding party of five or six, and explored all the
green lanes, and enjoyed all the fine views in the neighbourhood. We had no
idea that it would be my only visit: but Mr. Malthus died while I was
in America; and when I returned, his place was filled, both in College and
home. I have been at Haileybury since, when Professor Jones was the very
able successor of Mr. Malthus in the Chairs of Political Economy and
History; and Mr. Empson lived in the pleasant house where I had spent such
happy days. Now they are all gone; and the College itself, abolished by the
new Charter of the East India Company, will soon be no more than a matter
of remembrance to the present generation, and of tradition to the next. The
subdued jests and external homage and occasional insurrections of the young
men; the archery of the young ladies; the curious politeness of the Persian
professor; the fine learning and eager scholarship of Principal Le Bas; and
the somewhat old-fashioned courtesies of the summer evening parties,
are all over now, except as pleasant pictures in the interior gallery of
those who knew the place,--of whom I am thankful to have been one.
Mr. Hallam was one of the coterie of whom I have said so much: and
Mr. Whishaw was another; and so were his then young friends,--his
wards, the Romillys. The elder Romillys found themselves in parliament,
after the passage of the Reform Bill; and Sir John's career since
that time speaks for itself. They had virtuous projects when they entered
political life, and had every hope of achieving service worthy of their
father's fame: but their aspirations were speedily tamed
down,--as all high aspirations are lowered by Whig
influences. They were warned by prudent counsellors to sit silent for a few
years in the presence of their elders in the legislature: and, when
months and years slid away over their silence, they found it more and more
difficult, and at last impossible to speak. The lawyer brother got over
this, of necessity; but Edward never did. With poor health and sensitive
nerves, and brought up in the very hotbed of Whiggism, they could perhaps
be hardly expected to do more; but hope in them was strong, in the days of
the Reform Bill, and still alive when I left London. Good old Mr. Whishaw
was still fond and proud of his "boys," and still preaching
caution while expecting great things from them, when I last saw him. I met
that respected old man at every turn; and he did for me the same kind
office as Mr. Rogers,--coming for me, and carrying me home in his
carriage. When the drive was a long one,--as to Hampstead, or even to
Haileybury, there was time for a string of capital old stories, even at his
slow rate of utterance: and he made me feel as if I had known the
preceding generation of Whig statesmen and men of letters. Mr. Whishaw was
not only lame, (from the loss of a leg in early life) but purblind and
growing deaf, when I knew him: but every body was eager to amuse and
comfort him. He sat in the dining-room before dinner, with host or
hostess to converse with him till the rest came down; and every body took
care that he carried away plenty of conversation. The attentions of the
Romillys to their old guardian were really a beautiful spectacle.
His attached friend, Mr. Hallam, made abundant amends for the slowness
of the Whishaw discourse. It would have been a wonderful spectacle, I have
sometimes thought, if Hallam,
Macaulay and Empson had been induced to talk for a wager;--in regard to quantity merely, without stopping to think of quality; while their friends Rogers, Whishaw and Malthus would have made good counterparts. Mr. Hallam was in the brightest hour of his life when I first knew him. His son Arthur was living and affording the splendid promise of which all have been made aware by Tennyson, in "In Memoriam." In a little while, Arthur was gone,--found dead on the sofa by his father, one afternoon during a continental journey. Supposing him to be asleep, after a slight indisposition, Mr. Hallam sat reading for an hour after returning from a walk, before the extraordinary stillness alarmed him. Alone, and far from home, he was in a passion of grief. Few fathers have had such a son to lose; and the circumstances were singularly painful.--Then, there was the eldest daughter, on his arm at Carlyle's lectures, and the companion of her delightful mother;--she died in just the same way,--on the sofa, after a slight illness, and while her mother was reading to her. She exclaimed "Stop!" and was dead within five minutes: and when Dr. Holland had come, and found that there was nothing to be done, he had to go in search of the father, who had gone for his walk, and tell him of the new desolation of his home. Not long after, Mrs. Hallam died with equal suddenness; and now, in his failing age, the affectionate family-man finds himself bereft of all his large household,--all his ten children gone, except one married daughter. His works show that, social as he has always been, he has enjoyed solitary study. I remember his once making a ludicrous complaint of London dinners, and of the samehess of the luxuries he and I saw every day; and he told me his greatest longing was for a few days of cold beef and leg of mutton. He was, like most of the set, a capital gossip. Nothing happened that we ladies did not hear from Whishaw, Empson, or Hallam: and Mr. Hallam poured it all out with. a child-like glee and innocence which were very droll in a man who had done such things, and who spent so much of his time between passing judicial sentences in literature, and attending councils on politics and the arts with grave statesmen and with people of the highest
rank, to whom he showed a most solemn reverence. He was apt to say rash and heedless things in his out-pourings, which were as amusing as they were awkward. I remember his blurting out, when seated on a sofa between Mr. Whishaw and the remarkably plain and literary Miss --, a joke on somebody's hobbling with a wooden leg; and then an observation on Mrs. -- being the only handsome authoress. (As there were certainly two who would answer the description, I put no initials.) Of Mr. Hallam's works I say nothing, because they are fully discussed in the reviews of the time, by critics far more competent than myself. I enjoy them singularly; and especially his "History of Literature." I had a profound respect for him as an author, long before I ever dreamed of having him for a friend: and nothing that I ever observed in him lessened that respect in any degree, while a cordial regard was, I believe, continually growing stronger between us, from the hour of our first meeting till now. It does not follow that we agreed on all matters of conduct, any more than of opinion. I could never sympathize fully with his reverence for people of rank: and he could not understand my principle and methods of self-defence against the dangers and disgusts of "lionism." For one instance; I never would go to Lansdowne House, because I knew that I was invited there as an authoress, to undergo, as people did at that house, the most delicate and refined process of being lionised,--but still, the process. The Marquis and Marchioness of Lansdowne, and a son and daughter, caused me to be introduced to them at Sir Augustus Callcott's; and their not being introduced to my mother, who was with me, showed the footing on which I stood. I was then just departing for America. On my return, I was invited to every kind of party at Lansdowne House,--a concert, a state dinner, a friendly dinner party, a small evening party, and a ball; and I declined them all. I went nowhere but where my acquaintance was sought, as a lady, by ladies. Mr. Hallam told me,--what was true enough,--that Lady Lansdowne, being one of the Queen's ladies, and Lord Lansdowne, being a Cabinet Minister, could not make calls. If so, it made no difference in my disinclination to go, in a blue-stock-
ing way, to a house where I was not really acquainted with any body. Mr. Hallam, I saw, thought me conceited and saucy: but I felt I must take my own methods of preserving my social independence. Lord Lansdowne would not give the matter up. Finding that General Fox was coming one evening to a soirée of mine, he invited himself to dine with him, in order to accompany him. I thought this somewhat impertinent, while Mr. Hallam regarded it as an honour. I did not see why a nobleman and Cabinet Minister was more entitled than any other gentleman to present himself uninvited, after his own invitations had been declined. The incident was a trifle; but it shows how I acted in regard to this "lionising."
Mr. Rogers was my neighhour from the time when I went to live in Fludyer
Street; and many were the parties to which he took me in his carriage. Many
also were the breakfasts to which he invited me;--those breakfasts,
the fame of which has spread over the literary world. I could not often
go;--indeed, scarcely ever,--so indispensable to my work were my
morning hours and strength: and when Mr. Rogers perceived'
this, he asked me to dinner, or in the evening. But I did occasionally go
to breakfast; and he made it easy by saving me the street passage. He
desired his gardener to leave the garden gate unlocked; and merely crossed
the park and stepped in through the breakfast-room window. It was
there that, besides my familiar friends, I met some whom I was glad to see
after many years' acquaintance through books. It was there that I met
Southey, when he had almost left off coming to London. He was then indeed
hardly fit for society. It was in the interval between the death of his
first wife and his second marriage. He was gentle, kindly and agreeable;
and well disposed to talk of old Norwich, and many things besides. But
there was a mournful expression of countenance, occasionally verging upon
the distress of perplexity: and he faltered for words at times; and
once was painfully annoyed at being unable to recover a name or a date,
rubbing his head and covering his eyes long before he would give it up. I
told my mother, on coming home, that I feared that he was going the way of
so many hard literary workers. We were greatly
surprised to hear of his marriage, after what I had seen, and some worse indications of failure of which we had heard. The sequel of the story is known to every body.--I met Lord Mahon there (now Lord Stanhope) when his historical reputation was already established; and my agreeable friend Mr. Harness, whom I liked in all ways but as a dramatist. The Milmans used to extol the "finish" of his plays; and the author of "Fazio" ought to be a far better judge than I; but, as I told him, it seems to me that spirit is the first thing in a drama, and matter the next; and that "finish" comes only third, if so soon; and I could never see or feel beauty and elevation enough in Mr. Harness's plays to make me think it worth his while to write them. But he was one of my very pleasantest acquaintances, for his goodness at home and abroad,--to his sister and niece, to his parishioners, and to his friends in society. With poor health, and literary tastes craving the gratification which was constantly within his reach, he was a devoted parish priest; and he made duty pleasure, and endurance an enjoyment, or at worst a matter of indifference,--by his cheerful and disinterested temper. He was a fine example of an accomplished gentleman and poet in the Church, who did his clerical duty to the utmost, and with simplicity, while as agreeable a man of the world as you could meet. I never could fully enter into his dramatic propensities and enthusiasms, any more than into Mr. Dickens's,--in both which cases the drama seems to have drawn to itself an unaccountable amount of thought and interest; but the fault is probably in me,--that I cannot extend my worship of Shakspere so as to take an interest in all forms of dramatic presentment, as these two of my friends do. To me Shakspere is so much of a poet as to be supreme and sole as a dramatist: and they probably appreciate him better than I do, and prove it by loving meaner labours and productions for his sake. Considering that Göthe had the same preponderant taste, I can have no doubt that it is a case of deficiency in me, and not of eccentricity in them.
The Whig dinners of that day were at their highest point of
agreeableness. The Queen on her accession found her ministers "a set
of pleasant fellows," as was well understood at the time;--
gentlemen of literary accomplishments, to a moderate extent, which seemed very great to her, accustomed as she had been to such society as her uncles had got about them. The Whigs were in the highest prosperity and briskness of spirits at the time when I first knew them,--in the freshness of power under the declining old King, who had not got out of humour with them, as he did after Brougham's pranks in the autumn of 1834. And then again they were in high feather, after the Queen's accession, before they had arrived at presuming on their position, and while some vestiges of modesty remained among some of them. On returning to London a good many years later, I found a melancholy change which had occurred precisely through their desire that there should be no change at all. I found some who had formerly been "pleasant fellows" and agreeable ladies, now saying the same things in much the same manner as of old, only with more conceit and contempt of every body but themselves. Their pride of station and office had swelled into vulgarity; and their blindness in regard to public opinion and the progress of all the world but themselves was more wonderful than ever. All that I have seen of late years has shown me that in those pleasant dinners I saw the then leading society in literary London to the utmost advantage;--a privilege which I certainly enjoyed exceedingly.
My place was generally between some one of the notabilities and some
rising barrister. From the latter I could seldom gather much,--so bent
were all the rising barristers I met on knowing my views on "the
progress of education and the increase of crime." I was so weary of
that eternal question that it was a drawback on the pleasure of many a
dinner-party. In 1838, I went a journey of some weeks into the Lake
district and Scotland, with a party of friends,--some of whom were
over-worked like myself. We agreed to banish all topics connected
with public affairs and our own labours, and to give ourselves up to
refreshment, without any thought of improvement. We arrived at Fort
William, where the inn was overcrowded with passengers for the Loch Ness
steamer, in the evening, so tired that we (and I, especially) could
scarcely keep awake till our room (where
all the ladies of our party were to be lodged somehow,) was prepared. Mr. P--, our leader, very properly brought in a gentleman who could not find a place to sit down in, to have tea with us. My companions, seeing me drooping with sleep, did their utmost to seat him at the opposite side of the table: but he seized a stool, forced himself in next me, and instantly began (rising barrister as he was) to ask my opinion on the progress of education and the increase of crime in Scotland. I had no clear idea what I replied: but my companions told me, with inextinguishable laughter, after our guest was gone, that I had informed him that I knew nothing of those matters, and had made no inquiry, because we had all agreed before we left home that we would not improve our minds. They said that his stare of astonishment was a sight to be remembered.--In my London days, Lord Campbell was "Plain John Campbell:" but Plain John was wonderfully like the present Lord;--facetious, in and out of place, politic, flattering to an insulting degree, and prone to moralising in so trite a way as to be almost as insulting. He was full of knowledge, and might have been inexhaustibly entertaining if he could have forgotten his prudence and been natural. When his wife, Lady Stratheden, was present, there was some explanation of both the worldly prudence and the behaviour to ladies,--as if they were spoiled children, which Plain John supposed would please them. Others were there, Judges then or since,--the Parkes, the present Lord Chancellor Cranworth, the then Lord Chancellor Brougham, Coltman, Crompton, Romilly, Alderson; (not Talfourd, who was then only a rising barrister, and not yet seen among the literary Whigs.)
There were a few bishops;--Whately, with his odd, overbearing
manners, and his unequal conversation,--sometimes rude and tiresome,
and at other times full of instruction, and an occasional drollery coming
out amidst a world of effort. Perhaps no person of all my acquaintance has
from the first appeared to me so singularity overrated as he was then. I
believe it is hardly so now. Those were the days when he said a candid
thing which did him honour. He was quite a new bishop then; and
he said one day, plucking at his sleeve, as if he had his lawn ones on, "I don't know how it is: but when we have got these things on, we never do any thing more." Then, there was the nervous, good-natured, indiscreet rattle,--the Bishop of Norwich (Stanley), who could never get under weigh without being presently aground. Timid as a hare, sensitive as a woman, heedless and flexible as a child, he was surely the oddest bishop that ever was seen: and, to make the impression the more strange, he was as like Dr. Channing as could well be, except that his hair was perfectly white, and Dr. Channing's dark. That the solemn, curt, inaccessible, ever-spiritual Dr. Channing should so resemble the giddy, impressible Dr. Stanley, who carried his heart upon his sleeve (too often "for daws to peck at")was strange enough: but so it was. Bishop Stanley was, however, admirable in his way. If he had been a rural parish priest all his life, out of the way of dissenters and of clerical espionage, he would have lived and died as beloved as he really was, and much more respected. In Norwich, his care and furtherance of the schools were admirable; and in the function of benevolence to the poor and afflicted, he was exemplary. But censure almost broke his heart and turned his brain. He had no courage or dignity at all under the bad manners of his tory clergy; and he repeatedly talked in such a style to me about it as to compel me to tell him plainly that dissenters like myself are not only accustomed to ill-usage for differences of opinion, but are brought up to regard that trial as one belonging to all honest avowal of convictions, and to be borne with courage and patience like other trials. His innocent amazement and consternation at being ill-used on account of his liberal opinions were truly instructive to a member of a despised sect: but they were painful, too. I have often thought that if Bishop Stanley put himself in the power of other people as he did in mine he might expect at any hour the destruction of his peace, if not of his position,--so grievous were his complaints, and so desperate his criticisms of people who did not like his opinions, and teased him accordingly. His lady and daughters did much good in Norwich; and, on the whole, the city, which loved its old Bishop Bathurst, considered itself well off in his
successor.--Then there was the somewhat shy but agreeable Bishop Lonsdale (Lichfield); and the gracious, kindly and liberal,--but not otherwise remarkable--Bishop Otter (Chichester).
The common stream of Members of Parliament presented a curious
uniformity,--even considering that they were almost all Whigs. They
all had the same intense conviction that every thing but Whiggism was
bête; that they could teach "the
people" every thing that it was good for them to know; and that the
way to do it was by addressing them in a coaxing and admonitory way. They
all had the same intense admiration of Whig measures before they were
tried; and the same indifference and shamelessness in dropping those
measures when it was found that they would not work. But among these there
were a few who belonged to no party, and were too good to be confounded
with the rest. There was Charles Buller, the admired and beloved, and now
and always the deeply mourned. He was more than a drawing-room
acquaintance of mine. He was my friend; and we had real business to discuss
occasionally, besides lighter matters. Many an hour he spent by my
fireside, both before and after Lord Durham's government of Canada.
By means of my American travel and subsequent correspondence, I was
able,--or Charles Buller thought I was,--to supply some useful
information, and afford some few suggestions: and I was quite as much
impressed by his seriousness and fine sense in affairs of business as by
his infinite cleverness and drollery in ordinary conversation.--The
readers of my "History of the Peace" must perceive that I had
some peculiar opportunities of knowing the true story of that Canada
governmental campaign. I feared that it might be taken for granted that
Lord Durham or his family gave me the information; whereas he and they were
singularly careful to make no party, and to leave his case in silence till
a time should arrive for explanation, without risk of turning out Lord
Melbourne's government. They told me nothing of their personal
grievances; and I have said so in a note, in the History. But I could not
then tell where I did get my information. It was mainly from Charles
Buller's Journal of
his residence in Canada, which was confided to me on his return by a friend of his and mine. I felt myself bound not to say so while he was living, and with a political career before him which such a disclosure might have injured: but, now that he and his father and mother are gone, and that remarkable household has vanished, and is remembered as a dream, I see no reason why I should not declare on what high authority I made the statements relating to Lord Durham's residence in Canada. There was another journal, by another of the party, put into my hands at the same time, from which I have derived some incidents and suggestions: but Charles Buller's narrative, written from day to day, was the one on which I chiefly relied--His capacity, and his probable future, could not be adequately judged of by any thing he had said or done when his always frail health finally gave way. The Canada Report is noted for its ability; and the men of his generation remember how thorough were his Colonization speeches, and how his fine temper and well-timed wit soothed and brightened the atmosphere of the House in tempestuous times. But the sound greatness that lay beneath was known only to his intimates; and they mourned over an untimely arrest of a glorious career of statesmanship, while the rest of the world regarded the loss simply as of an effective and accomplished Member of Parliament.
Another, who stood out from the classification of Tory and Whig was my
friend R. Monckton Milnes, whom I know too well, and am too sincerely
attached to, to describe as if he were dead, or on less friendly terms with
me. When I first knew him, it was amidst the bustle of the discovery of his
being a poet; or, at least, I had seen him, as far as I remember, only once
before that. One evening, at Lady Mary Shepherd's (where I never went
again, for reasons which I will give presently) my hostess told me that she
was to introduce me, if I pleased, to a young friend of hers who had just
returned from travels in Greece. I understood his name to be Mills, and did
not think of connecting him with the Yorkshire family whose name was so
well known to me. When the young friend arrived, he did look
young,--with a round face and a boyish manner, free from all
shyness and gravity whatever. (Sydney Smith had two names for him in those days: "Dick Modest Milnes," and "the Cool of the Evening.") I was just departing, early, when he first had some conversation with me in the drawing-room and then went down to the cloak room, where he said something which impressed me much, and made me distinctly remember the earnest youth, before I discovered that he was the same with "the new poet," Milnes. He asked me some question about my tales,--then about half done; and my answer conveyed to him an impression I did not at all intend,--that I made light of the work. "No, now,--don't say that," said he, bluntly. "It is unworthy of you to affect that you do not take pains with your work. It is work which cannot be done without pains; and you should not pretend to the contrary." I showed him, in a moment, that he had misapprehended me; and I carried away a clear impression of his sincerity, and of the gravity which lay under his insouciant manners. When his poems came out,--wonderfully beautiful in their way, as they have ever seemed to me,--they and their author were a capital topic for the literary gossips,--Empson and Whishaw, and their coterie; and I did not wonder at their going from house to house, to announce the news, and gather and compare opinions. My pleasure in those poems was greatest when I read them in my Tynemouth solitude. My copy is marked all over with hieroglyphics involving the emotions with which I read them. He came to see me there, and did me good by his kindness in various ways. He visited me there again on my recovery; and he has been here to see me, lately, in my present illness. From time to time, incidents which he supposes to be absolute secrets have come to my knowledge which prove him to be as nobly and substantially bountiful to needy merit and ability as he is kindly in intercourse, and sympathising in suffering. The most interesting feature of his character, as it stands before the world, is his catholicity of sentiment and manner,--his ability to sympathise with all manner of thinkers and speakers, and his superiority to all appearance of exclusiveness, while, on the one hand, rather enjoying the reputation of having access to all houses, and, on
the other, being serious and earnest in the deepest recesses of his character.--This may look rather like doing what I said I could not;--describing a personal friend: but it is really not so: I have touched on none but the most patent aspects of an universally known man. If I were to describe him as a personal friend, I should have much more to say.
Another acquaintance who became a friend was Mr. Grote, then one of the
Members for London. That was not the period of his life which he relished
most. While doing his duty in parliament in regard to the Ballot, and
Colonization, and other great questions of the time, and exercising
hospitality as became his position, he looked back rather mournfully to the
happy quiet years when, before his father suddenly made an eldest son of
him, he was writing his History of Greece; and earnestly did he long for
the time, (which arrived in due course) when he might retire to his study
and renew his labours. I was always glad to meet him and his clever wife,
who were full, at all times, of capital conversation;--she with all
imaginable freedom; and he with a curious, formal, old-fashioned,
deliberate courtesy, with which he strove to cover his constitutional
timidity and shyness, The publication of his fine History now precludes all
necessity of describing his powers and his tastes. He was best known in
those days as the leading member of the Radical section in parliament; and
few could suppose then that his claims on that ground would be swallowed up
by his reputation as a scholar and author in one of the highest walks of
literature. As a good man and a gentleman his reputation was always of the
highest.--With him, the remembrance of his and my friend Roebuck is
naturally associated. Mr. Roebuck's state of health,--his being
subject to a most painful malady,--accounted to those who knew him
well for faults of temper which were singularly notorious. I always felt,
in regard to both him and Lord Durham, that so much was said about faults
of temper because there was nothing else to be fastened upon to their
disadvantage. I can only say that, well as I knew them both, I never
witnessed any ill temper in either. Mr. Roebuck was full of knowledge, full
of energy, full of ability; with great vanity, certainly, but of so
honest a kind that it did not much matter. When in pain, he was an example of wonderful fortitude; and there was a singular charm in the pathetic voice and countenance with which he discussed subjects that it was wonderful he could take an interest in under the circumstances. When he was well, his lively spirits were delightful; and a more agreeable guest or host could not be. Since I saw him last, he has undergone the severest trials of sickness; and it must be almost as great a surprise to himself as to me and others that he is now Chairman of the Sebastopol Committee, and able to take a leading part in the politics of our present serious national crisis. His position now seems to be a sort of retribution on Lord John Russell and other Whig politicians, who treated him with outrageous insolence, in public and private, while there was a Radical section for him to lead. Those who outlive me may yet see the balance struck between the popular and colonial tribune and the insolent official liberals, as they called themselves, who have one and all proved themselves incompetent to wield the power which they so greedily clutched, and held with so shameless a tenacity. I hope Mr. Roebuck may live to retrieve some mistakes, and to fulfill some of his long baffled aspirations. His chance seems at least better than that of his most insolent contemners.
Bulwer and Talfourd were hardly thought of as Members of Parliament at
that time, except in connexion with the international copyright treaty
which authors were endeavouring to procure, and with the Copyright Act,
which was obtained a few years after. Mr. Macaulay was another Member of
Parliament who associated his name very discreditably at first with the
copyright bill, which was thrown out one session in consequence of a speech
of his which has always remained a puzzle to me. What could have been the
inducement to such a man to talk such nonsense as he did, and to set at
naught every principle of justice in regard to authors' earnings, it
is impossible, to me and others, to conceive. Nothing that he could
propose,--nothing that he could do, could ever compensate to him for
the forfeiture of good fame and public confidence which he seems to have
actually volunteered in that speech. He changed his mind or his
tactics afterwards; but he could not change people's feelings in regard to himself, or make any body believe that he was a man to be relied upon. He never appeared to me to be so. When I went to London he was a new Member of Parliament, and the object of unbounded hope and expectation to the Whig statesmen, who, according to their curious practice of considering all of the generation below their own as chicks, spoke rapturously of this promising young man. They went on doing so till his return from India, five years afterwards, by which time the world began to inquire when the promise was to begin to fructify,--this young fellow being by that time seven-and-thirty. To impartial observers, the true quality of Macaulay's mind was as clear then as now. In Parliament, he was no more than a most brilliant speaker; and in his speeches there was the same fundamental weakness which pervades his writings,--unsoundness in the presentment of his case. Some one element was sure to be left out, which falsified his statement, and vitiated his conclusions; and there never was perhaps a speaker or writer of eminence, so prone to presentments of cases, who so rarely offered one which was complete and true. My own impression is, and always was, that the cause of the defect is constitutional in Macaulay. The evidence seems to indicate that he wants heart. He appears to be wholly unaware of this deficiency; and the superficial fervour which suns over his disclosures probably deceives himself, as it deceives a good many other people; and he may really believe that he has a heart. To those who do not hold this key to the interpretation of his career, it must be a very mysterious thing that a man of such imposing and real ability, with every circumstance and influence in his favour, should never have achieved any complete success. As a politician, his failure has been signal, notwithstanding his irresistible power as a speaker, and his possession of every possible facility. As a practical legislator, his failure was unsurpassed, when he bought home his Code from India. I was witness to the amazement and grid of some able lawyer, in studying that Code,--of which they could scarcely lay their finger on a provision through which you could not drive a coach and six. It
has long been settled that literature alone remains open to him; and in that he has, with all his brilliancy and captivating accomplishment, destroyed the ground of confidence on which his adorers met him when, in his mature years, he published the first two volumes of his History. His review articles, and especially the one on Bacon, ought to have abolished all confidence in his honesty, as well as in his capacity for philosophy. Not only did he show himself to be disqualified for any appreciation of Bacon's philosophy, but his plagiarisms from the very author (Basil Montagu) whom he was pretending to demolish, (one instance of plagiarism among many) might have shown any conscientious reader how little he was to be trusted in regard to mere integrity of statement. But, as he announced a History, the public received as a bonâ fide History the work on which he proposes to build his fame. If it had been announced as a historical romance, it might have been read with almost unmixed delight, though exception might have been taken to his presentment of several characters and facts. He has been abundantly punished, for instance, for his slanderous exhibition of William Penn. But he has fatally manifested his loose and unscrupulous method of narrating, and, in his first edition, gave no clue whatever to his authorities, and no information in regard to dates which he could possibly suppress. Public opinion compelled, in future editions, some appearance of furnishing references to authorities, such as every conscientious historian finds it indispensable to his peace of mind to afford; but it is done by Macaulay in the most ineffectual and baffling way possible,--by clubbing together the mere names of his authorities at the bottom of the page, so that reference is all but impracticable. Where it is made, by painstaking readers, the inaccuracies and misrepresentations of the historian are found to multiply as the work of verification proceeds. In fact, the only way to accept his History is to take it as a brilliant fancypiece,--wanting not only the truth but the repose of history,--but stimulating, and even, to a degree, suggestive. While I write, announcement is made of two more volumes to appear in the course of the year. If the radical faults of the former ones are remedied, there may yet be before
this gifted man something like the "career," so proudly anticipated for him a quarter of a century ago. If not, all is over; and his powers, once believed adequate to the construction of eternal monuments of statesmanship and noble edifices for intellectual worship, will be found capable of nothing better than rearing gay kiosks in the flower gardens of literature, to be soon swept away by the caprices of a new taste, as superficial as his own.--I have been led on to say all this by the vivid remembrance of the universal interest there was about Macaulay, when the London world first opened before me. I remember the days when he was met in the streets, looking only at the pavement as he walked, and with his lips moving,--causing those who met him to say that there would be a fine speech from Macaulay that night. Then came the sighs over his loss when he went to India for three years: then the joy at his return, and the congratulations to his venerable father: then the blank disappointment at the way in which he had done his work: and then his appearance in society,--with his strange eyes, which appeared to look nowhere, and his full cheeks and stooping shoulders, which told of dreamy indolence; and then the torrent of words which poured out when he did speak! It did not do to invite him and Sydney Smith together. They interfered with one another. Sydney Smith's sense of this appears in his remarks on Macaulay's "improvement," as shown by "flashes of silence;" and Macaulay showed his sense of the incompatibility of the two wits by his abstracted silence, or by signs of discomposure.
I had heard all my life of the vanity of women as a subject of pity to
men: but when I went to London, lo! I saw vanity in high places which
was never transcended by that of women in their lowlier rank. There was
Brougham, wincing under a newspaper criticism, and playing the fool among
silly women. There was Jeffrey flirting with clever women, in long
succession. There was Bulwer on a sofa, sparkling and languishing among a
set of female votaries,--he and they dizened out, perfumed, and
presenting the nearest picture to a seraglio to be seen on British
ground,---only the indifference or hauteur of the lord of
the harem being absent. There was poor Campbell the poet, obtruding his sentimentalities, amidst a quivering apprehension of making himself ridiculous. He darted out of our house, and never came again, because, after warning, he sat down, in a room full of people (all authors, as it happened) on a low chair of my old aunt's which went very easily on castors, and which carried him back to the wall and rebounded, of course making every body laugh. Off went poor Campbell in a huff; and, well as I had long known him, I never saw him again: and I was not very sorry, for his sentimentality was too soft, and his craving for praise too morbid to let him be an agreeable companion. On occasion of the catastrophe, he came with about forty authors one morning, to sign a petition to parliament for an International copyright law. Then there was Babbage,--less utterly dependent on opinion than some people suppose; but still, harping so much on the subject as to warrant the severe judgment current in regard to his vanity.--There was Edwin Landseer, a friendly and agreeable companion, but holding his cheerfulness at the mercy of great folks' graciousness to him. To see him enter a room, curled and cravatted, and glancing round in anxiety about his reception, could not but make a woman wonder where among her own sex she could find a more palpable vanity; but then, all that was forgotten when one was sitting on a divan with him, seeing him play with the dog.--Then there was Whewell, grasping at praise for universal learning,--(omniscience being his foible, as Sydney Smith said,)--and liking female adoration, rough as was his nature with students, rivals and speculative opponents.--I might instance more: but this is enough. The display was always to me most melancholy; for the detriment was so much greater than in the case of female vanity. The circumstances of women render the vanity of literary women well nigh unavoidable, where the literary pursuit and production are of a light kind: and the mischief (serious enough) may end with the deterioration of the individual. Lady Morgan and Lady Davy and Mrs. Austin and Mrs. Jameson may make women blush and men smile and be insolent; and their gross and palpable vanities may help to lower the position and discredit the
pursuits of other women, while starving out their own natural powers: but these mischiefs are far less important than the blighting of promise and the forfeiture of a career, and the intercepting of national blessings, in the case of a Bulwer or a Brougham. A few really able women,--women sanctified by true genius and holy science,--a Joanna Baillie, a Somerville, a Browning,--quickly repair the mischief, as regards the dignity of women; and the time has not yet arrived when national interests are involved in the moral dignity of individual women of genius. But, as a matter of fact, I conceive that no one can glance round society, as seen in London drawing-rooms, and pretend to consider vanity the appropriate sin of women. The instances I have given are of persons who, for the most part, were estimable and agreeable, apart from their characteristic foible. For Bulwer I always felt a cordial interest, amidst any amount of vexation and pity for his weakness. He seems to me to be a woman of genius enclosed by misadventure in a man's form. If the life of his affections had been a natural and fortunate one; and if (which would have been the consequence) he had not plunged over head and ears in the metaphysics of morals, I believe he would have made himself a name which might have lasted as long as our literature. He has insight, experience, sympathy, letters, power and grace of expression, and an irrepressible impulse to utterance and industry which should have produced works of the noblest quality; and these have been intercepted by mischiefs which may be called misfortune rather than fault. There is no need to relate his history or describe his faults. I can only lament the perversion of one of the most promising natures, and the intercepting of some of the most needful literary benefits offered, in the form of one man, in our time. His friendly temper, his generous heart, his excellent conversation (at his best) and his simple manners (when he forgot himself ) have many a time "left me mourning" that such a being should allow himself to sport with perdition. Perhaps my interest in him was deepened by the evident growth of his deafness, and by seeing that he was not, as yet, equal to cope with the misfortune of personal infirmity. He could not bring him-
self practically to acknowledge it; and his ignoring of it occasioned scenes which, painful to others, must have been exquisitely so to a vain man like himself. I longed to speak, or get spoken, to him a word of warning and encouragement out of my own experience: but I never met with any one who dared mention the subject to him; and I had no fair opportunity after the infirmity became conspicuous. From the time when, in contradicting in the newspapers a report of his having lost his hearing altogether, he professed to think conversation not worth hearing, I had no hope of his fortitude: for it is the last resource of weakness to give out that the grapes are sour.--Campbell was declining when I first knew him; and I disliked his visits because I was never quite sure whether he was sober,--his irritable brain being at the mercy of a single glass of sherry, or of a paroxysm of enthusiasm about the Poles: but I adored his poems in my youth;. I was aware that domestic misfortune had worn out his affectionate heart; and it was a pleasure to see that his sympathies were, to the last, warm on behalf of international morality and popular liberties.--As for Mr. Babbage, it seemed to me that few men were more misunderstood,--his sensitiveness about opinions perverting other people's impressions of him quite as much as his of them. For one instance: he was amused, as well as struck, by the very small reliance to be placed on opinion, public or private, for and against individuals: and he thought over some method of bringing his observation to a sort of demonstration. Thinking that he was likely to hear most of opinions about himself as a then popular author, he collected every thing he could gather in print about himself, and pasted the pieces into a large book, with the pros and cons in parallel columns, from which he obtained a sort of balance, besides some highly curious observations. Soon after he told me this, with fun and good-humour, I was told repeatedly that he spent all his days in gloating and grumbling over what people said of him, having got it all down in a book, which he was perpetually poring over. People who so represented him had little idea what a domestic tenderness is in him,--though to me his singular face seemed to show it,--nor how much that was really interesting might be found in him
by those who viewed him naturally and kindly. All were eager to go to his glorious soirées; and I always thought he appeared to great advantage as a host. His patience in explaining his machine in those days was really exemplary. I felt it so, the first time I saw the miracle, as it appeared to me; but I thought so much more, a year or two after, when a lady, to whom he had sacrificed some very precious time, on the supposition that she understood as much as she assumed to do, finished by saying "Now, Mr. Babbage, there is only one thing more that I want to know. If you put the question in wrong, will the answer come out right?" All time and attention devoted to lady examiners of his machine, from that time forward, I regarded as sacrifices of genuine good nature.
In what noble contrast were the eminent men who were not vain! There was
the honest and kindly Captain (now Admiral Sir Francis) Beaufort, who was
daily at the Admiralty as the clock struck, conveying paper, pen and ink
for any private letters he might have to write, for which he refused to use
the official stores. There were the friends Lyell and Charles
Darwin,--after the return of the latter from his four years'
voyage round the world;--Lyell with a Scotch prudence which gave way,
more and more as years passed on, to his natural geniality, and to an
expanding liberality of opinion and freedom of speech; and the simple,
childlike, painstaking, effective Charles Darwin, who established himself
presently at the head of living English naturalists. These
well-employed, earnest-minded, accomplished and genial men
bore their honours without vanity, jealousy, or any apparent
self-regard whatever. They and their devoted wives were welcome in
the highest degree. Lady Lyell was almost as remarkable in society as her
husband, though she evidently considered herself only a part of him. Having
no children, she could devote her life to helping him. She travelled over
half the world with him, entered fully into his pursuits, and furthered
them as no one else could have done; while there was not a trace of
pedantry in her, but a simple, lively manner, proceeding from a mind at
ease and nobly entertained. Mr. Rogers used to point out the beauty of her
eye,--"The eye of
the stag;" and truly she grew more charming-looking every year, and was handsomer and brighter than ever when I saw her not long ago in London. If she had no vanity for herself, neither had she for her husband, of whom her estimate was too lofty and just to admit the intrusion of so unworthy an emotion.
Many others there were in regard to whom the imputation of vanity was
impossible. There were Dr. Dalton and Mrs. Somerville sitting with their
heads close together, on the sofa, talking their own glorious talk without
a thought of what anybody in the world was saying about either of them. Dr.
Dalton was simple in every way: Mrs. Somerville in all that was
essential. Her mistakes in taking her daughters to court, and in a good
many conventional matters, were themselves no worse than a misplaced
humility which made her do as other people did, or as other people bade her
do, instead of choosing her own course. I used to wish she had been wise in
those matters, and more self-reliant altogether; but I am sure there
was no ambition or vanity in her mind, all the time. It was delightful to
find her with a letter from her publisher in her hand, considering it with
anxiety; and to hear what her difficulty was. She was respectfully
requested to make such alterations in the next edition of her
"Connexion of the Physical Sciences" as would render it more
popular and intelligible. She could not at all see her way. The scientific
mode of expression, with its pregnancy, its terseness and brevity, seemed
to her perfectly simple. If she was to alter it, it could be only by
amplifying; and she feared that would make her diffuse and comparatively
unintelligible. It was delightful to see her always well-dressed and
thoroughly womanly in her conversation and manners, while unconscious of
any peculiarity in her pursuits. It was delightful to go to tea at her
house at Chelsea, and find every thing in order and beauty;--the walls
hung with her fine drawings; her music in the corner, and her tea table
spread with good things. In the midst of these household elegancies, Dr.
Somerville one evening pulled open a series of drawers, to find something
he wanted to show me. As he shut one after another, I ventured to ask what
those strange things were which filled every drawer. "O! they are
only Mrs. Somerville's diplomas," said he, with a droll look of pride and amusement. Not long after this, the family went abroad, partly for Dr. Somerville's health: and great has been the concern of her friends at so losing her, while it was well known that her longings were for England. Her husband and her daughters, (turned Catholics,) have kept her in Italy ever since, to the privation and sorrow of many who know that scientific London is the proper place for her, and that, unselfish as she is, she must long to be there. I own it went to my heart to hear of one thing that happened soon after she left England. The great comet of 1843 was no more seen by her than by any other woman in Italy. The only good observatory was in a Jesuits' College, where no woman was allowed to set foot. It is too bad that she should spend the last third of her life in a country so unworthy of her.
And there was Joanna Baillie, whose serene and cheerful life was never
troubled by the pains and penalties of vanity;--what a charming
spectacle was she! Mrs. Barbauld's published correspondence tells of
her, in 1800, as "a young lady of Hampstead whom I visited, and who
came to Mr. Barbauld's meeting, all the while, with as innocent a
face as if she had never written a line." That was two years before I
was born. When I met her, about thirty years afterwards, there she was
"with as innocent a face as if she had never written a line!"
And this was after an experience which would have been a bitter trial to an
author with a particle of vanity. She had enjoyed a fame almost without
parallel, and had outlived it. She had been told every day for years,
through every possible channel, that she was second only to
Shakspere,--if second; and then she had seen her works drop out of
notice so that, of the generation who grew up before her eyes, not one in a
thousand had read a line of her plays:--yet was her serenity
never disturbed, nor her merry humour in the least dimmed. I have never
lost the impression of the trying circumstances of my first interview with
her, nor of the grace, simplicity and sweetness with which she bore them.
She was old; and she declined dinner-parties; but she wished to meet
me,--having known, I believe, some of my connexions
or friends of the past generation;--and therefore she came to Miss Berry's to tea, one day when I was dining there. Miss Berry, her contemporary, put her feelings, it seemed to me, to a most unwarrantable trial, by describing to me, as we three sat together, the celebrity of the "Plays on the Passions" in their day. She told me how she found on her table, on her return from a ball, a volume of plays; and how she kneeled on a chair to look at it, and how she read on till the servant opened the shutters, and let in the daylight of a winter morning. She told me how all the world raved about the plays; and she held on so long that I was in pain for the noble creature to whom it must have been irksome on the one hand to hear her own praises and fame so dwelt upon, and, on the other, to feel that we all knew how long that had been quite over. But, when I looked up at her sweet face, with its composed smile amidst the becoming mob cap, I saw that she was above pain of either kind. We met frequently afterwards, at her house or ours; and I retained my happy impression, till the last call I made on her. She was then over-affectionate, and uttered a good deal of flattery; and I was uneasy at symptoms so unlike her good taste and sincerity. It was a token of approaching departure. She was declining, and she sank and softened for some months more, and then died, revered and beloved as she deserved. Amidst all pedantry, vanity, coquetry, and manners ruined by celebrity which I have seen, for these twenty years past, I have solaced and strengthened myself with the image of Joanna Baillie, and with remembering the invulnerable justification which she set up for intellectual superiority in women, while we may hope that the injury done to that cause by blue-stockings and coquettes will be scarcely more enduring than their own trumpery notoriety.
I must own that I have known scarcely any political men who were not as
vain as women are commonly supposed to be: and if any were not so
themselves, their wives were sure to be so for them; and so conspicuously
as to do the mischief effectually. Lord Lansdowne was an exception, I
believe; and so, I am sure, was his simple-minded, shy lady, with
her rural tastes, and benevolent pursuits. The present Lord Grey did not
show
in private life the sensitiveness which marred his temper and manners in his political function. Lord Morpeth (the present Lord Carlisle) has his weaknesses, which are evident enough; but I never saw a trace of vanity in him. His magnanimous, benevolent, affectionate temper, his pure integrity, and devout conscientiousness, are all incompatible with vanity. It seems a pity that his powers are so inadequate to his sensibilities; or that, his abilities being what they are, he has not chosen to remain in that private life which he conspicuously adorns: but it is a benefit, as far as it goes, that his fine spirit and manners should be present in official life, to rebuke the vulgar selfishness, levity, and insolence which have discredited his political comrades, from their accession to power, a quarter of a century since, till now, when their faults have brought on a crisis in the destinies of England. As an order of men, however, politicians are, as far as my experience goes, far inferior in dignity to scientific men, among whom there are, it is true, examples of egregious vanity, but not so striking as the simplicity and earnestness which characterize many whose lives are spent in lofty pursuits which carry them high above personal regards. And to nearly all, I believe, the pursuit of knowledge for its own sake yields more pleasure than any gain of fame or money. To one Lardner, there is many a Beaufort, Washington, Delabêche, Ebrenberg, Dalton, and Gregory. Some, like Professor Nichol, may not be acquitted of vanity, while uniting with it, as he does, a simplicity, a kindliness, and a genial temper which make them delightful companions. Others, like Buckland, and Murchison, have a love of fun mingling with their genuine worship of science, which makes them highly agreeable, in spite of eccentricities of manner. Sir Charles Bell was of too tender a nature for the conflicts which await a discoverer; but his sensitiveness was of too refined and constitutional a kind to be insulted with the name of vanity; and he was beloved with a tenderness which no grossly vain person could ever win to himself. While he was grave, quiet and melancholy, men of stouter natures were making fun, if not of their science, of the uses to which they applied it, in that condescension to which their desire of reputa-
tion or of something lower led them. Sir Charles Bell wrote his Bridgewater Treatise, no doubt, with the grave sincerity with which he did every thing, and without any suspicion of the injury he was doing to theology, by attempting to bolster up the Design argument, which he ought to have seen tends directly, as is now widely admitted, to atheism. Among some of his comrades, the matter was viewed with more levity. When one of them was writing his successful treatise, he consigned his manuscript to a scientific friend for criticism. It had a good margin left for notes; and his critic, after gravely writing his observations on the scientific portion, scored in pencil the close of the sections, where the Bridgewater application was made, with the words "Power, wisdom and goodness as per contract." There was much covert laughter about this among the philosophers, while they presented a duly grave face to the theological world.
The artists are usually concluded to be the vainest of all orders of
men. I have not found them so. A more dignified, simple-minded and
delightful drawing-room companion I have hardly known than Sir
Augustus Calcott, for one. His tenderness of heart appeared in that
devotion to his wife which cost him his health and his life. She (the Maria
Graham of India and of South America, during Lord Dundonald's
achievements there) was a clever woman in her way, with indomitable
spirits, through years of slow consumption: but, when hearing her
gossip and random talk, one could not, after all allowance for her invalid
state and its seclusion contrasted with former activity, help regretting
that her far superior husband should sink prematurely into melancholy and
ill-health, from his too close attendance upon her, through years of
hot rooms and night watching. A higher order of wife would not have
permitted it; and a lower order of husband would not have done
it.--Chantrey was abundantly aware of his own merits; but there was an
honesty in the avowal which distanced the imputation of vanity. As I sat
next him one day at dinner, I was rather disturbed at the freedom with
which he criticised and directed the carving of a haunch of venison, fixing
the attention of the whole table on the process, which the operator bore
most gracefully. Chantrey turned
apologetically to me with, "You know I have a right. I am the first carver in London." He always told every body who he was, and took for granted that every body knew all his works: but there was a good-humoured courage and naturalness about his self-estimate which made it amusing, instead of disgusting.
Allan Cunningham was, however, far more interesting than his employer
and friend. It was quite a sight to see stalwart Allan and his stalwart
wife enter a drawing-room, and to see how his fine face and head
towered above others in expression as much as in altitude. His simple sense
and cheerful humour rendered his conversation as lively as that of a wit;
and his literary knowledge and taste gave it refinement enough to suit any
society. I always felt that Allan Cunningham was precisely the human
example that I had long wished to see;--of that privileged condition
which I think the very most advantageous that a man can be placed in; the
original standing of a workman, with such means of intellectual cultivation
as may open to him the life of books. Allan Cunningham was one of the
hard-handed order, privileged to know the realities of practical
life; while also a man of letters and a poet, exempt from the deficiencies
and foibles of mere literary life. Thus, while a workman, a student and a
poet, he was above all a man; and thorough manliness was his dominant
characteristic. All this came back upon me when, in 1849, I met his son
Peter, whose features recalled so much of his father, and whose industrious
and effectual authorship reminds us all of his honourable descent.
Westmacott, again, was seriously full of his art; and that is the true
charm in the manners of an artist. Phillips was formal and
self-complacent, but well read and communicative: and the
friendship between himself and his accomplished family was a pretty
spectacle. Macready's sensitiveness shrouded itself within an
artificial manner; but a more delightful companion could not be,--not
only on account of his learning and accomplishment, but of his
uncompromising liberality of opinion, and his noble strain of meditative
thought. He enjoyed playing Jaques,--thinking that character
singularly like himself; and it was so, in one part of his character:
but there was, besides the moral-
ising tendency, a chivalrous spirit of rare vigilance, and an unsleeping domestic tenderness and social beneficence which accounted for and justified the idolatry with which he was regarded, through all trials occasioned by the irritable temper with which he manfully struggled.--The Kembles were of a different sort altogether; I mean Charles Kemble and his daughters. They were full of knowledge and accomplishment, of course, and experienced in all manner of social intercourse: but there seemed to me to be an incurable vulgarity clinging to them, among all the charms of their genius, their cultivation, and their social privileges. I think it must have been from their passionate natures, and from their rather priding themselves on that characteristic of theirs. I liked Adelaide the best of the three, because she had herself more under control than the others, and because the womanly nature did itself more justice in her case than in her sister's. The admiration and interest which Fanny inspired were as often put to flight as aroused,--so provoking was her self-will, and so vexatious her caprice. And then, there was no relying on any thing she said, while the calmer and more devoted Adelaide was mistress of her own thought and speech, and composedly truthful in a way which ought to have been, and probably was, exemplary in Fanny's eyes. There was a green-room cast of mind about them all, from which Macready was marvelously free. He saw life by daylight, and they by stage lamps; and that was the difference. I am speaking of them as I met them in drawing-rooms: but I have other associations with them. I saw much of Fanny in America, during her early married life, and was present at the christening of her first child. She showed me the proof sheets of her clever "Journal," and, as she chose to require my opinion of it, obtained a less flattering one than from most people. I might be, and probably was, narrow and stiff in my judgment of it; but I was sufficiently shocked at certain passages to induce her to cancel some thirty pages. I really strove hard to like and approve her; and I imposed upon myself for a time, as on others in conversation, the belief that I did so: but I could not carry it on long. There was so radical an unreality about her and her sayings and doings,
and so perverse a sporting with her possessions and privileges in life, and with other people's peace, that my interest in her died out completely, in a way which could not have happened if I could have believed her notorious misfortunes to have been other than self-inflicted. By her way of entering upon marriage, and her conduct in it afterwards, she deprived herself of all title to wonder at or complain of her domestic miseries, terrible as they were. She was a finely gifted creature, wasted and tortured by want of discipline, principle and self-knowledge. Adelaide was morally of a far higher order; and when with her, I desired nothing more than that she had seen life through other than the stage medium, and that she had not been a Kemble. She was charming at their own soirees in London,--unobtrusively taking care of and amusing every body, with good nature and simplicity: and she was yet more charming when she sat beside my couch at Tynemouth, singing "Auld Robin Gray" for my pleasure, and manifesting a true womanly sympathy with me, of whom she had personally known nothing except through drawing-room intercourse. It was she who sent me the chief luxury of my sick room,--the "Christus Consolator" of Scheffer, which truly affords study for as many years as I was ill. If, as I understand, she has found happiness in her domestic life, after such triumphs as hers on the stage, the genuine fine quality of her nature is sufficiently proved.
In those days, Eastlake was just home from Italy. He had already left
off landscape painting, with which he began. I have hanging up in the next
room the engraving which he gave me of his last
landscape,--"Byron's Dream." He was now producing
the early pictures of that short series which, full of charm at first, soon
proved how
bornés were his resources. The
mannerism of his colouring, and the sameness of his female faces, showing
that he had but one idea of beauty, could be made evident only by time; and
at first there was an exquisite charm in the grace, refinement and delicacy
of both conception and execution. Since that time, his function has
appeared to be the aiding and support of art by other means than himself
painting. I always liked to meet him,--ignorant as I was on the
subjects
which were most important to him. He condescended to talk to me on them; and there was the wide field of literature in which we had a common interest. Kind and conversible as he was, I always felt that there was a certain amount of cynicism in his views, and skepticism in his temper, which must have interfered with his enjoyment of life. It was not very great, and was chiefly noticeable as being the only drawback on the pleasure of conversation with him. I have seen him only once for nearly twenty years; and that was at a distance in Thackeray's lecture room, in 1851. I should hardly have known the careworn, aged face, if my attention had not been directed to him: and it gave me pain to see how the old tendency to anxiety and distrust seemed to have issued in care or ill-health, which could so alter a man not yet old. He has done so much for art, and given so much pleasure to society, that one wishes he could have enjoyed the strength and spirits which those who love art as he does should, and generally do, derive from its pursuit.--There was Uwins, in those days, with his sunny Italian groups; and, more recently, Rothwell, whose picture (when unfinished) of "Rich and rare were the gems she wore," seemed to me wonderfully beautiful: and, among portrait painters, the accomplished and earnest Richmond,--to whom I sat for the only good portrait taken of me.
I seem to have got a long way from the dinner parties which led me into
all these sketches; and I will not go back to them; but rather tell a
little about the evening engagements which gave variety to my London life.
There were blue-stocking evenings, now and then; and I never went
twice to any house where I encountered that sort of reception, except the
Miss Berrys', where there was so much to relieve "the
blue," and one was left so freely and pleasantly to be amused, that
one's pride or one's modesty was safe from offence. By the way,
an incident occurred at dinner at Miss Berry's which I recall with as
much astonishment as paralysed me at the moment, and struck me dumb when it
was of some importance that I should speak. I have told how a Prime
Minister's daughter was for the first time informed of the Birmingham
Church and King riots, when Dr.
Priestley's chapel, house and library were destroyed. A high-born lady betrayed to me, that evening at Miss Berry's, what her notion, and that of her associates, was of the politics of the liberal party after the passage of the Reform Bill. Lady G.S.W., whose husband, I think, had been in the United States, inquired of me about the prospects of Slavery there. When she seemed surprised at the amount of persecution the abolitionists were undergoing, I attempted to show her how the vicious institution was implicated with the whole policy, and many of the modes, ideas and interests of society there; so that the abolitionists were charged with destructiveness, and regarded by timid persons, whether slaveholders or other, much as people would be among us who should be charged with desiring to overthrow every thing, from the throne to the workhouse. Her reply completely puzzled me for a moment, and then appeared so outrageously wide of the mark that I had not presence of mind to answer it; and the opportunity was presently gone. I wonder whether she really supposed she had given me a check and a set down! "Come now," said she; "don't let us talk about that. I want to get this information from you, and we will talk only about what we agree in. You know we shall differ about pulling down, and all that." Why she talked to me at all if she supposed that I wanted to pull down every thing, from the throne to the workhouse, I can't imagine. And, if she thought so of me, she must have regarded the then dominant liberals as unredeemed destructives. It is a curious state of mind in the tory aristocracy that such incidents reveal. She seemed otherwise sensible enough; yet she had read my series without finding out that I am for "pulling down" nothing, and quietly superseding what can no longer be endured.
The ancient ladies themselves, the Miss Berrys and their inseparable
friend, Lady Charlotte Lindsay, (the youngest daughter of Lord North) whose
presence seemed to carry one back almost a century, were the main
attraction of those parties. While up to all modern interests, the
old-fashioned rouge and pearl-powder, and false hair, and the
use of the feminine oaths of a hundred years ago were odd and striking.
E.g: a footman tells his mis-
tress that Lady So-and-so begs she will not wait dinner, as she is drying her shoes which got wet between the carriage and the door. The response is "O! Christ! if she should catch cold! Tell her she is a dear soul, and we would not have her hurry herself for the world, &c., &c." My mother heard an exclamation at our door, when the carriage door would not open, "My God! I can't get out!" And so forth, continually. But they were all three so cheerful, so full of knowledge and of sympathy for good ideas, and so evidently fit for higher pursuits than the social pleasures amidst which one met them, that, though their parties were "rather blue," they were exceedingly agreeable. I had a general invitation to go there, whenever, in passing their house in Mayfair from a dinner party, I saw light over the lower shutters; and they also invited me to spend summer days with them at their Petersham house. I never did this, for want of time; and I went seldom to their evening parties, for the same reason that I seemed to neglect other invitations of the same general kind,--that I was always engaged three or four weeks in advance, by express invitation. When my aged friends perceived this, they gave me express invitations too, and made me fix my own day. The last of the trio, the elder Miss Berry, died in November, 1852. The announcement impelled me to record the associations it excited; and I did so in an obituary memoir of her in the "Daily News."* My friend Milnes offered his tribute in the form of some charming lines in the "Times," which show how strong was the natural feeling of concern, on such an occasion, at letting go our hold on the traditions of the last century.
How different were those parties from the express "blue"
assemblies of such pedants as Lady Mary Shepherd! She went about
accompanied by the fame given her by Mr. Tierney, when he said that there
was not another head in England which could encounter hers on the subject
of Cause and Effect, and some kindred topics: and it did indeed
appear that she was, in relation to the subtlest metaphysical topics, what
Mrs. Somerville was to mathematical astronomy. The difference
was,--and a
___________________
bottomless chasm separated the two,--that Mrs. Somerville was occupied with real science,--with the knowable; whereas, Lady Mary Shepherd never dreamed of looking out first for a sound point of view, and therefore wasted her fine analytical powers on things unknowable or purely imaginary. It was a story against her that when in a country house, one fine day, she took her seat in a window, saying in a business-like manner, (to David Ricardo, if I remember rightly,)--"Come, now; let us have a little discussion about Space." I never went to her house but once. Though I there first made Mr. Milnes's acquaintance, I never would go again; and I then made my escape as soon as I could. First, I was set down beside Lady Charlotte Bury, and made to undergo, for her satisfaction, a ludicrous examination by Lady Mary, about how I wrote my series, and what I thought of it. Escaping from this, to an opposite sofa, I was boarded by Lady Stepney, who was then, as she boasted, receiving seven hundred pounds apiece for her novels. She paraded a pair of diamond earrings, costing that sum, which she had so earned. She began talking to me on the ground of our mutual acquaintance with Mrs. Opie, who had once been an intimate friend and correspondent of hers. She complained of the inconvenience of Mrs. Opie's quakerism; and insisted on having my suffrage whether it was not very wrong in people to change their opinions, on account of the inconvenience to their friends. The difficulty in conversing with this extraordinary personage was that she stopped at intervals, to demand an unqualified assent to what she said, while saying things impossible to assent to. She insisted on my believing that "that dreadful Reform in Parliament took place entirely because the dear Duke" of Wellington had not my "moral courage," and would not carry a trumpet. She told me that the dear Duke assured her himself that if he had heard what had been said from the Trsasury-benches, he should never have made that declaration against parliamentary reform which brought it on: and thence it followed, Lady Stepney concluded, that if he had heard what was said behind him,--that is, if he had carried a trumpet, he would have suppressed his declaration; and the rest followed of course.
I was so amused at this that I told Lady Durham of it; and she repeated it to her father, then Prime Minister; and then ensued the most amusing part of all. Lord Grey did not apparently take it as a joke on my part, but sent me word, in all seriousness, that there would have been parliamentary reform, sooner or later, if the Duke of Wellington had carried a trumpet! Lady Stepney pointed to a large easy chair at my elbow, and said she supposed I knew for whom that was intended. She was surprised that I did not, and told me that it was for Captain Ross; and that the company assembled were longing for him to come, that they might see the meeting between him and me, and hear what we should say to each other. This determined me to be off; and I kept my eye on the doors, in order to slip away on the entrance of the newest "lion." It was too early yet to go with any decency. Lady Stepney told me meantime that the Arctic voyagers had gone through hardships such as could never be told: but it only proved (and to this in particular she required my assent) "that the Deity is every where, and more particularly in barren places." She went on to say how very wrong she thought it to send men into such places, without any better reason than she had ever heard of. "They say it is to discover the North Pole," she proceeded; "and, by the bye, it is curious that Newton should have come within thirty miles of the North Pole in his discoveries. They say, you know," and here she looked exceedingly sagacious and amused; "they say that they have found the magnetic pole. But you and I know what a magnet is, very well. We know that a little thing like that would be pulled out of its place in the middle of the sea." When I reported this conversation to my mother, we determined to get one of this lady's novels immediately, and see what she could write that would sell for seven hundred pounds. If she was to be believed as to this, it really was a curious sign of the times. I never saw any of her books, after all. I can hardly expect to be believed about the anecdote of the magnet (which I imagine she took to be a little red horse-shoe;) and I had some difficulty in believing it myself, at the moment: but I have given her very words. And they were no joke. She
shook her head-dress of marabout feathers and black bugles with her excitement as she talked. I got away before Captain Ross appeared, and never went to the house again, except to drop a card before I left London.
Some people may be disposed to turn round upon me with the charge of
giving blue-stocking parties. I believe that to blue-stocking
people my soirées might have that appearance, because they looked
through blue spectacles: but I can confidently say that, not only
were my parties as diverse in quality as I could make them,--always
including many who were not literary; but I took particular care that no
one was in any way shown off, but all treated with equal respect as guests.
My rooms were too small for personages who required space for
display: and such were not therefore invited. A gentleman who
expected a sofa all to himself, while a crowd of adorers simpered in his
face, was no guest for a simple evening party in a small house: nor a
lady who needed a corner in which to confide her troubles with her husband;
nor for another who hung her white hand over the arm of her chair, and
lectured metaphysically and sentimentally about art, to the annoyance of
true connoisseurs who felt that while she was exposing herself, she was
misleading others who knew no more about the real thing than she did. Nor
had I a place for rouged and made up old ladies who paraded literary
flirtations in the style of half a century ago. Such were not therefore
invited. I was too nervous about having parties at all to introduce any
persons who might be disagreeable to people of better manners. All I
ventured upon was to invite those who knew what to expect, and could stay
away if they liked. What they had to expect was tea below stairs, and ices,
cake and wine during the evening, with a very choice assembly of guests who
did not mind a little crowding, for the sake of the conversation they
afforded each other. I became more at ease when I found that all whom I
invited always came: a test which satisfied me that they liked to
come.
I have particularised only well known persons: but it must be
understood that these were not my intimates, or most valued acquaintances.
If they had been intimate friends, I could not
have characterised them. There were three or four houses where I went freely for rest and recreation; families too near and dear to me to be described in detail. There were country houses where I went every week or two, to meet pleasant little dinner parties, and to sleep, for the enjoyment of country air and quiet. Such as these were the H. Bellenden Kers', whose Swiss Cottage at Cheshunt was a sort of home to me: and the Porters', first at Norwood, and then on Putney Heath: and then the Huttons' at Putney Park; and the Fishers' at Highbury: and the Potters' at Notting Hill: and the Marshes' at Kilburn: and the. Hensleigh Wedgwoods; in their Clapham home first, and then in Regent's Park: and my old friend, Mrs. Reid's, in Regent's Park: beside my own relations. All these were home houses to me;--each a refuge from the wear and tear of my busy life, and from the incessant siege of lion-hunting strangers. One yearly holiday was especially refreshing to me. With the first fine weather in May, Mr. and Mrs. Fisher and I used to go, for a few days or a week, to Boxhill, or Godstone, or some other pretty place not too far off, and carry a book or two, and lie on the grass, or ramble among hills, commons or lanes, as if we had nothing to do; and I never came home without fresh spirits for my work, and valuable suggestions about new efforts. With them I planned or thought of some of my tales: with them I discussed "Deerbrook," the week before I began it, though Mrs. Ker was my great confidante during its progress, I spent a month or more of every summer with her at her Swiss Cottage; and a month of luxury it always was,--well as my work proceeded in my own "den" there.
I was spending a couple of days at Mrs. Marsh's, when she asked me
whether I would let her read to me "one or two little stories"
which she had written. From her way of speaking of them, and from her
devotion to her children, who were then for the most part very young, I
concluded these to be children's tales. She ordered a fire in her
room, and there we shut ourselves up for the reading. What she read was no
child's story, but "The Admiral's Daughter." My
amazement may be conceived. We were going to dine at the
Wedgwoods': and a
strange figure we must have cut there; for we had been crying so desperately that there was no concealing the marks of it. Mrs. Marsh asked me what I thought of getting her tales published. I offered to try if, on reading the manuscript at home, I thought as well of it as after her own most moving delivery of it. A second reading left no doubt on my mind; and I had the pleasure of introducing the "Two Old Men's Tales" to the world through Messrs. Saunders and Otley, from whom, as from the rest of the world, the author's name was withheld as long as possible. Mr. Marsh made this the condition of our attempt: a condition which we thought perfectly reasonable in the father of many daughters, who did not wish their mother to be known as the author of what the world might consider second-rate novels. That the world did not consider them second-rate was immediately apparent; and the reason for secrecy existed no longer. But no one ever knew or guessed the authorship through my mother or me, who were for a considerable time the only possessors of the secret. From that time Mrs. Marsh managed her own affairs; and I never again saw her works till they were published. I mention this because, as I never concealed from her, I think her subsequent works very inferior to the first: and I think it a pity that she did not rest on the high and well deserved fame which she immediately obtained. The singular magnificence of that tale was not likely to be surpassed: but I have always wished that she had either stopped entirely, or had given herself time to do justice to her genius. From the time of the publication of the "Two Old Men's Tales" to the present hour, I have never once, as far as I remember, succeeded in getting another manuscript published for any body. This has been a matter of great concern to me: but such is the fact. I have never had to make any proposal of the kind for myself,--having always had a choice of publishers before my works were ready; but I have striven hard on behalf of others, and without the slightest success.
No kind of evening was more delightful to me than those which were spent
with the Carlyles. About once a fortnight, a mutual friend of theirs and
mine drove me over to Chelsea, to
the early tea table at number five, Cheyne Row,--the house which Carlyle was perpetually complaining of and threatening to leave, but where he is still to be found. I never believed that, considering the delicate health of both, they could ever flourish on that Chelsea clay, close to the river; and I rejoiced when the term of lease had nearly expired, and my friends were looking out for another house. If they were living in a "cauldron" and a "Babel," it seemed desirable that they should find an airy quiet home in the country,--near enough to London to enjoy its society at pleasure. Carlyle went forth, on the fine black horse which a friend had sent him with sanitary views, and looked about him. Forth he went, his wife told me, with three maps of Great Britain and two of the World in his pocket, to explore the area within twenty miles of London. All their friends were on the look out; and I, from my sick chamber at Tynemouth, sent them earnest entreaties to settle on a gravelly soil: but old habit prevailed, and the philosopher renewed the lease, and set to work to make for himself a noise-proof chamber, where his fretted nerves might possibly obtain rest amidst the London "Babel." I like the house for no other reason than that I spent many very pleasant evenings in it: but it has now become completely associated with the marvelous talk of both husband and wife. There we met Mazzini, when he was exerting himself for the education of the Italians in London, and before he entered openly on the career of insurrection by which he has since become the most notorious man in Europe. I entirely believe in all that his adorers say of the noble qualities of his heart and temper. I can quite understand how it is that some of those who know him best believe him to be the best man in existence. There is no doubt whatever of his devotedness, his magnanimity, his absolute disinterestedness. But the more, and not the less, for all this does his career seem to me almost the saddest spectacle of our time. He is an ideologist who will preach for ever in a mood of exaltation and a style of fustian, without being listened to by any but those who do not need his incitements. Insurrection is too serious a matter to be stirred up by turgid appeals like his, vague and irreducible to
the concrete. Accordingly, here are twenty years since I knew him gone by without success or the prospect of it. His beacon fire blazed longer at Rome than any where: but it went out; and it left in ashes many a glorious relic from ancient times, and the peace of many households. The slaughter of patriots from abortive insurrections has gone on through a long course of years, till, if Mazzini's heart is not broken, many others are; and the day of an Italian republic seems further off than ever. To Mazzini it seems always at hand, as the Millennium seems to Robert Owen; but I cannot find that any one else who knows the Italians has the least belief that, as a people, they desire a republic, or that the small minority who do could ever agree to the terms of any republican constitution, or maintain it if established. His career will be, I fear, as it has hitherto been, one of failure; and of failure so disastrous as to set it above every other vie manquée. When I knew him, face to face, these purposes of his were growing in silence. His still, patient, grave countenance was that of a man who had suffered much, and could endure to any extremity: but I could not have supposed that experience and experiment could have been so lost on him as they appear to have been. His self-will was not the less strong for his disinterestedness, it appears; and it has taken possession of his intellect, causing him to believe, with a fatal confidence, what he wishes. When we consider how Sardinia has advanced, during the whole period of Mazzini's bloody and fruitless struggles, and how that State is now a striking spectacle of growing civil and religious liberty, while Mazzini, with his perfect plots, his occult armies, his buried arms and ammunition, his own sufferings and dangers, and his holocaust of victims, has aggravated the tyranny of Austria, and rendered desperate the cause of his countrymen, we can hardly help wishing that his own devotedness had met with acceptance, and that the early sacrifice of his life had spared that of hundreds of his followers who are wept by thousands more.
Another vie manquée was before my
eyes at the Carlyles'. John Sterling was then in the midst of his
conflicts of all sorts,--with bad health, with the solemn pity and
covert reproba-
tion of orthodox friends and patrons, and with his own restless excitement about authorship. I cannot say that I knew him at all; for I never heard the sound of his voice. When we met at the tea table, he treated me like a chair; and so pointed was his rude ignoring of me that there was nothing to be done but for Carlyle to draw off apart with him after tea, while the rest of us talked on the other side of the room. When our meetings were over,--when I was on my couch at Tynemouth, and he was trying to breathe in Devonshire, he suddenly changed his mind, on meeting with "Deerbrook," and was as anxious to obtain my acquaintance as he had been to avoid it. Supposing me to be at Teignmouth, and therefore within reach, he wrote to Mrs. Carlyle to ask whether it was too late, or whether she would sanction his going to Teignmouth to ask my friendship. I should have been very happy to hear the voice belonging to the striking face and head I knew so well: but it was too late. The length of the kingdom lay between us; and before I emerged from my sick-room, he was in his grave. I am glad I saw him, whatever he might have been thinking of me; (and what it was I have not the remotest idea:) for I retain a strong impression of his noble head and vital countenance.
Another memorable head was there, now and then. Leigh Hunt was there,
with his cheery face, bright, acute, and full of sensibility; and his thick
grizzled hair combed down smooth, and his homely figure;--black
handkerchief, grey stockings and stout shoes, while he was full of
gratitude to ladies who dress in winter in velvet, and in rich colours; and
to old dames in the streets or the country who still wear scarlet cloaks.
His conversation was lively, rapid, highly illustrative, and perfectly
natural. I remember one evening when Horne was there (the author of
"Orion," &c.) wishing that the three
heads,--Hunt's, Horne's and Carlyle's,- could
be sketched in a group. Horne's perfectly white complexion, and
somewhat coxcombical curling whiskers and determined picturesqueness
contrasted curiously with the homely manliness of Hunt's fine
countenance, and the rugged face, steeped in genius, of Carlyle. I have
seen Carlyle's face under all aspects, from the deepest gloom to the
most reck-
less or most genial mirth; and it seemed to me that each mood would make a totally different portrait. The sympathetic is by far the finest, in my eyes. His excess of sympathy has been, I believe, the master-pain of his life. He does not know what to do with it, and with its bitterness, seeing that human life is full of pain to those who look out for it: and the savageness which has come to be a main characteristic of this singular man is, in my opinion, a mere expression of his intolerable sympathy with the suffering. He cannot express his love and pity in natural acts, like other people; and it shows itself too often in unnatural speech. But to those who understand his eyes, his shy manner, his changing colour, his sigh, and the constitutional pudeur which renders him silent about every thing that he feels the most deeply, his wild speech and abrupt manner are perfectly intelligible. I have felt to the depths of my heart what his sympathy was in my days of success and prosperity and apparent happiness without drawback; and again in sickness, pain, and hopelessness of being ever at ease again: I have observed the same strength of feeling towards all manner of sufferers; and I am confident that Carlyle's affections are too much for him, and the real cause of the "ferocity" with which he charges himself, and astonishes others. It must be such a strong love and honour as his friends feel for him that can compensate for the pain of witnessing his suffering life. When I knew him familiarly, he rarely slept, was wofully dyspeptic, and as variable as possible in mood. When my friend and I entered the little parlour at Cheyne Row, our host was usually miserable. Till he got his coffee, he asked a list of questions, without waiting for answers, and looked as if he was on the rack. After tea, he brightened and softened, and sent us home full of admiration and friendship, and sometimes with a hope that he would some day be happy. It was our doing,--that friend's and mine,--that he gave lectures for three or four seasons. He had matter to utter; and there were many who wished to hear him; and in those days, before his works had reached their remunerative point of sale, the earnings by his lectures could not be unacceptable. So we confidently proceeded, taking the management of the
arrangements, and leaving Carlyle nothing to do but to meet his audience, and say what he had to say. Whenever I went, my pleasure was a good deal spoiled by his unconcealable nervousness. Yellow as a guinea, with downcast eyes, broken speech at the beginning, and fingers which nervously picked at the desk before him, he could not for a moment be supposed to enjoy his own effort; and the lecturer's own enjoyment is a prime element of success. The merits of Carlyle's discourses were however so great that he might probably have gone on year after year till this time, with improving success, and perhaps ease: but the struggle was too severe. From the time that his course was announced till it was finished, he scarcely slept, and he grew more dyspeptic and nervous every day; and we were at length entreated to say no more about his lecturing, as no fame and no money or other advantage could counterbalance the misery which the engagement caused him.--I remember being puzzled for a long while as to whether Carlyle did or did not care for fame. He was for ever scoffing at it; and he seemed to me just the man to write because he needed to utter himself, without ulterior considerations. One day I was dining there alone. I had brought over from America twenty-five copies of his "Sartor Resartus," as reprinted there; and, having sold them at the English price, I had some money to put into his hand. I did put it into his hand the first time: but it made him uncomfortable, and he spent it in a pair of signet rings, for his wife and me, (her motto being "Point de faiblesse," and mine "Frisch zu!") This would never do; so, having imported and sold a second parcel, the difficulty was what to do with the money. My friend and I found that Carlyle was ordered weak brandy and water instead of wine; and we spent our few sovereigns in French brandy of the best quality, which we carried over one evening, when going to tea. Carlyle's amusement and delight at first, and all the evening after, whenever he turned his eyes towards the long-necked bottles. showed us that we had made a good choice. He declared that he had got a reward for his labours at last: and his wife asked me to dinner, all by myself, to taste the brandy. We three sat round the fire after dinner,
and Carlyle mixed the toddy while Mrs. Carlyle and I discussed some literary matters, and speculated on fame and the love of it. Then Carlyle held out a glass of his mixture to me with, "Here,--take this. It is worth all the fame in England." Yet Allan Cunningham, who knew and loved him well, told me one evening, to my amazement, that Carlyle would be very well, and happy enough, if he got a little more fame. I asked him whether he was in earnest; and he said he was, and moreover sure that he was right;--I should see that he was. Carlyle's fame has grown from that day; and on the whole his health and spirits seem to be improved, so that his friend Allan was partly right. But I am certain that there are constitutional sources of pain (aggravated, no doubt, by excess in study in his youth) which have nothing to do with love of fame, or any other self-regards.
In 1837, he came to me to ask how he should manage, if he accepted a
proposal from Fraser to publish his pieces as a collection of
"Miscellanies." After discussing the money part of the
business, I begged him to let me undertake the
proof-correcting,--supposing of course that the pieces were to
be simply reprinted. He nearly agreed to let me do this, but afterwards
changed his mind. The reason for my offer was that the sight of his proofs
had more than once really alarmed me,--so irresolute, as well as
fastidious, did he seem to be as to the expression of his plainest
thoughts. Almost every other word was altered; and revise followed upon
revise. I saw at once that this way of proceeding must be very harassing to
him; and also that profit must be cut off to a most serious degree by this
absurdly expensive method of printing. I told him that it would turn out
just so if he would not allow his "Miscellanies" to be
reprinted just as they stood, in the form in which people had admired, and
now desired to possess them. As might be expected, the printing went on
very slowly, and there seemed every probability that this simple reprint
would stand over to another season. One day, while in my study, I heard a
prodigious sound of laughter on the stairs; and in came Carlyle, laughing
loud. He had been laughing in that manner all the
way from the printing-office in Charing Cross. As soon as he could, he told me what it was about. He had been to the office to urge on the printer: and the man said "Why, Sir, you really are so very hard upon us with your corrections! They take so much time, you see!" After some remonstrance, Carlyle observed that he had been accustomed to this sort of thing,--that he had got works printed in Scotland, and ........ "Yes, indeed, Sir," interrupted the printer. "We are aware of that. We have a man here from Edinburgh; and when he took up a bit of your copy, he dropped it as if it had burnt his fingers, and cried out 'Lord have mercy! have you got that man to print for? Lord knows when we shall get done,--with all his corrections!'" Carlyle could not reply for laughing, and he came to tell me that I was not singular in my opinion about his method of revising.
He has now been very long about his "Frederick the Great,"
which I must, therefore, like a good many more, die without seeing. I could
never grow tired of his biographies. From the time when I first knew him, I
am not aware that he has advanced in any views, or grown riper in his
conclusions; and his mind has always seemed to me as inaccessible as
Wordsworth's, or any other constitutionally isolated like
theirs: and therefore it is that I prefer to an outpouring of his own
notions, which we have heard as often as he has written didactically, and
which were best conveyed in his "Sartor Resartus," a commentary
on a character, as in biography, or on events, as in a history. For many
reasons, I prefer his biographies. I do not think that he can do any more
effectual work in the field of philosophy or morals: but I enjoy an
occasional addition to the fine gallery of portraits which he has given us.
I am now too much out of the world to know what is the real condition of
his fame and influence: but, for my own part, I could not read his
Latter Day Pamphlets, while heartily enjoying his Life of his friend
Sterling, and, in the main, his "Cromwell." No one can read his
"Cromwell" without longing for his "Frederick the
Great:" and I hope he will achieve that portrait, and others
after it. However much or little he may yet do, he certainly ought to
be recognised as one of the chief influences of his time. Bad as is our political morality, and grievous as are our social shortcomings, we are at least awakened to a sense of our sins: and I cannot but ascribe this awakening mainly to Carlyle. What Wordsworth did for poetry, in bringing us out of a conventional idea and method to a true and simple one, Carlyle has done for morality. He may be himself the most curious opposition to himself,--he may be the greatest mannerist of his age while denouncing conventionalism,--the greatest talker while eulogizing silence,--the most woful complainer while glorifying fortitude,--the most uncertain and stormy in mood, while holding forth serenity as the greatest good within the reach of Man: but he has nevertheless infused into the mind of the English nation a sincerity, earnestness, healthfulness and courage which can be appreciated only by those who are old enough to tell what was our morbid state when Byron was the representative of our temper, the Clapham Church of our religion, and the rotten-borough system of our political morality. If I am warranted in believing that the society I am bidding farewell to is a vast improvement upon that which I was born into, I am confident that the blessed change is attributable to Carlyle more than to any single influence besides.
My mornings were, as I have said, reserved for work; and the occasions
were very rare when I allowed any encroachment on the hours before two
o'clock. Now and then, however, it was necessary; as when the Royal
Academy Exhibition opened, and I really could not go, except at the early
hour when scarcely any body else was there. The plain truth is that I was
so stared at and followed in those days that I had not courage to go
(indicated by my trumpet) to public places at their fullest time. Even at
the Somerset House Exhibition, in the early morning, when the floors were
still wet with watering, I was sure to be discovered and followed. There
was a party, I remember, who so pushed upon me, and smiled at me under my
bonnet (having recognised me by Evans's portrait on the wall) that my
mother exercised her sarcastic spirit with some effect. She said to me,
after many vain attempts to get away from the grinning group,
--"Harriet, these ladies seem to have some business with us. Shall we ask them how we can be of any service to them?" By Mr. Macready's kindness, we escaped this annoyance at the theatre, where we spent many a pleasant evening. He gave us the stage box, whenever we chose to ask for it; and there my mother, whose sight was failing, could see, and I, deaf as I was, could hear; and nobody saw us behind our curtain, so that we could go in our warm morning dress, and be as free and easy as if we were at home. This was one of my very greatest pleasures,--Macready's interpretation of Shakspere being as high an intellectual treat as I know of.
I have mentioned Evans's portrait of me,--of which Sir A.
Calcott said to me, "What are your friends about to allow that
atrocity to hang there?" We could not help it. Mr. Evans was
introduced to me by a mutual acquaintance, on the ground that he was
painting portraits for a forthcoming work, and wanted mine. I could not
have refused without downright surliness; but it appeared afterwards that
the artist had other views. I sat to him as often as he wished, though I
heartily disliked the attitude, which was one in which I certainly was
never seen. The worst misfortune, however, was that he went on painting and
painting at the portrait, long after I had ceased to sit,--the result
of which was that the picture came out the "atrocity" that
Calcott called it. The artist hawked it about for sale, some years after;
and I hope nobody bought it; for my family would be sorry that it should be
taken for a representation of me. While on this subject, I must say that I
have been not very well used in this matter of portraits. It signifies
little now that Mr. Richmond's admirable portrait, and the engraving
from it exist to show what I really look like: but before that, my
family were rather disturbed at the "atrocities" issued,
without warrant, as likenesses of me; and especially by Miss Gillies, who
covered the land for a course of years with supposed likenesses of me, in
which there was, (as introduced strangers always exclaimed) "not the
remotest resemblance." I sat to Miss Gillies for (I think) a
miniature, at her own request, in 1832 and from a short time after that,
she never saw me again.
Yet she continued, almost every year, to put out new portraits of me,--each bigger, more vulgar and more monstrous than the last, till some of my relations, having seen those of the "People's Journal" and the "New Spirit of the Age" wrote to me to ask whether the process could not be put a stop to, as certainly no person had any business to issue so-called portraits without the sanction of myself or my family, and without even applying to see me after the lapse of a dozen years. The drollest thing was to see the Editor of the "People's Journal," when we first met. He had been complacent and gratified, as he told me, about presenting a likeness of me in the Journal; on which I had made no observation, as it could answer no purpose to object when the thing was done. When we did meet, his first words were, as he sank back on the sofa,--"Ma'am, the portrait! There is not the remotest resemblance!"
I think there were fourteen or fifteen bad portraits before Mr.
Richmond's good one was obtained. I need not say that their
fabrication was a disageeable process to me. That is of course: but I
could not prevent them. For some I did not sit: in other cases, I
really could not help myself. I refused to sit; but the artists came, with
easel and implements, and established themselves in a corner of my study,
requesting me to go on with my work, and forget that they were there. The
only one besides Richmond's, and Miss Gillies's first, that has
been liked by any body, as far as I know, is Osgood's, taken in
America. I do not myself think it good. It is too good-looking by
far; and the attitude is melodramatic. But it is like some of my relations,
and therefore probably more or less like me. All the rest are, we think,
good for less than nothing.--Two casts have been taken of my head; one
in 1833, and one in 1853. They were taken purely for phrenological
purposes. As I have bequeathed my skull and brain, for the same objects, I
should not have thought it necessary to have a second cast taken, (to
verify the changes made by time) but for the danger of accident which might
frustrate my arrangements. I might die by drowning at sea; or by a railway
smash, which would destroy the head: so I made all sure by having a
cast taken, not long before my last illness began.
It may be as well to explain here some transactions which might appear
strange, if their reasons and their course were not understood. At the time
of my removal to London, the special horror of the day was the Burke and
Hare murders; and all wits were set to work to devise a remedy for the
scarcity of bodies for dissection which bred such phenomena as the Burkes
and Hares. The mischief was that the only authorised supply was from the
gallows; and disgrace was added to the natural dislike of the idea of
dissection. Good citizens set to work in various ways to dissolve the
association of disgrace with post mortem
dissection. Some sold the reversion of their bodies; and others followed
Bentham's example of leaving his body for dissection, by an express
provision of his will. I, being likely to outlive my only remaining parent,
and to have no nearer connexion, did this, when my new earnings obliged me
to make a new will in 1832. The passage of Mr. Warburton's bill, and
its success, relieved the necessity of the case; and in my next will, the
arrangement was omitted. This was one of the transactions I referred to.
The next was much later in date. When I found that, easy as it is to
procure brains and skulls, it is not easy to obtain those of persons whose
minds are well known, so that it is rather a rare thing to be able to
compare manifestations with structure, I determined to do what I could to
remedy the difficulty by bequeathing my skull and brain to the ablest
phrenologist I knew of; and this I did in the will rendered necessary by
the acquisition of my Ambleside property. Soon after that will was made, I
received a letter from Mr. Toynbee, the well-known benevolent
surgeon, enclosing a note of introduction from a mutual friend, and going
straight to the point on which he wished to address me. He laid before me
the same consideration in regard to cases of deafness that I have set down
above in connexion with phrenology generally, saying that it is easy enough
to obtain the skulls of deaf persons, in order to study the structure of
the ear; and it is very easy to meet with deaf people in life; but it is
very difficult to obtain the defunct ears of persons whose deafness has
been a subject of observation during life. He therefore requested me to
leave him a legacy of my ears. He added a
few words, in explanation of his plain speaking, about the amount of mischief and misery caused by the ignorance of surgeons in regard to the ear; an ignorance which can be removed only by such means as he proposed. I was rather amused when I caught myself in a feeling of shame, as it were, at having only one pair of ears;--at having no duplicate for Mr. Toynbee after having disposed otherwise of my skull. I told him how the matter stood; and my legatee and he met, to ascertain whether one head could in any way be made to answer both their objects. It could not be, and Mr. Toynbee could not be gratified. I called on him in London afterwards, and showed him as much as he could see while I was alive: and he showed me his wonderful collection of preparations, by which malformation and impaired structure of the ear are already largely illustrated. This is the other transaction which I referred to, and which may as well be distinctly understood, as I do not at all pride myself on doing odd things which may jar upon people's natural feelings.
Two or three times during my residence in London, I was requested to
allow my head to be pronounced upon by professional phrenologists, under
precautions against their knowing who I was. I entirely disapprove, and
always did, that summary way of deciding on the characters of utter
strangers, whose very curiosity is a kind of evidence of their not being in
a state to hear the sober truth; while the imperfect knowledge of the
structure of the brain at that time, and our present certainty of the
complexity of its action, must obviate all probability of an accurate
judgment being formed. At the time I speak of, every body was going to
Deville, to see his collection of bronzes, and to sit down under his hands,
and hear their own characters,--for which they paid down their
half-sovereigns, and came away, elated or amused. Among those who so
went was a remarkable trio,--of whom Lord Lansdowne and Sydney Smith
were two; and I think, but am not sure, that Jeffrey was the third. They
went on foot, and avoided naming each other, and passed for ordinary
visitors. Lord Lansdowne, to whom was consigned at that time, on account of
his aptitude for detail, all the small troublesome business of the Cabinet
which every body else was
glad to escape, was pronounced by Deville to be liable to practical failure at every turn by his tendency to lose himself in the abstract, and neglect particulars. What he said to Jeffrey (if Jeffrey it was) I forget; but it was something which amused his companions excessively. "This gentleman's case," said Deville of Sydney Smith, "is clear enough. His faculties are those of a naturalist, and I see that he gratifies them. This gentleman is always happy, among his collections of birds and of fishes." "Sir," said Sydney Smith, turning round upon him solemnly, with wide open eyes, "I don't know a fish from a bird." Of about the same accuracy was Deville's judgment of me. We were a large party,--seven or eight,--of whom my mother was one, and three others were acquaintances of Deville's. It was agreed that his friends should take the rest of us, as if to see the bronzes; that I should hide my trumpet in a bag, and that nobody should name me (or my mother) or speak to me as to a deaf person. We were certain to be invited by Deville, they said, to hear a little address on Phrenology; and he would then propose to pronounce on the character of any one of the company. I was instructed to take my seat at the end of the group, nearest Deville's right hand, and to take off my bonnet at a certain signal. All went exactly as foreseen. For some time, the party listened gravely enough to the oracle which I heard mumbling above my head; but at length all burst into a roar of laughter. Mr. Deville pronounced that my life must be one of great suffering, because it was a life of constant failure through timidity. I could never accomplish any thing, through my remarkable deficiency in both physical and moral courage. My mother then observed that it was so far true that I was the most timid child she had ever known. Satisfied with this, Deville proceeded. Amidst some truer things, he said I had wit. Some very properly denied this; but one exclaimed, "Well, I say that any one who has read Miss Martineau's poor-law tale ........." And now the murder was out. Deville was much discomposed,--said it was not fair,--desired to do it all over again,--to come to our house and try, and so forth: but we told him that the whole proceeding was spontaneous on his own part, and that he had
better leave the matter where it was. An amended judgment could not be worth any thing.--Another time, I went with my friends, Mr. and Mrs. F., to call on Mr. Holm the Phrenologist. They had some acquaintance with him, and had an appointment with him, to have him pronounce on Mrs. F.'s head. Mrs. F. thought this a good opportunity to obtain an opinion of my case; and I therefore accompanied her,--no trumpet visible, and no particular notice being taken of me. Mr. Holm pronounced my genius to be for millinery. He said that it was clear, by such and such tokens, that I was always on the look out for tasteful bonnets and caps: and that, my attention being fixed on one at a shop window, I should go home and attempt to make one like it; and should succeed. Such was the sum and substance of his judgment. I afterwards, at his request, attended a few private lectures of his, in a class of three members, the other two being the Duke of Somerset and Rammohun Roy. I really used to pity the lecturer when, from the brain or cast which he held in his hand, he glanced at the heads of his pupils: for the Duke of Somerset had a brown wig, coming down low on his forehead: Rammohun Roy had his turban just above his eyebrows; and I, of course, had my bonnet. No one who knows me will suppose that in thus speaking of so-called phrenologists and their empirical practices, I am in the slightest degree reflecting on that department of physiological science. It is because such empirical practice is insulting and injurious to true science that I record my own experience of it. The proceedings of the fortune-telling oracles, which pronounce for fees, are no more like those of true and philosophical students of the brain than the shows of itinerant chemical lecturers, who burned blue lights, and made explosions, and electrified people half a century ago are like the achievements of a Davy or a Faraday.
One of my rare morning expeditions was to see Coleridge, at his Highgate
residence. I cannot remember on what introduction I went, nor whether I
went alone: but I remember a kind reception by Mr. and Mrs. Gilman,
and by Coleridge himself. I was a great admirer of him as a poet then, as I
am, to a more limited extent, now. If I had thought of the man then as I
have been compelled by Cottle's Life to think of him since, I should not have enacted the hypocrisy of going to see him, in the mode practiced by his worshippers. In these days, when it is a sort of fashion among wise men of all opinions to insist upon the disconnexion of religion and morals, one may have a strong sympathy with a man or a writer of eloquent religious sensibilities, even if his moral views or conduct may be unsatisfactory. But then, the religious eloquence must be of a sounder intellectual quality than Coleridge's appears to me to be. In truth, I do not know how to escape the persuasion that Coleridge was laughing in his sleeve while writing some of the characteristic pieces which his adorers go into raptures about. A great deal of cloud beauty there is in the climate and atmosphere of his religious writings; and if his disciples would not attempt to make this charm, and his marvellous subtlety, go for more than they are worth, one could have no objection to any amount of admiration they could enjoy from such a source. But those who feel as strongly as I do the irreverence and vanity of making the most solemn and sacred subjects an opportunity for intellectual self indulgence, for paradox, and word-play and cloud-painting, and cocoon-spinning out of one's own interior, will feel certain that the prophecied immortality of Coleridge will be not so much that of his writings as of himself, as an extreme specimen of the tendencies of our metaphysical period, which, being itself but a state of transition, can permit no immortality to its special products but as historical types of its characteristics and tendencies. If Coleridge should be remembered, it will be as a warning,--as much in his philosophical as his moral character.--Such is my view of him now. Twenty years ago I regarded him as poet,--in his "Friend" as much as his verse. He was, to be sure, a most remarkable looking personage, as he entered the room, and slowly approached and greeted me. He looked very old, with his rounded shoulders and drooping head, and excessively thin limbs. His eyes were as wonderful as they were ever represented to be;--light grey, extremely prominent, and actually glittering: an appearance I am told common among opium eaters. His onset amused me not a little. He told me
that he (the last person whom I should have suspected) read my tales as they came out on the first of the month; and, after paying some compliments, he avowed that there were points on which we differed: (I was full of wonder that there were any on which we agreed:) "for instance," said he, "you appear to consider that society is an aggregate of individuals!" I replied that I certainly did: whereupon he went off on one of the several metaphysical interpretations which may be put upon the many-sided fact of an organised human society, subject to natural laws in virtue of its aggregate character and organisation together. After a long flight in survey of society from his own balloon in his own current, he came down again to some considerations of individuals, and at length to some special biographical topics, ending with criticisms on old biographers, whose venerable works he brought down from the shelf. No one else spoke, of course, except when I once or twice put a question; and when his monologue came to what seemed a natural stop, I rose to go. I am glad to have seen his weird face, and heard his dreamy voice; and my notion of possession, prophecy,--of involuntary speech from involuntary brain action, has been clearer since. Taking the facts of his life together with his utterance, I believe the philosophy and moralising of Coleridge to be much like the action of Babbage's machine; and his utterance to be about equal in wonder to the numerical results given out by the mechanician's instrument. Some may think that the philosophical and theological expression has more beauty than the numerical, and some may not: but all will agree that the latter issues from sound premises, while few will venture to say that the other has any reliable basis at all. Coleridge appears to me to have been constitutionally defective in will, in conscientiousness and in apprehension of the real and true, while gifted or cursed with inordinate reflective and analogical faculties, as well as prodigious word power. Hence his success as an instigator of thought in others, and as a talker and writer; while utterly failing in his apprehension of truth, and in the conduct of his life.
The mention of Coleridge reminds me, I hardly know why, of Godwin, who
was an occasional morning visitor of mine. I
looked upon him as a curious monument of a bygone state of society; and there was still a good deal that was interesting about him. His fine head was striking, and his countenance markable. It must not be judged of by the pretended likeness put forth in Fraser's Magazine about that time, and attributed, with the whole set, to Maclise, then a young man, and, one would think, in great need of one sort or another, if he could lend himself to the base method of caricaturing shown in those sketches. The high Tory favourites of the Magazine were exhibited to the best advantage; while Liberals were represented as Godwin was. Because the finest thing about him was his noble head, they put on a hat: and they presented him in profile because he had lost his teeth, and his lips fell in. No notion of Godwin's face could be formed from that caricature: and I fear there was no other portrait, after the one corresponding to the well-known portrait of Mary Wollstonecraft. It was not for her sake that I desired to know Godwin; for, with all the aid from the admiration with which her memory was regarded in my childhood, and from my own disposition to honour all promoters of the welfare and improvement of Woman, I never could reconcile my mind to Mary Wollstonecraft's writings, or to whatever I heard of her. It seemed to me, from the earliest time when I could think on the subject of Woman's Rights and condition, that the first requisite to advancement is the self-reliance which results from self-discipline. Women who would improve the condition and chances of their sex must, I am certain, be not only affectionate and devoted, but rational and dispassionate, with the devotedness of benevolence, and not merely of personal love. But Mary Wollstonecraft was, with all her powers, a poor victim of passion, with no control over her own peace, and no calmness or content except when the needs of her individual nature were satisfied. I felt, forty years ago, in regard to her, just what I feel now in regard to some of the most conspicuous denouncers of the wrongs of women at this day;--that their advocacy of Woman's cause becomes mere detriment, precisely in proportion to their personal reasons for unhappiness, unless they have fortitude enough (which loud complainants usually
have not) to get their own troubles under their feet, and leave them wholly out of the account in stating the state of their sex. Nobody can be further than I am from being satisfied with the condition of my own sex, under the law and custom of my own country; but I decline all fellowship and co-operation with women of genius or otherwise favourable position, who injure the cause by their personal tendencies. When I see an eloquent writer insinuating to every body who comes across her that she is the victim of her husband's carelessness and cruelty, while he never spoke in his own defence: when I see her violating all good taste by her obtrusiveness in society, and oppressing every body about her by her epicurean selfishnesss every day, while raising in print an eloquent cry on behalf of the oppressed; I feel, to the bottom of my heart, that she is the worst enemy of the cause she professes to plead. The best friends of that cause are women who are morally as well as intellectually competent to the most serious business of life, and who must be clearly seen to speak from conviction of the truth, and not from personal unhappiness. The best friends of the cause are the happy wives and the busy, cheerful, satisfied single women, who have no injuries of their own to avenge, and no painful vacuity or mortification to relieve. The best advocates are yet to come,--in the persons of women who are obtaining access to real social business,--the female physicians and other professors in America, the women of business and the female artists of France; and the hospital administrators, the nurses, the educators and substantially successful authors of our own country. Often as I am appealed to to speak, or otherwise assist in the promotion of the cause of Woman, my answer is always the same:--that women, like men, can obtain whatever they show themselves fit for. Let them be educated,--let their powers be cultivated to the extent for which the means are already provided, and all that is wanted or ought to be desired will follow of course. Whatever a woman proves herself able to do, society will be thankful to see her do,--just as if she were a man. If she is scientific, science will welcome her, as it has welcomed every woman so qualified. I believe no scientific woman complains of wrongs.
If capable of political thought and action, women will obtain even that. I judge by my own case. The time has not come which certainly will come, when women who are practically concerned in political life will have a voice in making the laws which they have to obey; but every woman who can think and speak wisely, and bring up her children soundly, in regard to the rights and duties of society, is advancing the time when the interests of women will be represented, as well as those of men. I have no vote at elections, though I am a tax-paying housekeeper and responsible citizen; and I regard the disability as an absurdity, seeing that I have for a long course of years influenced public affairs to an extent not professed or attempted by many men. But I do not see that I could do much good by personal complaints, which always have some suspicion or reality of passion in them. I think the better way is for us all to learn and to try to the utmost what we can do, and thus to win for ourselves the consideration which alone can secure us rational treatment. The Wollstonecraft order set to work at the other end, and, as I think, do infinite mischief; and, for my part, I do not wish to have any thing to do with them. Every allowance must be made for Mary Wollstonecraft herself, from the constitution and singular environment which determined her course: but I have never regarded her as a safe example, nor as a successful champion of Woman and her Rights.
Nothing struck me more in Godwin than an order of attributes which were
about the last I should have expected to find in him. I found him cautious,
and even timid. I believe this is often the case, towards the close of
life, with reformers who have suffered in their prime for their
opinions: but in Godwin's case, it was not about matters of
opinion only that he was timid. My mother and I went, with a mutual friend,
to tea at the Godwins' little dwelling under the roof of the Houses
of Parliament, just before I went to America. Godwin had a small office
there, with a salary, a dwelling, and coals and candle; and very
comfortable he seemed there, with his old wife to take care of him. He was
so comfortable that he had evidently no mind to die. Three times in the
course of that evening, he asked questions or
made a remark on the intended length of my absence, ending with "When you come back, I shall be dead:" or "When you come back, you will visit my grave,"--evidently in the hope that I should say "No, you will see me return." I was much amused at the issue of a sudden impulse of complaisance towards me, under which he offered me letters of introduction to various friends and correspondents of his in America. I accepted the offer exactly as I accepted every offer of the kind,--with thanks, and an explanation that my friends must not take it amiss if their letters should chance not to be delivered, as I could not at all tell beforehand what would be the extent or the circumstances of my American travel: and I observed to my mother that this precaution might be particularly necessary in the case of Mr. Godwin's introductions, if they should chance to be addressed to persons whose views bore no relation to the politics of their time and their republic. On the next Sunday, in came Godwin, in evident uneasiness and awkwardness. He threw his gloves into his hat, as if preparing for some great effort; and then he told me, with reluctance and confusion, that he wished to recall his offer of letters to his American correspondents; for this reason:--that I should be known there as a political economist; and, if he introduced me, it might be supposed that he had changed his views in his old age, and become one of the order of men against whom he had written in his earlier years. I told him I thought he was quite right; and his spirits rose immediately when he saw I was not offended.--I liked best getting him to speak of his novels; and at times he was ready enough to gratify me. He told me, among other things, that he wrote the first half of "Caleb Williams" in three months, and then stopped for six,--finishing it in three more. This pause in the middle of a work so intense seems to me a remarkable incident. I have often intended to read "Caleb Williams" again, to try whether I could find the stopping place: but it has never fallen in my way, and I have not seen the book since my youth.
That last evening at Godwin's was a memorable one to me. The place
is gone, and all who were there are dead except myself.
Before it grew too dusk (it was in July) Godwin took us through the passages of that old Parliament House, and showed us the Star Chamber, and brought the old tallies for us to examine, that we might finger the notches made by the tax-collectors before accounts were kept as now. Within three months those tallies burnt down that Star Chamber, and both Houses of Parliament. They burned old Godwin's dwelling too. His good wife saved him from a fright and anxiety which might have destroyed him at once. He was at the theatre; and she would not have him called, but packed and removed his goods, and so managed as that he was met and told the story like any body else. He was, however, dead before my return, as he had said he should be. When I returned, he was in his grave; and faithful friends were taking kind care of the wife who had done so much for him.
Another old man, of a very different order, was a pretty frequent
visitor of mine, and always a kind one,--Mr. Basil Montagu. He, with
his venerable head, and his majestic-looking lady were occasionally
the ornaments of my evening parties: and I was well acquainted with
the Procters, Mrs. Montagu's daughter and son-in-law. I
was always glad to see Mr. Procter in any drawing-room I entered. It
was delightful to know the "Barry Cornwall" who won his first
fame when I was living on poetry, down at Norwich, and when his exquisite
metres were on my tongue or in my head day and night: but all I found
in him supported and deepened the interest with which I met him. He was
always so kind and courteous, so simple and modest, so honest and agreeable
that I valued his acquaintance highly, and have continued to do so, to this
day.--As for Mr. Montagu, his benevolence was the first attraction;
and the use of the gallows had not then been so long restricted as to
permit the efforts of our Romillys and our Montagus to he forgotten. No one
man perhaps did so much for the restriction of the punishment of death as
Mr. Montagu; and none based the cause on so deep a ground. I was not aware
of Mr. Montagu's philosophy till the latest period of my acquaintance
with him. I wish I had been; but he was timid in the avowal of it to a
wholly
unnecessary, and, I think, faulty degree. Before his death, he distinctly declared in a message to me his approbation of the avowal which his friend Mr. Atkinson and I had made of opinions like his own: and, if he could have lived to see how little harm, and how much good, the avowal has done us, he would have regretted his own caution,--though it was more justifiable in his time than it would have been in ours. I imagine that his curious strain of sentimentality was,--(as far as it was his at all, but I have always believed his lady to have intervened in that case)--to cover up to himself and others the differences between himself and others;--an attempt to find a ground of sympathy, when the broadest and firmest did not exist.
The rising up of his countenance before me as I write reminds me of an
occasion when he drew me away from my morning work, to occupy an odd place,
and witness a remarkable scene. I found a note from him on the breakfast
table, one morning, to say that he would call at ten o'clock, and
take me down to Westminster, to witness the trial of the Canadian
prisoners, on whose behalf Mr. Roebuck was to plead that day. So early an
hour was named, that I might be well placed for hearing. All London was in
excitement about this trial, which followed the Canadian rebellion, and the
Court was daily crowded. My sister Rachel was with us at the time, and she
was glad to accompany Mr. Montagu and me. Early as we were, the Court was
full;--completely crowded to the back of the galleries. Mr. Montagu
looked in at every door, and then committed us to the charge of one of the
ushers while he disappeared for five minutes. He returned, threw his cloak
over the arm of the usher, gave us each an arm, in perfect silence, and led
us through a long succession of passages till we arrived at a door which he
opened, lifting up a red curtain, and pushing us in. To our amazement and
consternation, we found ourselves on the Bench, facing the sea of heads in
the Court. It was dreadful; and at first, I crouched behind a
bulwark: but we agreed that there was nothing to be done. There we
were: Mr. Montagu had disappeared; and we could not help ourselves.
The only vacant bench in the Court below was presently filled. In came the
Canadian prisoners, and seated themselves there. We could hardly believe our eyes, but the men wore hand-cuffs, and we saw the gleam of the steel as they moved. Our consultation about this, and our observation of the prisoners while talking about it made us the subject of the hoax of the day.--We saw the prisoners lay their heads together, and make inquiries of their attendants; and then there was some bustle about handing paper, pen and ink to them. Presently a letter appeared, travelling over the heads of the crowd, and handed from counsel to counsel till it was presented to me by the one nearest the bench. It was a note of compliment and gratitude from the chef of the prisoners. Plenty of lawyers were in a minute pressing pen, ink and paper on me; and I again crouched down and wrote a civil line of reply, which was handed to my new correspondent. We found ourselves particularly stared at till we could bear it no longer, and slipped away,--meeting Mr. Montagu in time to save us from losing ourselves in the labyrinth of passages. We did not know till some time afterwards what pathos there was in the stare which followed the notes. A waggish acquaintance of ours was among the lawyers in the Court. He put on a grave look during the transmission of the notes; and then, hearing speculation all round as to who we were, he whispered to one and another,--"Don't you know? They are the wives of the Canadian prisoners." As he intended, the news spread through the Court, and our countenances were watched with all due compassion. I am afraid we were pronounced to be very unfeeling wives, if we might be judged by our dress and demeanour.
When my morning work was done, there was usually a curious variety of
visitors, such as it bewilders me more to think of now than it did to
receive at the time. More than once, my study door was thrown open, and a
Frenchman, Italian or German stood on the threshold, with one hand on his
heart and the other almost touching the top of the door, clearing his
throat to recite an ode, of which he wanted my opinion. Sometimes it was a
lady from the country, who desired to pour her sorrows into my bosom, and
swear eternal friendship. This kind of
visitor could never be made to understand that it takes two to make a friendship; and that there was no particular reason why I should enter into it with a perfect stranger. By such as these I was favoured with the information that they had inquired my character before coming,--whether I was amiable and so forth; but they seemed to forget that I knew nothing of them. Sometimes some slight acquaintance or another would enter with a companion, and engage me in conversation while the companion took possession of a sheet of my writing paper, or even asked me for a pencil, sketched me, and put the sketch into her reticule; by which time the ostensible visitor was ready to go away. Sometimes my pen was filched from the inkstand, still wet, and taken away to be framed or laid up in lavender. Sometimes ambitious poets, or aspirants to poetic honours, obtained an introduction, on purpose to consult me as to how they should do their work. One young clergyman I remember, who felt that he was made for immortality in the line of Shaksperian tragedy; but he wanted my opinion as to whether he should begin in that way at once, or try something else; and especially, whether or not I should advise him to drink beer. Amidst such absurd people, whose names I have long forgotten, there were many agreeable visitors, beside the multitude whom I have sketched above, who made that time of the day exceedingly pleasant. It was then that I saw Dr. Chalmers on his visits to town. His topics were pauperism and (in those antediluvian days before the ark of the Free Church was dreamed of) the virtues of religious establishments: and fervid and striking was his talk on these and every other subject. Mr. Chadwick, then engaged on the Poor-law, was a frequent visitor,--desiring to fix my attention on the virtues of centralisation,--the vices of which in continental countries were not then so apparent as they have since become. One always knew what was coming when he entered the room; and indeed, so busy a man could not make morning calls, but for the promotion of business. I regarded his visit, therefore, as a lesson; and I never failed to learn much from the master,--the first of our citizens, I believe, who fairly penetrated the foul region of our sanitary disorders, and set us
to work to reform them. It might be that his mind was an isolated one; and his faculty narrow and engrossed with detail, so that it was necessary at length to remove him from the administrative position to which his services seemed to entitle him: but there is no question of his social usefulness in instituting the set of objects which he was found unequal to carry out. Twenty years ago, he was just discovered by the Whig Ministers, and he was himself discovering his own department of action. He was a substantial aid to me while I was writing about social evils and reforms; and he has gone on to supply me with valuable information, from that day to this,--from his first exposition of the way in which country justices aggravated pauperism under the old law, to the latest improvement in hollow bricks and diameter of drains.--Judging by the reforms then discussed in my study, that period of my life seems to be prodigiously long ago. Several of the beneficent family of the Hills came on their respective errands,--penny postage, prison administration, juvenile crime reformation, and industrial and national education. Mr. Rowland Hill was then pondering his scheme, and ascertaining the facts which he was to present with so remarkable an accuracy. His manner in those days,--his slowness, and hesitating speech,--were not recommendatory of his doctrine to those who would not trouble themselves to discern its excellence and urgent need. If he had been prepossessing in manner and fluent and lively in speech, it might have saved him half his difficulties, and the nation some delay: but he was so accurate, so earnest, so irrefragable in his facts, so wise and benevolent in his intentions, and so well timed with his scheme, that success was, in my opinion, certain from the beginning; and so I used to tell some conceited and shallow members and adherents of the Whig government, whose flippancy, haughtiness and ignorance about a matter of such transcendent importance tried my temper exceedingly. Rowland Hill might and did bear it; but I own I could not always. Even Sydney Smith was so unlike himself on this occasion as to talk and write of "this nonsense of a penny postage:" as if the domestic influences fostered by it were not more promotive
of moral good than all his preaching, or that of any number of his brethren of the cloth! Lord Monteagle got the nickname of "the footman's friend," on that occasion,--the "Examiner" being a firm and effective friend of Rowland Hill and his scheme. Lord Monteagle, who is agreeable enough in society to those who are not very particular in regard to sincerity, was, as Chancellor of the Exchequer or any thing else, as good a representative as could be found of the flippancy, conceit, and official helplessness and ignorance of the Whig administrations. He actually took up Rowland Hill's great scheme, to botch and alter and restrict it. With entire complacency he used to smile it down at evening parties, and lift his eyebrows at the credulity of the world, which could suppose that a scheme so wild could ever be tried: but he condescended to propose that it should supersede the London twopenny post. The "Examiner" immediately showed that the operation would be to save flunkeys the fatigue of carrying ladies' notes; and Lord Monteagle was forthwith dubbed "the footman's friend,"--a title which has perversely rushed into my memory, every time I have seen him since. The alteration in Rowland Hill himself, since he won his tardy victory, is an interesting spectacle to those who knew him twenty years ago. He always was full of domestic tenderness and social amiability; and these qualities now shine out, and his whole mind and manners are quickened by the removal of the cold obstruction he encountered at the beginning of his career. Grateful as I feel to him, as the most signal social benefactor of our time, it has been a great pleasure to me to see the happy influence of success on the man himself. I really should like to ask the surviving Whig leaders, all round, what they think now of "the nonsense of the penny postage."
Good Mr. Porter, of the Board of Trade,--amiable and friendly,
industrious and devoted to his business,--but sadly weak and
inaccurate, prejudiced and borné in
ability,--was a frequent and kindly visitor. His office was at hand,
when we lived in Fludyer Street; and he found time to look in very often,
and to bring me information, sometimes valuable, and sometimes not. His
labours, industrious and sincere, were a
complete illustration of Carlyle's doctrine about statistics. Nothing could be apparently more square and determinate; while nothing could be in fact more untrustworthy and delusive. Some exposures of his mistakes have been made in parliament; and plenty more could be pointed out by parties qualified to criticise his statements; as, for instance, the Birmingham manufacturers, who find that the spirits of wine used in vast quantities for the burnishing of their goods are set down by Mr. Porter as alcoholic liquor drunk by the English people: and, again, the ship-owners, who find the tonnage of the kingdom estimated by him by the number of ships going to sea or returning in the course of the year,--no allowance being made for ships going more voyages than one. It is a serious injury to the nation that the Whig administrations have employed, to obtain and publish information, such unfortunate agents as Bowring, Macgregor and Porter, whose errors and incompetence any sensible man of business could have informed them of. Many thousands of pounds, much valuable time, and no little exertion, have been spent in actually misinforming the people, on the supposition of procuring valuable facts for them. Bowring and Macgregor were obviously unfitted for such work from the outset, by their vanity, incompetence and unscrupuloushess. Mr. Porter was of a far higher order. His innocent vanity, which was far from immoderate, never interfered with his steady labour; and he was honourable, disinterested and generous: but his deficiency in sense and intellectual range, together with his confidence in himself and his want of confidence in all public men, was an insuperable disqualification for his sound discharge of an office requiring a wholly different order of mind from his. His intimate friend, his guide and crammer, was David Urquhart, whose accounts of royal, diplomatic and administrative personages he reverently accepted: and this accounts for a good deal of prejudice and perversion of judgment. It was at his table that I saw Mr. Urquhart for the only time that I ever met him. Once was enough; and that once was too like a pantomime to leave the impression of a rational dinner party. Mr. Urquhart had arrived from Turkey with mighty expectations from what he called the
friendship of William IV. But the King was dead, and Victoria reigned in his stead: and the oracle's abuse of the Queen,--a young girl entering upon the most difficult position in the world,--was something wonderful. He railed at her every where and perpetually,--with a vehemence which luckily prevented any harm, such as might have resulted from moderate censure. On the day that I met him, he engrossed the whole conversation, as he sat between our hostess and me. What he gave us, besides abuse of the Queen, was a series of oracular utterances on political doctrine, which he assured me from time to time I was incapable of comprehending; and an intense eulogium on Turkish life, which owed its excellence, political and moral, to the Turkish women being not allowed to learn to read and write. He addressed this to Mrs. Porter, (the sister of David Ricardo, and the author of certain books) on the one hand, and to me on the other. His odd ape-like gestures, his insane egotism, his frail figure and pale countenance, and the ferocious discontent which seemed to be consuming his life, left a strange and painful impression on my mind. His mother soon after died happy in the belief that he would be the saviour of his country: and now, after half a lifetime, he seems, by newspaper accounts, to be just the same man, talking in the same mood and style, with no other change than that he has been tried in parliament and has failed, and that he has been constantly moulting his tail, all these years. His adherents have fallen off and been replaced in constant succession. He has never retained any body's confidence long (he lost Mr. Porter's at last) and he has never failed to find impressible, half-informed and credulous people ready to shut their eyes and open their mouths, and swallow what doctrine he should please to give.
With Mr. Porter came Mr. Duppa, the devoted and indefatigable friend of
popular education, and the organiser and support of the Central Society of
Education, which diffused some useful knowledge and good views in its day.
Some foreigner or another, distinguished by eminence in some department
within Mr. Porter's range, often gave me a call, and taught me
something, or offered inducements to foreign travel, which I never
was able to avail myself of, till the failure of my health made it too late. Mr. Senior used to come and talk about the poor-law, or Ireland. The Combes came and talked about phrenology and educational improvement. Mr. Robertson came to talk of the Westminster Review, of which he was editor, under the direction of Mr. J.S. Mill. He had prodigious expectations from his own genius, and an undoubting certainty of fulfilling a grand career: but he has long sunk out of sight. For fifteen years past, he seems to have been forgotten. I fear he has suffered much, and caused much suffering since the days when I knew him. I never understood him at all; and was duly surprised to find that he represented himself to be my most intimate friend,--philosopher, and guide! but the delusions of his vanity were so many and so gross that one may easily be let pass among the rest.--An even more unintelligible claim to my friendship has been advanced in print by the Howitts. I can only say that I do not remember having seen Mrs. Howitt more than twice in my life, and that I should not know her by sight: and that I have seen Mr. Howitt about four or five times:--three or four times in London, and once at Tynemouth, when he came with a cousin of mine to cool himself after a walk on the sands, and beg for a cup of tea. This he and Mrs. Howitt have represented in print as visiting me in my illness. Such service as they asked of me in London, (to obtain a favourable review of a book of Mr. Howitt's in which he had grossly abused me) I endeavoured to render; but I really was barely acquainted with them; and I was glad the intercourse had gone no further when I witnessed their conduct to their partner in the People's Journal, and in some other affairs. I so greatly admire some of their writings, in which their fine love of nature and their close knowledge of children are unmingled with passion and personal discontent, that I am thankful to enjoy the good their genius provides without disturbance from their unreasonable and turbulent tempers.
One of the most striking of my occasional visitors was Capel Lofft the
younger, the author of that wonderful book, the merits of which were
discovered by Charles
Knight;--"Self-forma-
tion," which should be read by every parent of boys. Those who know the work do not need to be told that the author was a remarkable man: and if they happen to have met with his agrarian epic, "Ernest," a poem of prodigious power, but too seditious for publication, they will feel yet more desire to have seen him. When he called on me to ask my advice what to do with his poem, his card revived all I had heard about his eccentric father, the patron of the poet Bloomfield. He was neat and spruce in his dress and appearance,--with his glossy olive coat, and his glossy brown hair, parted down the middle, and his comely and thoughtful face. He was as nervous as his father; and by degrees I came to consider him as eccentric; especially when I found what was his opinion of the feminine intellect, and that his wife, to whom he appeared duly attached, did not know of the existence of his poem. (The Quarterly Review put an end to the secrecy, some time afterwards.) He died early; but not before he had left a name in the world, by his "Self-formation," and an impression of power and originality by his formidable epic.--Another poet whose face I was always glad to see was Browning. It was in the days when he had not yet seen the Barretts. I did not know them, either. When I was ill at Tynemouth, a correspondence grew up between the then bedridden Elizabeth Barrett and myself; and a very intimate correspondence it became. In one of the later letters, in telling me how much better she was, and how grievously disappointed at being prevented going to Italy, she wrote of going out, of basking in the open sunshine, of doing this and that; "in short," said she, finally, "there is no saying what foolish thing I may do." The "foolish thing" evidently in view in this passage was marrying Robert Browning: and a truly wise act did the "foolish thing" turn out to be. I have never seen my correspondent, for she had gone to Italy before I left Tynemouth; but I knew her husband well, about twenty years ago. It was a wonderful event to me,--my first acquaintance with his poetry.--Mr. Macready put "Paracelsus" into my hand, when I was staying at his house; and I read a canto before going to bed. For the first time in my life, I passed a whole
night without sleeping a wink. The unbounded expectation I formed from that poem was sadly disappointed when "Sordello" came out. I was so wholly unable to understand it that I supposed myself ill. But in conversation no speaker could be more absolutely clear and purpose-like. He was full of good sense and fine feeling, amidst occasional irritability; full also of fun and harmless satire; with some little affectations which were as droll as any thing he said. A real genius was Robert Browning, assuredly; and how good a man, how wise and morally strong, is proved by the successful issue of the perilous experiment of the marriage of two poets. Her poems were to me, in my sick-room, marvellously beautiful: and, now that from the atmosphere of the sick-room, my life has been transferred to the free open air of real, practical existence, I still think her poetry wonderfully beautiful in its way, while wishing that she was more familiar with the external realities which are needed to balance her ideal conceptions. They are a remarkable pair, whom society may well honour and cherish.
Their friend Miss Mitford came up to town occasionally, and found her
way to Fludyer Street. I was early fond of her tales and descriptions, and
have always regarded her as the originator of that new style of
"graphic description" to which literature owes a great deal,
however weary we may sometimes have felt of the excess into which the
practice of detail has run. In my childhood, there was no such thing known,
in the works of the day, as "graphic description:" and
most people delighted as much as I did in Mrs. Ratcliffe's gorgeous
or luscious generalities,--just as we admired in picture galleries
landscapes all misty and glowing indefinitely with bright
colours,--yellow sunrises and purple and crimson
sunsets,--because we had no conception of detail like Miss
Austen's in manners, and Miss Mitford's in scenery, or of
Millais' and Wilkie's analogous life pictures, or Rosa
Bonheur's adventurous Hayfield at noon-tide. Miss Austen had
claims to other and greater honours; but she and Miss Mitford deserve no
small gratitude for rescuing us from the folly and bad taste of slovenly
indefiniteness in delineation. School-girls are now taught to draw
from objects: but in my
time they merely copied their masters' vague and slovenly drawings: and the case was the same with writers and readers. Miss Mitford's tales appealed to a new sense, as it were, in a multitude of minds,--greatly to the amazement of the whole circle of publishers, who had rejected, in her works, as good a bargain as is often offered to publishers. Miss Mitford showed me at once that she undervalued her tales, and rested her claims on her plays. I suppose every body who writes a tragedy, and certainly every body who writes a successful tragedy, must inevitably do this. Miss Mitford must have possessed some dramatic requisites, or her success could have not been so decided as it was; but my own opinion always was that her mind wanted the breadth, and her character the depth, necessary for genuine achievement in the highest enterprise of literature. I must say that personally I did not like her so well as I liked her works. The charming bonhommie of her writings appeared at first in her conversation and manners; but there were other things which presently sadly impaired its charm. It is no part of my business to pass judgment on her views and modes of life. What concerned me was her habit of flattery, and the twin habit of disparagement of others. I never knew her respond to any act or course of conduct which was morally lofty. She could not believe in it, nor, of course, enjoy it: and she seldom failed to "see through" it, and to delight in her superiority to admiration. She was a devoted daughter, where the duty was none of the easiest; and servants and neighbours were sincerely attached to her. The little intercourse I had with her was spoiled by her habit of flattery; but I always fell back on my old admiration of her as soon as she was out of sight, and her "Village" rose up in my memory. The portrait of her which appeared in (I think) 1854 in the "Illustrated London News" is one of the most remarkable likenesses I have ever seen: and it recalls a truly pleasant trait of her conduct. Some years ago, Lady Morgan published a furious comment on some unfavourable report of her beauty, at the very same time that Miss Mitford happened to be addressing a sonnet to an artist friend who had taken her portrait;--a morsel of such moral beauty that I was
grateful to the friend (whoever it might be) who took the responsibility of publishing it. The absence of personal vanity, the bonhommie, and the thoughtful grace of that sonnet contrasted singularly, (and quite undesignedly) with the pettish wrath of the sister author.--When I knew Miss Mitford, she was very intimate with the Talfourds. Mr. Talfourd (as he was then) was one of my occasional visitors; and he was also exulting in his dramatic success as the author of "Ion." To see Macready's representation of "Ion" was a treat which so enraptured London as to swell Talfourd's reputation beyond all rational bounds. I shared the general enthusiasm; and I told Talfourd so; for which I was sorry when I knew better, and learned that the beauty of the play is actually in spite of its undramatic quality. During my absence in America, Talfourd's sudden rise in reputation and success,--professional, parliamentary and literary, was something extraordinary: but the inevitable collapse was not long in coming. His nature was a kindly, but not a lofty one; and his powers were prodigiously overrated. He, of whom I had heard in my youth as a sentimental writer in the "Monthly Repository" died a judge; but he had outlived his once high reputation, which was a curious accident of the times, and might well mislead him when it misled society in general, for months, if not years. His most intimate friends loved him. By those who knew him less he was less liked,--his habits and manners being inferior to his social pretensions and position.
The most complete specimen of the literary adventurer of our time whom I
knew was one who avowed his position and efforts with a most respectable
frankness. Mr. Chorley, who early went to town, to throw himself upon it,
and see what he could make of it, was still about the same business as long
as I knew him. He had a really kind heart, and helpful hands to needy
brethren, and a small sort of generosity which was perfectly genuine, I am
confident. But his best qualities were neutralised by those which belonged
to his unfortunate position,--conceit and tuft-hunting, and
morbid dread of unusual opinions, and an unscrupulous hostility to new
knowledge. The faults of the Athenæum are well known:--Mr.
Chorley assumed to be the
sub-editor of the Athenæum at the time I knew him; and I suppose he is so still; and by a reference to it, his qualities, good and bad, may be best conveyed. For a considerable time, I overrated him, trusting, from his real goodness of heart when his nature had fair play, that he would improve. But I fear,--by what I recently saw of his singular affectations in dress and manners in public places, and by the deteriorating quality of the Athenæum, that the bad influences of his position have prevailed. From him alone,--unless it were also from Mr. Robertson,--I obtained a conception of the life of the literary adventurer as a vocation. Every author is in a manner an adventurer; and no one was ever more decidedly so than myself: but the difference between one kind of adventurer and another is, I believe, simply this;--that the one has something to say which presses for utterance, and is uttered at length without a view to future fortunes; while the other has a sort of general inclination toward literature, without any specific need of utterance, and a very definite desire for the honours and rewards of the literary career. Mr. Henry F. Chorley is, at least, an average specimen of the latter class; and perhaps something more. But the position is not a favourable one, intellectually or morally, to the individual, while it is decidedly injurious to the sincerity and earnestness of literature.
I twice saw Miss Landon,--the well known "L.E.L." of
twenty years ago. Both times it was in our own house that. I saw
her;--once, when she was accompanying Mrs. A.T. Thomson in her round
of calls, and a second time when she came to me for information about her
needful preparations for living at Cape Coast Castle,--a cousin of
mine having recently undergone an experience of that kind as the wife of
the Chief Justice of Sierra Leone. I was at first agreeably surprised by
Miss Landon's countenance, voice and manners. I thought her very
pretty, kind, simple and agreeable. The second time, it was all so sad that
my mother and I communicated to each other our sense of dismay, as soon as
the ladies were gone. Miss Landon was listless, absent, melancholy to a
striking degree. She found she was all wrong in her provision of clothes
and comforts,--was
going to take out all muslins and no flannels, and divers pet presents which would go to ruin at once in the climate of Cape Coast. We promised, that day, to go to Dr. Thomson's, and hear her new play before she went: and I could not but observe the countenance of listless gloom with which she heard the arrangement made. Before the day of our visit came round, it was discovered that she had been secretly married, and I saw her no more. The shock of her mysterious death soon followed the uncomfortable impression of that visit.
Miss Edgeworth happened never to be in London during my residence there;
but she sought some correspondence with me, both before and after my
American travel. Her kindly spirit shone out in her letters, as in all she
did; but her vigour of mind and accuracy of judgment had clearly given way,
under years and her secluded life. Her epistles,--three or four sheets
to my one,--confirmed in me a resolution I had pondered before; to
relax my habit of writing in good time; and to make to myself such friends,
among my nephews and nieces, as that I might rely on some of them for a
check, whenever the quality of my writing should seem to deteriorate. A
family connexion of Miss Edgeworth's had told me, long before, that
there was a garret at Edgeworth's-town full of boxes of
manuscript tales of Maria's which would certainly never see the
light. This was before the appearance of "Helen"; and the
appearance of "Helen," notwithstanding the high ability shown
in the first volume, confirmed my dread of going to press too often, and
returning to it too late. An infamous hoax, in which Miss Edgeworth was
betrayed to ridicule, in company with the whole multitude of eminent living
authors, deepened the warning to me. That was a remarkable hoax. I was the
only one of the whole order who escaped the toils. This happened through no
sagacity of my own, but by my mother's acuteness in detecting a
plot.
One day in 1833, when my mother and I were standing by the fire, waiting
for the appearance of dinner, a note arrived for me, which I went up to my
study to answer,--requesting that my mother and aunt would not wait
dinner for me. The note was this:--
"82, Seymour Street, Somer's Town: October 4th,
1833.
"MADAM,--A Frenchman named Adolphe Berthier, who
says he acted as Courier to you during one of your visits to France, has
applied for a situation in my establishment. He says that you will give him
a character. May I request the favour of an answer to this note, stating
what you know of him.
"I have the honour to be,
Madam,
"Your obedient Servant,
"GEORGE
MILLAR."
"To MISS MARTINEAU."
My reply was easy and short. There must be some mistake, as I had never been in France. As I came down with the note, my mother beckoned me into her room, and told me she suspected some trick. There had been some frauds lately by means of signatures fraudulently obtained. She could not see what any body could do to me in that way; but she fancied somebody wanted my autograph. The messenger was a dirty little boy, who could hardly have come from a gentleman's house; and he would not say where he had come from.--I objected that I could not, in courtesy, refuse an answer; and my only idea was that I was mistaken for some other of the many Miss Martineaus of the clan. My mother said she would write the answer in the character of a secretary or deputy: and so she fortunately did. We never thought of the matter again till the great Fraser Hoax burst upon the town,--to the ruin of the moral reputation of the Magazine, though to the intense amusement of all but the sufferers from the plot. Among these, I was not one. My mother's note was there, signed "E.M."; and the comment on it was fair enough. After a remark on their failure to get my autograph, the hoaxers observed that my story "French Wines and Politics" might have saved me the trouble of assuring them that I had never travelled in France. Miss Edgeworth suffered most,--and it really was suffering to her modest and ingenuous nature. She sent a long letter about her lady's-maids,--sadly garrulous in her desire not to injure a servant whom she might have forgotten. The heartless traitors sent a reply which drew forth, as they intended, a mass of twaddle; and having obtained this from her very goodness, they
made game of her.--Many of the other replies were characteristic enough. Scott's puzzles me most. I cannot see how there could be one from him, as he died in 1832, and was incapable of writing for long before: and the hoax could hardly have been whole years in preparation. Yet I distinctly remember the universal remark that Scott's was, of all, the most unlike the writer. He called the fictitious applicant a scoundrel, or a rascal, or something of that sort. Coleridge's was good,--"Should be happy to do any thing within my knowledge or power." But I need say no more, as the whole may be seen by a reference to Fraser's Magazine. All who may look back to it will be of the same mind with every gentleman whom I heard speak of the trick;--that plotter and publisher deserved to be whipped from one end of London to the other.
Among the eminent women who sought my acquaintance by letter, and whom I
have never seen, are Fredrika Bremer, and Miss Kelty, the author of the
first successful "religious novel," "the Favourite of
Nature," which I remember reading with much pleasure in my youth.
Miss Kelty wrote to me when I was ill at Tynemouth, under the notion that I
had been her school-fellow some years before I was born. She then
sent me her little volume, "Fireside Philosophy;" and I have
lately received from her her autobiography, published under the title of
"Reminiscences of Thought and Feeling." It is a painfully
impressive biography; but its tendency is to indispose me to intercourse
with the writer,--sincere and frank and interesting as she appears to
be. Systems of religion and philosophy are evidently something very
different to her from what they are to me; and I cannot lay open, or submit
to controversy, the most solemn and severe subjects of all, when they can
be made a means of excitement, and a theme of mere spiritual curiosity. But
I am glad to have read the Memoir; and glad that it exists,--painful
as it is: for it is a striking emanation of the spirit of the time,
and illustration of its experiences. Of the ability, courage and candour of
the writer, there can be no question.
If Miss Kelty desired correspondence with me on the ground of the
Atkinson Letters, Miss Bremer, I believe, dropped it for
the same reason. Miss Bremer also accosted me when I was ill at Tynemouth, in a letter of pretty broken English. Her style is so well known now that I need not describe the mingled sentimentality, fun and flattery of her letters. The flattery, and the want of what we call common sense, rather annoyed me till I was made sure, by her American experiences, that those were her weak points, and quite irremediable. I was a good deal startled, before she went to America, at a little incident which filled me with wonder. A neighbour lent me her novel, "Brothers and Sisters," the first volume of which we thought admirable: but the latter part about Socialism, Mesmerism, and all manner of isms which she did not at all understand, made us blush as we read. Presently a letter arrived for me from her announcing the approach of a copy of this book, which she hoped I should more or less enjoy, as I had in fact, by my recovery and some other incidents and supposed views of mine, suggested and instigated the book. I mention this, because Miss Bremer may probably have explained the origin of her book in a similar manner elsewhere; and I am really bound to explain that, in that book, she does not represent any views and opinions that I ever had. I fear I did not answer that letter; for, if I remember right, I could not find any thing to say that she would like to hear; for she could not be satisfied with what I can truly say to others, that I enjoy and admire her books exceedingly, after throwing out the "views" and the romance. The sketches of home life in Sweden are exquisitely done; and their coarseness of morals and manners is evidently merely Swedish, and not attributable to Miss Bremer,--unconscious as she evidently is of any unlikeless to the women around her. Her sentimental pietism is naturally offended by the accounts which have been given her of the Atkinson Letters, as I dare say it would be by the book itself; for philosophical research, with a view to truth, is quite out of her way. As she thinks every woman's influence springs from a hotbed of sentiment, she naturally supposes that my influence must be destroyed by my having taken root on an opposite ground. But she is not aware how much further sound reason and appeals to science go with the best of our people than a floating religiosity
which she proposes through the "Times" newspaper as the means of reforming the world through the influence of women. Much more than she has lost in England through that singular obtrusion have I, as it proves, gained by a directly opposite method of proceeding. But I dare say it would be difficult to convince her of this, and painful to her, in her life of dreams, to be so convinced. I hoped to have enjoyed more of her exquisite pictures of Swedish homes; and I yet trust that others may. It would be a world-wide benefit if this gifted woman could be induced to leave social reforms and published criticism to other hands, and to discharge while she lives the special function by which she scatters a rare delight broadcast over whole nations.
A frequent topic of conversation between my morning guests and myself
was the various methods of doing our work. Sooner or later, almost every
author asked me about my procedure, and told me his or hers. The point on
which I was at issue with almost every body was the time of beginning in
the morning. I doubt whether I was acquainted with anybody who went to work
during the fresh morning hours which have always been delightful to
me,--before the post came in, and interruption was abroad. I found my
friends differ much as to the necessity of revision, rewriting and
delay,--on which I have already given my opinion and experience. The
point on which perhaps they were most extensively agreed was that our
occupation changes our relation to books very remarkably. I remember Miss
Aikin complaining of the difficulty of reading for amusement, after some
years' experience of reading for purposes of historical or other
authorship. I found this for a time when stopped in my career by
illness: but, though I have never since read so fast or so
efficiently as in my youth, I have experienced some return of the youthful
pleasure and interest, though in regard to a different order of books. I
could not now read "Lalla Rookh" through before breakfast, as I
did when it appeared. I cannot read new novels. It is an actual incapacity;
while I can read with more pleasure than ever the old
favourites,--Miss Austen's and Scott's. My pleasure in
Voyages and Travels is almost an insanity; and History and philosophical
disquisition are more
attractive than ever. Still, I can sympathise heartily with those who declare that the privilege of being authors has deprived them of that of being amateur readers. The state of mind in which books are approached by those who are always, and those who have never been, in print is no doubt essentially different.--I believe Miss Aikin's method of writing is painstaking; and she has so high an opinion of revision by friends, that I have no doubt she copies very conscientiously. Her enjoyment of her work is very great. I remember her saying, at a time when her physician forbade her fatiguing herself with writing, that if ever she saw a proof-sheet again, she thought she should dance.
Mrs. Opie wrote slowly, and amidst a strenuous excitement of her
sensibilities. She liked trying the effect of her tales on hearers before
they went to press. I remember my mother and sister coming home with
swollen eyes and tender spirits after spending an evening with Mrs. Opie,
to hear "Temper," which she read in a most overpowering way.
When they saw it in print, they could hardly believe it was the same story.
Her handwriting was execrable, for smallness and irregularity. Miss
Aikin's is formal, but very legible. Miss Edgeworth's, an
ordinary "lady's hand." Mrs. Somerville's the same.
Miss Brontï's was exceedingly
small,
nervous and poor, but quite legible. Miss Edgeworth's method of
composition has been described already, on her own published authority.
Mrs. Somerville, being extremely short-sighted, brings her paper
close to her eyes, supported on a square piece of pasteboard. Miss
Brontï did the same; but her first manuscript was a very small square
book, or folding of paper, from which she copied, with extreme care. She
was as much surprised to find that I never copy at all as I was at her
imposing on herself so much toil which seems to me unnecessary.--Mr.
Rogers used to give me friendly admonition, now and then, to do every thing
in my practice of composition in an exactly opposite method to my
own:--to write a very little, and seldom; to put it by, and read
it from time to time, and copy it pretty often, and show it to good judges;
all which was much like advising me to change my hair and eyes to blonde
and blue, and to add a cubit to my stature. It was a curious
commentary on his counsel to hear Sydney Smith's account of Mr.
Rogers's method of composition. The story is in print, but
imperfectly given, and evidently without any consciousness that "the
brooding dove" of Shakspere is concerned in it,--"the
brooding dove, ere yet her golden couplets are disclosed." The
conversation took place soon after Rogers had given forth his epigram on
Lord Dudley:
"Ward has no heart, they say: but I deny it.
Ward
has a heart;--and gets his speeches by it."
"Has Rogers written any thing lately?" asked somebody; to which
another replied,--"No, I believe not. Nothing but a
couplet."
"Nothing but a couplet!" exclaimed Sydney Smith. "Why,
what would you have? When Rogers produces a couplet, he goes to
bed:
And the caudle is made:
And the knocker is tied:
And straw is laid down:
And when his friends send to inquire,--'Mr. Rogers is as well
as can be expected.'"
Mr. Rogers's rate of advance would not suit a really earnest
writer; and, granting that poetry is under wholly different conditions from
prose, it will still occur to every body that the world may be thankful
that Milton and Shakspere did not require so much time. Lope de Vega, with
his eighteen hundred plays, may have been in excess of speed; but
literature would have no chance if the elaboration and expression of
thought and feeling were so sophisticated as they must be by extreme
timidity or excessive polish.
Mr. Hallam, taking up a proof-sheet from my table, one day, while
I was at work on the second volume of the same book, expressed his surprise
at my venturing to press before the whole was finished and tied up; and
said that he should not have nerve to do this. I think he agreed with me
that much depends on whether the work is or is not composed of complete
sections,--of distinct parts,--each of which is absolutely
finished in its own
place. He was industrious when at work; but he did it for pleasure, and took as much time as he pleased about it. When I first knew him, his handwriting was one of the finest I ever saw; and there was a remarkable elegance about the whole aspect of his authorship.--Mr. Rogers's hand was old-fashioned and formal, but so clear that you might teach a child to read from it,--I have mentioned the appearance of Carlyle's proof-sheets, His manuscript is beautifully neat, when finished; and a page holds a vast quantity of his small upright writing. But his own account of his toil in authorship is melancholy. He cannot sleep for the sense of the burden on his mind of what he has to say; rises weary, and is wretched till he has had his coffee. No mode of expression pleases him; and, by the time his work is out, his faculties are over-wearied. It is a great object in his case to have the evenings amused, that his work may not take possession of his mind before bedtime. His excessive slowness is a perfect mystery to me,--considering that the work is burdensome. If he dwelt lovingly on its details, and on his researches, I could understand it. But perhaps he does, more than he is aware of. If not, his noble vocation is indeed a hard one.
Almost every one of these is late in sitting down; and I believe few
write every day. Mrs. Somerville's family did not breakfast early;
and she ordered her household affairs before sitting down to work. She
worked till two only: but then, it was such work! Dr. Somerville told
me that he once laid a wager with a friend that he would abuse Mrs.
Somerville in a loud voice to her face, and she would take no notice; and
he did so. Sitting close to her, he confided to his friend the most
injurious things,--that she rouged, that she wore a wig, and other
such nonsense, uttered in a very loud voice; her daughters were in a roar
of laughter, while the slandered wife sat placidly writing. At last, her
husband made a dead pause after her name, on which she looked up with an
innocent, "Did you speak to me?"
Sir Charles Lyell sits down late, and says he is satisfied with a very
few pages: but then, his work is of a kind which requires research as
he proceeds; and pages are no measure of work in
that case. In writing my "History of the Peace," I was satisfied with seven manuscript pages per day; whereas, in general, I do not like to fall short of ten or twelve.--Dr. Chalmers was another mystery to me. He told me that it was a heavy sin to write (for press) longer than two hours per day;--that two hours out of the twenty-four are as much of that severest labour as the human brain is fitted to endure. Yet he must have written faster than that, to produce his works. Dr. Channing entirely agreed with Dr. Chalmers, and was apt to tax people with rashness who wrote faster. His practice was, when in Rhoda Island, to saunter round the garden once every hour, and then come back to the desk: and when in Boston, he went to the drawing-room instead, or walked about in his library. No person can judge for another; but we used to compare notes. I wondered how he could ever get or keep his ideas in train, under such frequent interruption: and he was no less surprised at my experience;--that every hour is worth double the last for six hours; and that eight are not injurious when one's subject naturally occupies them: but then, it is an indispensable condition that there shall be no interruptions. The dissipation of mind caused by interruption is a worse fatigue than that of continuous attention.--Southey and Miss Edgeworth wrote in the common sitting-room, in the midst of the family. This I cannot understand, though I am writing this Memoir under circumstances which compel me to surrender my solitude. Under a heart-disease, I cannot expect or ask to be left alone: and I really find no gêne from the presence of one person, while writing this simple and plain account of my life. I can imagine that Miss Edgeworth's stories would not require very much concentration; but how a man can write epics in the midst of the family circle is inconceivable, even to some of Southey's warmest admirers. The comment is inevitable;--that his poems might have been a good deal better, if he had placed himself under the ordinary conditions of good authorship.--Wordsworth was accustomed to compose his verses in his solitary walks, carry them in his memory, and get wife or daughter to write them down on his return.--The varieties of method are indeed great. One ac-
quaintance of mine takes a fit of writing,--,a review or a pamphlet,--and sends his wife to an evening party without him. He scribbles, as fast as his pen will go, on half sheets of paper, which he lets fly to the floor when finished;--i.e., when a dozen or a score of lines run awry, so as to cover the greater part of the expanse. His wife, returning after midnight, finds him sitting amidst a litter of paper, some inches deep,--unless he has previously summoned the butler to sweep them up in his arms and put them somewhere. By five in the morning the pamphlet is done. How it is ever got into order for press, I cannot imagine.--But enough! I have met with almost every variety of method among living authors; and almost every variety of view as to the seriousness of their vocation. But I believe the whole fraternity are convinced that the act of authorship is the most laborious effort that men have to make: and in this they are probably right: for I have never met with a physician who did not confirm their conviction by his ready testimony.
going out free from all misgiving and anxiety about pecuniary matters; so I paid in my £400, and carried credits to that amount, without being under obligation to any body.--Mr. Bentley the publisher met me one day at dinner at Miss Berry's, and he sounded me about a book on America. I rather think, from his subsequent conduct, that that was his real object in getting an introduction to me, though he put forward another;---his desire to issue my Series in a new form. I told him as I told others, that I knew nothing of any American book, and that I was going to the United States with other objects,--the first of which was to obtain rest and recreation. I went and returned entirely free from any kind of claim on me, on any hand, for a book. I can truly say that I travelled without any such idea in my mind. I am sure that no traveller seeing things through author spectacles, can see them as they are; and it was not till I looked over my journal on my return that I decided to write "Society in America." (I never can bear to think of the title. My own title was "Theory and Practice of Society in America;" but the publishers would not sanction it. They had better have done so.)
My first desire was for rest. My next was to break through any selfish
"particularity" that might be growing on me with years, and any
love of ease and indulgence that might have arisen out of success,
flattery, or the devoted kindness of my friends, I believed that it would
be good for me to "rough it" for a while, before I grew too old
and fixed in my habits for such an experiment. I must in truth add that two
or three of my most faithful friends, intimate with my circumstances,
counselled my leaving home for a considerable time, for the welfare of all
who lived in that home. My position had become a difficult one there, even
while my work afforded an incontestable reason for my being sought and made
much of. If my social position remained the same after the work was done,
my mother's happiness would not, they thought, be promoted by my
presence. This was too obviously true already: and I took the advice
of my friends to go without any misgiving, and to stay away as long as I
found it desirable. I made provision for my mother's income not being
lessened by my absence: but she
declined, for generous reasons, all aid of that sort. She never touched the money I left for the purpose, but received in my place a lady who made an agreeable third in the little household. I have already said that Lord Henley's suggestions first turned my project in the direction of the United States; and the reasons he urged were of course prominent in my mind during my travels.
I was singularly fortunate in my companion. I had been rather at a loss
at first what to do about this. There are great difficulties in joining a
party for so very long a journey, extending over so long a time. To be with
new friends is a fearful risk under such an ordeal: and the ordeal is
too severe, in my opinion, to render it safe to subject an old friendship
to it. There was a plan for a time that the same friends with whom I was to
have gone to Italy (if the continent had been my playground) should go with
me to America: but there were aged parents and other reasons against
their going so far; and my friends and I went on our several ways.--It
would never do, as I was aware, to take a servant, to suffer from the proud
Yankees on the one hand and the debased slaves on the other: nor
would a servant have met my needs in other ways. Happily for me a lady of
very superior qualifications, who was eager to travel, but not rich enough
to indulge her desire, offered to go with me, as companion and helper, if I
would bear her expenses. She paid her own voyages, and I the rest; and most
capitally she fulfilled her share of the compact. Not only well educated
but remarkably clever, and, above all, supremely rational, and with a
faultless temper, she was an extraordinary boon as a companion. She was as
conscientious as able and amiable. She toiled incessantly, to spare my
time, strength and faculties. She managed the business of travel, and was
for ever on the watch to supply my want of ears,--and, I may add, my
defects of memory. Among the multitudes of strangers whom I saw, and the
concourse of visitors who presented themselves every where, I should have
made hourly mistakes but for her. She seemed to make none,--so
observant, vigilant and retentive were her faculties. We fulfilled the term
of our compact without a shadow of failure, but rather with large
supererogation of good works
on her part; and she returned under the care of the excellent captain,--a friend of some of my family,--who brought me home four months later. I remained that much longer, for the purpose of accompanying a party of friends to the Northern Lakes, and some new territory which it was important that I should visit. I could not afford this additional trip to more than myself; and there was not room for more than one: so my comrade preceded me homewards, sorry not to have taken that northern trip, but well satisfied with the enterprise she had achieved. She has been married for many years; and it is pleasant still to talk over our American adventures in her house or in mine. Her husband and children must be almost as glad as she and I that she had the spirit to go.
After leaving home, I paid visits to my family and friends, (followed
from place to place by my last proofs) and was joined by Miss J. at
Liverpool, a day or two before we sailed. The first steam voyage to the
United States took place in 1838: and I set forth in 1834: so
there was no thought of a quicker passage than a month. I did not wish for
a shorter one; and when it stretched out to forty-two days, I was
not at all discontented. I have enjoyed few things more in life than the
certainty of being out of the way of the post, of news, and of passing
strangers for a whole month: and this seems to show how overwrought I
must have been at the close of my long work. My felicity would have been
complete if I could have looked forward to a month of absolute
idleness: but my constitutional weakness,--my difficulty in
saying "No," was in my way, and a good deal spoiled my holiday.
A friend, whom indeed I was bound to oblige, requested me to write for him
a long chapter for a book he contemplated, to be called "How to
Observe." The subject he gave me was Morals and Manners. Before my
return, his proposed volume was given up; and Mr. Knight was arranging
about a series of volumes, under that title. The Chapter I wrote on board
ship served as the basis of my own volume for that series; and thus, the
reluctant toil was not thrown away. But thoroughly reluctant it was. The
task weighed upon me more than the writing of a quarto volume
would have done at another time: and circumstances of time and place were indeed most unfavourable to work of the kind. My long confinement within stringent bounds of punctuality had produced bad effects,--narrowing my mind, and making my conscience tender about work. So, when that chapter was done at last, I wrote no more till I was settled at home again, in the autumn of 1836,--with two small exceptions. It was necessary to accede to a request to bring out myself, while in America, two volumes of "Miscellanies," under penalty of seeing it done by some unauthorised person, with alterations, and probably the introduction of pieces which would be as new to me as to any body. In order to secure the copyright to the American proprietors, I wrote an essay for their edition: (on "Moral Independence.") Being asked to furnish a story for some Sunday school festival, I wrote the little tale "The Children who lived by the Jordan." These two trifles were all I wrote for press, as far as I remember, for above two years. I need not say that I had a large correspondence to sustain,--a correspondence perpetually increasing as my travel and my intercourses extended: and I kept a very ample journal.
On the morning of the 4th of August, we were summoned on board our
ship,--the United States. As I stood on the wharf in my
sea-dress, watching the warping out of the vessel, I saw an old
acquaintance observing the same process. Sir James Parke was one of the
Judges then at Liverpool on circuit; and he and some ladies were amusing
themselves with seeing the American packet clear out. He would hardly
believe me when I told him I was going to step on board presently; and for
how long. He was the last of my London acquaintances whom I saw before that
long absence.
I have said quite enough about that voyage, and very nearly enough about
my American travel, in the two books I published after my return. One
subject remains nearly untouched in those books; and on that alone I
propose now to speak at any length. I refer to my own personal connexion
with the great controversy on negro slavery which was then just beginning
to stir the American community. While speaking largely of the
contro-
versy in my book, I said as little as possible of my own relation to it, because some undeserved suspicion of resentment on my own account might attach to my historical narrative; and because it was truly my object to present an impartial view, and by no means to create an interest in my personal adventures. In this place I feel it right to tell my story. Supported as it is by documents in the hands of my Executor, and by the testimony of Americans who know me best, it will stand as a record of what really took place, in answer to some false reports and absurd misrepresentations. For one instance of what Americans,--even American gentlemen,--will persuade themselves to do in the case of the Slavery question, which seems to pervert all its advocates;--I heard some time since that two American gentlemen, who were college youths when I saw them, claim the credit of having beguiled me into publishing some nonsensical stories with which they mystified me when I was the guest of their parents. I not only clearly remember that I had no conversation with those boys (who were shy of my trumpet) but I possess the best possible evidence that it is their present statement which is the mystifying one. By some lucky inspiration of prudence, I kept a lock-up copy of my American books, in which the name of every authority for every statement is noted in the margin. I have referred to this copy since I heard of the claim of these two gentlemen; and I have called my biographer to witness that the names of the gentlemen in question do not once occur.--So many false things having been said about my American experiences, in regard to the anti-slavery agitation, during my life, it is probable that there may be more when I am no longer here to contradict them: and therefore it is that I now give a plain account of what really took place. I do not altogether trust my memory for an experience which is however deeply impressed upon it. My journal, and my entire American correspondence on that subject are my warrant: and I have before me also the narrative as written down many years ago, from the same materials, and when my remembrance of the events of 1835 and 1836 was so fresh as to obviate any objection that can be made to my statement on the score of lapse of time.
It will be remembered that I wrote, near the beginning of my Series, a
number called "Demerara," which was as open a committal of
myself, on every ground, to hostility to slavery as was possible. I therein
declared myself satisfied that slavery was indefensible, economically,
socially, and morally. Every body who knew any thing about me at all, at
home or in America, knew that from the spring of 1832 I was completely
committed against slavery. The American passengers on board our ship were
certainly aware of it before they saw me; and so was a Prussian
fellow-passenger, Dr. Julius, who had been introduced to me in
London as a philanthropist going to America with a direct commission from
the late King of Prussia to inquire into the state of prison discipline
there. Every one on board regarded Dr. Julius as so commissioned; but he
told Miss J. and me, one day, when in a communicative mood, that he had
sought the sanction of the King to his object, and believed he had obtained
it: but that when he was admitted to an audience, to take leave, he
found that the King had forgotten all about it (if he had really known) and
that nothing could make him understand that this was a leave-taking
visit, or why Dr. Julius presented himself, though the King approved of
inquiries into prison-discipline. Whether there was a prevalent
doubt about the reality of his commission, or whether his habit of petty
concealment induced suspicion, I do not know; but the impression on board
ship, and in American society afterwards, certainly was that there was
something mysterious and doubtful about him. I was disposed to conclude, on
the whole, that there was nothing worse in the case than that he was a Jew,
and was anxious to conceal the fact. The clearest thing in the matter was
that, with all his big talk, he was in a continual state of panic. He was
afraid of the elements and of man: convulsed with terror during a
storm; and in great horror on the subject of Slavery, though the American
"reign of terror" was only then beginning, and it had not, I
believe, been heard of in Europe. Mr. George Thompson had
half-engaged a cabin in our ship for himself and his family, but was
by some accident prevented sailing so soon. It was very well: for,
while we were crossing the
sea, the first serious pro-slavery riots were taking place in New York;--those riots by which the Messrs. Tappan were driven from the city, their houses destroyed, and their furniture burnt in the streets.
The last news I heard of Dr. Julius was some time after my return to
England: and I acknowledge that I was considerably disturbed by it.
After I had left Washington, he petitioned for certain State Papers, and
government information, either in my name expressly, or on the ground of
our being fellow-travellers. I need not say that this was without
any authority whatever from me, or that I took pains to disavow in the
right quarter all connexion with Dr. Julius's inquiries. I was
distinctly informed that the papers and information would not have been
granted, but on the supposition that they were asked for by me, for my own
use.
When we took in a pilot at Sandy Hook, we all observed how hastily he
tossed down his bundle of newspapers for the amusement of the passengers,
and then beckoned the captain to the stern; and we were not so absorbed in
the newspapers as not to perceive that the conversation in the stern was
earnest and long. Though there was a good deal about me and my reception in
those newspapers, it never occurred to me that I was the subject of the
conversation between the captain and pilot. When the pilot went to the
wheel, the captain requested a private interview with an American lady who
had talked with me a good deal during the voyage. Long after, I heard that
he wanted to know from her what my opinions were upon Slavery; and, if
anti-slavery, whether I had ever professed them publicly. It is odd
that she did not tell him, (what she certainly knew) that I was completely
committed to anti-slavery opinions by my writings. By her own
account, her reply to the captain was that I was opposed to Slavery; but
that I had been more than once heard to say on board, when questioned about
my opinion of American institutions, that I went to learn, and not to
teach. The captain seemed satisfied to let Slavery pass muster among
"American institutions;" and he declared that he should now
know what to say. He avowed that if he had been less well
satisfied, he should not have ventured to put me ashore: and he made it his particular request that I should hear nothing of what had passed. The pilot had warned him that if Mr. Thompson was on board, he had better hide him in his cabin; for, if his presence was known in New York, he would be a dead man before night.
Knowing nothing of all this, being carefully kept ignorant while in New
York, (as many resident ladies were) of the fact of the riots, and
travelling for weeks among persons who either took no interest in the
subject or anxiously ignored it, Miss J. and I long remained in a state of
profound unconsciousness of the condition of society around us. It was not
merely as travellers that we were thus kept in the dark. On the last
occasion of my being at New York, I was assured by the ladies of Mrs.
Jeffrey's family that I was entirely misinformed about there having
been any disturbances there at all in the autumn of 1834. I told them the
particulars,--some notorious, and others of unquestionable truth; but
they believed me so little that they asked husband and brother about it, in
the middle of dinner, in the presence of the servants. The gentlemen could
not, of course, deny the facts; but they did their best to make light of
them, on the one hand; and, on the other, accounted for their silence to
the wondering ladies by declaring that they were ashamed of the whole
business, and did not wish to alarm or annoy the ladies unnecessarily. Such
was the bondage in which the inhabitants of the boasted republic were
living so long ago as 1834. Such bondage was, to English women, an
inconceivable and incredible thing, till the fact was forced on our
observation by further and more various travel.
We went among the Sedgwicks, on our ascent of the Hudson: we went
to Niagara, and by Western Pennsylvania to Philadelphia, where we staid six
weeks, proceeding to Baltimore (a Slave State) in December. There was all
this while scarcely any thing to remind us of the subject of Slavery but
the virulent abuse of the Abolitionists in the newspapers. I afterwards
learned that the whole country was divided into three parties: the
Pro-slavery multitude, the Colonisationists (represented in
Europe by the before-mentioned Elliot Cresson), and the Abolitionists. The Colonisationists were simply a selection from the Pro-slavery multitude, who did the Slave States the service of ridding them of clever and dangerous slaves, and throwing a tub to the whale of adverse opinion, and easing lazy or weak consciences, by professing to deal, in a safe and beneficial manner, with the otherwise hopeless difficulty. Care was taken, so early as my visit to Philadelphia, and yet more at Baltimore and Washington, that I should hear much in favour of the Colonisation scheme, and nothing but horrors of the Abolitionists. I acknowledge here, once for all, that it is very probable that expressions unfavourable to the Abolitionists may be fairly remembered and quoted against me throughout the Southern and Western States. I never wavered, of course, in my detestation of Slavery; and I never intended to take any part against the Abolitionists; but it is scarcely possible to hear from day to day, for ten months, that persons whom one has never seen are fanatical, bloodthirsty and so forth, without catching up some prejudice against them. We were constantly and gravely informed, as a matter of fact, that Garrison and his followers used incitemerits to the slaves to murder their masters, and sent agents and publications into the South to effect insurrections. Till we had the means of ascertaining that these charges were totally and absolutely false,--Garrison and most of his followers being non-resistants, and thoroughly consistent opponents of physical force,--it was really impossible to remain wholly unimpressed by them. I steadily declared my intention to hear, when opportunity offered, what the Abolitionists, as well as others, had to say for themselves: but it certainly never entered my imagination that I could possibly find them the blameless apostles of a holy cause which I afterwards saw that they were.
The first perplexing incident happened at Philadelphia, ten or twelve
weeks after our landing. A lady of that city whose manners were eminently
disagreeable to us, beset us very vigorously,--obtruding her society
upon us, and loading me with religious books for children,--some of
her own writing, and some by others. When we made our farewell calls, we
were
not sorry to be told that this lady could see no visitors, as she had a cold. We were speeding away from the door, when a servant ran after us, with an unwelcome summons to the lady's chamber. She made me sit beside her on her sofa, while Miss J. sat opposite,--out of my hearing. The lady having somehow introduced the subject of the blacks, a conversation ensued between her and Miss J. of which I did not hear a syllable. I saw my companion look embarrassed, and could not conceive why, till the lady turned full upon me with, "Can it be as your friend assures me? She says that if any young person known to you was attached to a negro, you would not interfere to prevent their marrying." I replied that I had no notion of interfering between people who were attached; that I had never contemplated the case she proposed; but that I did not believe I should ever interfere with lovers proposing to marry. The lady exclaimed against my thus edging off from the question,--which I had not the least intention of doing: and she drove her inquiries home. Mystery is worse than any other mischief in such matters; and I therefore replied that, if the union was suitable in other respects, I should think it no business of mine to interfere on account of complexion. The lady cried out in horror, "Then you are an Amalgamationist!" "What is that?" I asked: and then remonstrated against foreign travellers being classified according to the party terms of the country. I was not then aware of the extent to which all but virtuous relations are found possible between the whites and blacks, nor how unions to which the religious and civil sanctions of marriage are alone wanting, take place wherever there are masters and slaves, throughout the country. When I did become aware of this, I always knew how to stop the hypocritical talk against "amalgamation." I never failed to silence the cant by pointing to the rapidly increasing mulatto element of the population, and asking whether it was the priest's service which made the difference between holy marriage and abhorred "amalgamation." But I was not yet possessed of this defence when assailed by the Philadelphia saint.--When we rose to go, the woman insisted on kissing me, and poured out lamentations about my departure.
The moment we were in the street, I said to my friend, "You must be careful, and not get me or yourself into any more such scrapes till we know what people mean on this subject of the blacks." Miss J. justified herself completely. She had been so questioned that she could not avoid saying as much as she did, unless by the more dangerous method of refusing to reply. This was the beginning of many troubles: but the troubles would have occurred from some other beginning, if we had escaped this.
The day before we left Philadelphia, Dr. Julius called at the house
where we were staying. He had just arrived from New York. He burst into the
room with an air of joy which did not look very genuine; and I presently
saw that he was absent and uneasy. After staying an unconscionable time,
while I was fidgety about my preparations, he explained a long series of
unintelligible nods and winks by asking to speak with me alone for a few
minutes. My host (a clergyman, and in character, though not in
circumstances, the original of Hope in "Deerbrook") left the
room, taking his little boy with him: and then Dr. Julius, turning as
white as the marble chimney-piece, said he came to warn me to
proceed no further south than Philadelphia. He had not been two hours in
the city before he heard that I had avowed myself an amalgamationist, and
that my proceeding southwards would bring upon me certain insult and
danger. It appeared to me that there was every reason why this conversation
should not be private; and I summoned my host. While I
repeated to him what Dr. Julius had been saying, he too turned as pale as
ashes; and between his ghastly countenance, and the gesticulations of Dr.
Julius, the scene was a strange one. Dr. Julius declared the whole city was
ringing with the news.--After a moment's consideration, I
declared that I should not alter my plans in any respect. I was a
well-known anti-slavery writer before I thought of going to
America; and my desire to see the operation of the system of Slavery could
hardly wrongly interpreted by any one who took an interest in my
proceedings. I was disposed to trust to the openness of plans, and the
simplicity of my purpose, and to the common
sense of those among whom I was going. Dr. Julius shrugged his shoulders; and my host suggested a method by which the difficulty might be probably obviated. The Editors of the two leading Philadelphia newspapers were well acquainted with me, and would undoubtedly, according to custom, give their report of me on my departure. They could with perfect truth, and would on the slightest hint, declare that my opinions on slavery were candidly held, and that they afforded no obstacle to the most friendly intercourse with me. I positively forbade any such movement on the part of my personal friends, feeling that I should never succeed in seeing the Americans as they were, if my road was paved for me from one society to another. Knowing Dr. Julius's tendency to panic, I felt little apprehension from any thing he could say; and I particularly requested my host and hostess not to alarm Miss J. with any account of what had passed. I took on myself the duty which belonged to me, of enlightening her sufficiently to put her own case into her own hands.
At Baltimore, further obscure intimations of danger were conveyed to
me: and at Washington, so many, that I felt the time was come for
laying the case before my companion. Reflecting that she and I had
discussed the whole matter of my anti-slavery opinions before we
left home; and that she was very prudent and extremely clever, and fully
able to take care of herself, all I thought it necessary to do was
this.
In our own room at Washington, I spread out our large map, showed the
great extent of Southern States through which we should have to pass,
probably for the most part without an escort; and always, where we were
known at all, with my anti-slavery reputation uppermost in every
body's mind.--"Now, Louisa," said I, "does it
not look awful? If you have the slightest fear, say so now, and we will
change our route."--"Not the slightest," said she.
"If you are not afraid, I am not." This was all she ever heard
from me of danger.
The intimations I refer to came to me in all manner of ways. I was
specially informed of imprisonments for opinions the same as are found in
"Demerara;" which indeed might well be under
the laws of South Carolina, as I found them in full operation. Hints were offered of strangers with my views not being allowed to come away alive. But the most ordinary cunning or sensitiveness of the slave-holders would account for attempts like these to frighten a woman from going where she might see slavery for herself. I was more impressed by less direct warning; by words dropped, and countenances of anxiety and pity.--Before I left Washington, I wrote to my Philadelphia host and hostess, who were not only my most intimate American friends, but witnesses of the first attempt to alarm me. I told them of the subsequent incidents of the same kind, and that I had communicated them to no other person whatever, supposing that they might be only empty threats. As they might however be real, I wrote to assure these friends, and other friends and my family through them, that I went into the danger warily: and I requested that my letter might be kept in evidence of this, in case of my never returning.
As for the terms on which I went, I took timely care that there should
be no mistake about that. I carried letters to some of the leading
statesmen at Washington; and the first to acknowledge them were the
senators from the Southern States. On the very first day, several of these
gentlemen came straight from the senate, with their wives, not only to
offer me their services at Washington, but to engage us to visit them at
their homes, in our progress through the South. Before I pledged myself to
make any visit whatever, I took care to make it understood that I was not
to be considered as silenced on the subject of slavery by the hospitality
of slave-owners. I made an express reservation of my freedom in this
matter, declaring that I should not, of course, publish names or facts
which could draw attention upon individuals in private life; but that it
must not be forgotten that I had written upon Slavery, and that I should
write on it again, if I saw reason. They all made in substance the same
reply; that my having published "Demerara" was the main reason
why they wished me to visit them. They desired me to see their
"peculiar institution" for myself: they would show me the
best and the wont instances of its working; and
their hope was--so they declared,--that I should publish exactly what I saw. The whole conduct and conversation of my southern entertainers showed an expectation of seeing in print all that was then passing. I often told them that they were much more sure than I was that I should write a book. I am not aware that there was ever any misunderstanding between them and me on this head; and if any charge of my having accepted hospitalities from slave-holders, and then denounced their mode of life has ever been brought, or should ever be brought against me, I repel it as wholly groundless. A fair lady of blue-stocking Boston said of me after my book appeared, "She has ate of our bread and drunk of our cup; and she calls dear, delightful, intellectual Boston pedantic!" on which a countryman of the complainant remarked, "If she thinks Boston pedantic, did you mean to bribe her, by a cup of tea, not to say so?" The southerners might be more easily excused for this sort of unreasonableness and cant: but I never heard that they were guilty of it. Angry as they were with my account of slavery, I am not aware that they imputed ingratitude and bad manners to me in consequence.
It was not in the south that I saw or heard any thing to remind me of
personal danger: nor yet in the west, though the worst inflictions of
Lynch law were beginning there about that time. My friend and I were in
fact handed on by the families of senators, to the care and kindness of a
long succession of them, from the day we reached Washington, till we
emerged from the Slave States at Cincinnati. Governor Hayne and his
friends, and Mr. Calhoun's family secured every attention to us at
Charleston: and Colonel Preston was our host at Columbia. Judge
Porter, of the federal senate, and Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of
Louisiana, was the familiar friend who took us in charge at New
Orleans: and Mr. Clay conducted us on board the steamer
there,--his son-in-law being our escort up the
Mississippi, and our host afterwards in Kentucky, where Mr. Clay, whose
estate adjoined, spent part of every day with us. No one of these, nor any
other of our intimate acquaintance can ever, I am sure, have complained of
my act of publishing on the institution which
they exhibited to me, however they may dislike my opinions on it.
Our host at Charleston was a clergyman from the north, with a northern
wife, who had rushed into that admiration of Slavery which the native
ladies do not entertain. I never met with a lady of southern origin who did
not speak of Slavery as a sin and a curse,--the burden which oppressed
their lives; whereas Mrs. Gilman observed to me, in the slave-market
at Charleston, in full view of a woman who, with her infant, was on the
stand,--that her doctrine was that the one race must be subordinate to
the other, and that if the blacks should ever have the upper hand, she
should not object to standing on that table with her children, and being
sold to the highest bidder. This lady's publications bear the same
testimony. Her brother-in-law is Mr. Ellis Gray Loring of
Boston, well known as an avowed Abolitionist, and a most generous
contributor to the cause. The Gilmans adored this
brother-in-law,--speaking of his abolitionism as his
only fault. I was gratified by receiving, in their house, a message from
him, to say that his wife and he would call on me as soon as I went into
their neighbourhood, and that they begged I would reserve some time for a
visit to them. I was aware that this excellent pair, and also Dr. and Mrs.
Follen, were, though abolitionists, not "blood-thirsty"
nor "fanatical." One of my chief objects in meeting their
advances was to learn what the abolitionists really thought, felt and
intended. I had attended Colonisation meetings, whenever invited, and heard
all that the advocates of slavery had to say; and I made no secret of my
intention to give the same ample hearing to the abolitionists, if they
should desire to instruct me in their views and objects.
My first intercourse with any abolitionist took place when I was staying
in Kentucky, on my way northwards, and when Mr. Clay was daily
endeavouring, at his daughter's house or his own, to impress me in
favour of slavery. A long and large letter from Boston arrived one day. The
hand was strong and flowing; the wording wonderfully terse, the style
wonderfully eloquent; but the whole appearing to me rather intrusive, and
not a little fanatical. It was from her who has been my dear, honoured and beloved friend from that year to the present day. When I saw the signature "Maria Weston Chapman," I inquired who she was, and learned that she was one of the "fanatics." The occasion of her writing was that some saying of mine had reached her which showed, she thought, that I was blinded and beguiled by the slave-holders; and she bespoke for the abolitionists, in the name of their cause, a candid hearing. She then proceeded to remonstrance. I cannot bear to think of my answer. I have no clear remembrance of it; but I am sure it was repulsive, cold and hard. I knew nothing of what was before her eyes,--the beginning of the reign of terror in New England on the slave question; and I knew myself to be too thoroughly opposed to slavery to need caution from an abolitionist. I was not aware of the danger of the Colonisation snare. I was, in short, though an English abolitionist, quite unaware of the conditions of abolitionism in America. Mrs. Chapman received my reply, and then myself, with a spirit of generosity, disinterestedness and thorough nobleness which laid a broad foundation for friendship between us, whenever I should become worthy of it: but not one woman in a thousand, (and that one in a thousand only for the sake of the cause) would have ever addressed me again after receiving my letter, if my general impression of it is at all correct.
In August, 1835, Miss J. and I were the guests of a clergyman at
Medford, near Boston: and there I saw Dr. and Mrs. Follen, and Mr.
and Mrs. Ellis Gray Loring, and enjoyed sufficient intercourse with them to
find that some abolitionists at least were worthy of all love and honour.
We travelled in other parts of Massachusetts before paying our Boston
visits; and it was in passing through Boston, on my way from Salem to
Providence, that I saw, but without being aware of it, the first outbreak
of Lynch law that I ever witnessed. In that August, 1835, there had been a
public meeting in Boston (soon and long repented of) to denounce, rebuke
and silence the abolitionists; a proceeding which imposed on the
abolitionists the onus of maintaining the
liberty of speech and action in Massachusetts. How they
did it, few or none can have forgotten; how, on the 21st of the following October, the women held their proper meeting, well knowing that it might cost them their lives; how. Mr. Garrison was mobbed and dragged through the streets towards the tar-kettle which he knew to be heating near at hand, but was saved by the interference and clever management of a stout truckman, who got him into the gaol: and how Mrs. Chapman, the leader of the band of confessors, remained in possession of the moral victory of the day. Miss J. and I asked the meaning of the crowded state of the streets in the midst of Boston that day; and our fellow-travellers in the coach condescended to explain it by the pressure near the post-office on foreign post day! At Providence, we heard what had really happened. President Wayland agreed with me at the time about the iniquitous and fatal character of the outrage; but called on me, after a trip to Boston, to relieve my anxiety by the assurance that it was all right,--the mob having been entirely composed of gentlemen! Professor Henry Ware, who did and said better things afterwards, told me that the plain truth was, the citizens did not choose to let such a man as Garrison live among them,--admitting that Garrison's opinions on slavery were the only charge against him. Lawyers on that occasion defended a breach of the laws; ladies were sure that the gentlemen of Boston would do nothing improper: merchants thought the abolitionists were served quite right,--they were so troublesome to established routine; the clergy thought the subject so "low" that people of taste should not be compelled to hear any thing about it; and even Judge Story, when I asked him whether there was not a public prosecutor who might prosecute for the assault on Garrison, if the abolitionists did not, replied that he had given his advice (which had been formally asked) against any notice whatever being taken of the outrage,--the feeling being so strong against the discussion of slavery, and the rioters being so respectable in he city. These things I myself heard and saw, or I would not ask any body to believe what I could hardly credit myself. The rural settlements were sounder in principle and conduct; and so were the working men of Boston, and many young men not yet trammelled and corrupted by
the interests of trade and the slavery of public opinion: but the public opinion of Boston was what I have represented in the autumn of 1835, when I was unexpectedly and very reluctantly, but necessarily, implicated in the struggle.
It was in the interval between that dispersed meeting of the
abolitionists and their next righteous attempt to assemble, that Miss J.
and I returned to the neighbourhood,--paying our first visit at
Professor Henry Ware's at Cambridge. Dr. and Mrs. Follen called on us
there one morning; and Dr. Follen said, with a mild and serious
countenance, "I wish to know whether we understood you
rightly,--that you would attend an abolition meeting, if opportunity
offered." I repeated what I had said before;--that, having
attended Colonisation meetings, and all others where I thought I could gain
light on the subject of slavery, I was not only willing but anxious to hear
what the Abolitionists had to say, on their public as well as their private
occasions. Dr. Follen said that the opportunity might presently occur, as
there was to be a meeting on the next Wednesday, (November 18th) adding
that some were of opinion that personal danger was incurred by attending
abolition meetings at present. This was, of course, nothing to me in a case
where a principle, political or moral, was involved; and I said so. Dr.
Follen inquired whether, if I should receive an invitation to attend a
meeting in a day or two, I would go. I replied that it must depend on the
character of the meeting. If it was one at which ladies would merely settle
their accounts and arrange their local affairs, I would rather defer it
till a safer time: but if it was one where I could gain the knowledge
I wanted, I would go, under any circumstances. Dr. Follen said the meeting
would be of the latter kind: and that, as it was impossible to hold
it at the Anti-slavery Office without creating a mob, the meeting
was to be held at the house of Mr. Francis Jackson. This house was only
just finished, and built according to the taste of this most faithful
citizen, for himself and his daughters: but he said he would
willingly sacrifice it, rather than the ladies of Boston should not have a
place to meet in.
The Follens had not been gone many minutes before the
invi-
tation arrived. It was signed by the President and the Secretary of the Ladies' Society; and it included in its terms any friend whom I might like to take with me. The note was enclosed in one from Mr. Loring, proposing to call for Miss J. and me on the Wednesday, that we might dine early at his house, and go to the meeting with his family party. His house was near Mr. Jackson's, and it was not considered safe to go otherwise than on foot. I had before satisfied myself as to the duty of not involving any of my hosts in any of my proceedings on the abolition question. But it was now necessary to give Miss J. time to consider the part she should take. Three ladies, all inadequate to the subject, were dining at Dr. Ware's that day; and it was impossible at the moment to have any private conversation with my companion. I therefore handed her the letters across the table, with a sign of silence; and she had five hours for reflection before the guests departed. "Have you read those letters?" I then inquired of her.--"Yes."--"Do you mean to go?"--"Certainly, if you do."--"Shall I say so for you?"--"If you please."--I therefore accepted both invitations for both of us, and returned to the drawing-room, where I soon found an opportunity of saying to my host and hostess, "I do not ask or wish an opinion from you: but I tell you a fact. Miss J. and I are going to dine at Mr. Loring's on Wednesday, to attend an abolition meeting." Dr. Ware turned round as he stood in the window, and said, "You will be mobbed. You will certainly be mobbed."--"Perhaps so," I replied. I then explained that Mr. Loring was coming for us; so that none of our Cambridge friends would be seen in the streets, or involved in our proceeding. I was sorry to hear, the next morning, that my host had desired Mr. Loring not to trouble himself to fetch us, as Mrs. Ware had some shopping to do in Boston, and Dr. Ware would drive us there in his "carry-all."--From time to time during the intervening day, our host observed, "You will certainly be mobbed:" and when I once more and finally explained that this would make no difference, he jokingly declared that he said it so often, partly to be proved right, if any accident should happen, and partly for a jest, if all went well.
At Mr. Loring's house we found Mrs. Chapman and one of her
sisters, and the Rev. Samuel May. During dinner, the conversation was
chiefly on the Southern slave-holders, whose part was taken by Miss
J. and myself, so far as to plead the involuntariness of their position,
and the extreme perplexity of their case,--over and above the evil
conditions of prejudice and ignorance in which they were brought up. Our
line of argument was evidently worth little in the estimate of all present,
who appeared to us, in our then half-informed state, hard and
narrow. But we were now in the way to learn better. Mr. Loring was too ill
to eat or speak: and it was plain that he ought to have been in
bed: but he would not leave his wife's side on that
day.--Immediately after dinner it was time to be gone. When I was
putting on my shawl upstairs, Mrs. Chapman came to me, bonnet in hand, to
say, "You know we are threatened with a mob again
to-day: but I do not myself much apprehend it. It must not
surprise us; but my hopes are stronger than my fears." I hear now, as
I write, the clear silvery tones of her who was to be the friend of the
rest of my life. I still see the exquisite beauty which took me by surprise
that day;--the slender, graceful form,--the golden hair which
might have covered her to her feet;--the brilliant complexion, noble
profile, and deep blue eyes;--the aspect, meant by nature to be soft
and winning only, but that day, (as ever since) so vivified by courage, and
so strengthened by upright conviction, as to appear the very embodiment of
heroism. "My hopes," said she, as she threw up her golden hair
under her bonnet, "are stronger than my fears."
Mr. Loring and I walked first. Just before turning into the street where
Mr. Jackson lived, he stopped, and looking me in the face, said,
"Once more,--have you physical courage? for you may need it
now." On turning the corner we were pleased to find only about a
dozen boys yelling in front of Mr. Jackson's house, as often as the
coloured women went up the steps. No one was detained there an instant. The
door opened and shut as rapidly as possible. As it was a ladies'
meeting, there were no gentlemen in the house but the owner, and the two
who accompanied us. When all were admitted, the front door was
bolted, and persons were stationed at the rear of the house, to keep a way clear for escape over the fence, if necessary. About a hundred and thirty ladies were assembled; aH being members except Mrs. George Thompson, Miss J. and myself. The folding-doors between the two drawing-rooms were thrown back; and the ladies were seated on benches closely ranged in both rooms. The President's table was placed by the folding-door; and near her were seated the officers of the society. The three gentlemen overheard the proceedings from the hall. I may refer to my "Retrospect of Western Travel," (volume iii., page 153) for some account of the proceedings; and to an article of mine in the "Westminster Review," of December, 1838, entitled "The Martyr Age of the United States," for evidence of the perils dared by the women who summoned and held this meeting. To me, the commotion was a small matter,--provided we got away safely. I was going home in less than a year; and should leave peril and slander behind me. But these women were to pass their lives in the city whose wrath they were defying; and their persecutors were fellow-citizens, fellow-worshippers, and familiar acquaintances. I trust that any who may have the least doubt of the seriousness of the occasion will look back to that year of tenor, 1835, in that sketch in the "Westminster Review" or other records. The truth is, it was one of the crises which occur in the life of a youthful nation, and which try the quality of the people, bringing out the ten righteous from among the multitude who are doing evil.
In the midst of the proceedings which I have elsewhere detailed, a note
was handed to me, written in pencil on the back of the hymn which the party
were singing. It was from Mr. Loring; and these were his words.
"Knowing your opinions, I just ask you whether you would object to
give a word of sympathy to those who are suffering here for what you have
advocated elsewhere. It would afford great comfort." The moment of
reading this note was one of the most painful of my life. I felt that I
could never be happy again if I refused what was asked of me: but, to
comply was probably to shut against me every door in the United States but
those of the Abolitionists.
I should no more see persons and things as they ordinarily were: I should have no more comfort or pleasure in my travels; and my very life would be, like other people's, endangered by an avowal of the kind desired. George Thompson was then on the sea, having narrowly escaped with his life; and the fury against "foreign incendiaries" ran high. Houses had been sacked; children had been carried through the snow from their beds at midnight: travellers had been lynched in the market-places, as well as in the woods; and there was no safety for any one, native or foreign, who did what I was now compelled to do.--Having made up my mind, I was considering how this word of sympathy should be given, when Mrs. Loring came up with an easy and smiling countenance, and said--"You have had my husband's note. He hopes you will do as he says; but you must please yourself, of course." I said "No: it is a case in which there is no choice." "O! pray do not do it unless you like it. You must do as you think right." "Yes," said I: "I must."
At first, (out of pure shyness) I requested the President to say a few
words for me: but, presently remembering the importance of the
occasion, and the difficulty of setting right any mistake that the
President might fall into, I agreed to that lady's request that I
would speak for myself. Having risen therefore, with the note in my hand,
and being introduced to the meeting, I said, as was precisely recorded at
the time, what follows.
"I have been requested by a friend present to say
something--if only a word--to express my sympathy in the objects
of this meeting. I had supposed that my presence here would be understood
as showing my sympathy with you. But as I am requested to speak, I will say
what I have said through the whole South, in every family where I have
been; that I consider Slavery as inconsistent with the law of God, and as
incompatible with the course of his Providence. I should certainly say no
less at the North than at the South concerning this utter abomination and I
now declare that in your principles I fully agree." I
emphasized the word "principles," (involuntarily,) because
my mind was as yet full of what I had heard at the South of the objectionable methods of the Abolitionists. I have already explained that I ascertained all reports of the kind to be entirely false.--As I concluded, Mrs. Chapman bowed down her glowing face on her folded arms, and there was a murmur of satisfaction through the room, while outside, the growing crowd (which did not however become large) was hooting and yelling, and throwing mud and dust against the windows.
Dr. Ware did the brave act of driving up to Mr. Jackson's door, to
take us home. On our road home, he questioned me about the meeting.
"What have you been doing?" he asked. "Why," said
I, "I have been speaking"--"No! you have not!"
he exclaimed in alarm. I told him that I was as sorry for it as he could
be; but that it was wholly unavoidable. He communicated the fact, first to
his wife and then to his brother-in-law, at home, in a way
which showed how serious an affair they considered it. They could only hope
that no harm would come of it. As I heard nothing about it for nearly three
weeks, I began to hope so too.--During those three weeks, however, the
facts got into print. Dr. Follen went to the Antislavery office one day,
and found the Secretary and Mr. May revising the report of the
meeting,--Mr. May taking extreme care that my precise words should be
given. Nothing could be more accurate than the report, as far as I was
concerned.
About three weeks after the meeting, I was staying at the Rev. Dr.
Walker's, at Charlestown,--a suburb of Boston, the weather being
extremely bad with snow-storms, so that visiting was almost out of
the question,--considering that a windy and immensely long bridge
stretches between Charlestown and Boston. The weather prevented my being
surprised that so few people came; but my host and hostess were in daily
expectation of some remark about their seclusion from society. It was not
till many months afterwards that I was told that there were two reasons why
I was not visited there as elsewhere. One reason was that I had avowed, in
reply to urgent questions, that I was disappointed in an oration of Mr.
Everett's: and the other was that I had publicly condemned the
institution of Slavery. I
hope the Boston people have outgrown the childishness of sulking at opinions, not in either case volunteered, but obtained by pressure. At the time, I could not have conceived of such pettishness; and it was now nearly twenty years ago; so we may hope that the weakness is more or less outgrown,--so little as the indulgence of it can matter to passing strangers, and so injurious as such tendencies are to permanent residents. At length, some light was thrown on the state of my affairs, which I found every body knew more of than Miss J. and myself.
Miss Peabody of Boston was staying at Dr. Walker's at the same
time with ourselves. The day before she returned home, she happened to be
in the Doctor's library when his newspaper came in. It was the
leading paper in Boston, conducted by Mr. Hale, the
brother-in-law of Mr. Everett. Mr. Hale knew me,--having
travelled a whole day in company with me, during which the party conversed
abundantly. His paper contained, on this day, an article on my attending an
abolition meeting, very bad in itself, but made infinitely worse by giving,
with its sanction, large extracts from a New York paper of bad repute (The
Courier and Enquirer)--those extracts being, to speak plainly, filthy.
Dr. Walker and Miss Peabody burned the paper, hoping that I might not hear
of it. In the course of the morning, however, Miss Tuckerman called, in
company with two other ladies, and was evidently full of something that she
was eager to say. With a solemn countenance of condolence she presently
told me that she had never seen Dr. Channing so full of concern as on that
day, on the appearance of a most painful article in the "Daily
Advertiser;" and she proceeded to magnify the misfortune in a way
which astonished me. I begged her to tell Dr. Channing not to be troubled
about it, as I was, in the first place, prepared for the consequences of
what I might say or do; and, in the next, I acknowledged no foreign
jurisdiction in the case. The next time I saw Dr. Channing, he quietly
observed that it was all a mistake about his having been troubled on my
account. His anxiety was for Mr. Hale, not for me. He did not offer an
opinion, then or ever afterwards, as to whether I was right or wrong in
regard to that act: and I never inquired. I found
from others, some time afterwards, that he had written a strong remonstrance to Mr. Hale, declaring that he would not throw up the newspaper, as many other citizens did that day; because, having the independence of the newspaper press at heart, he thought it unjustifiable to desert an Editor for one slip, however great. Many others thought differently; and Mr. Hale lost so many subscribers before night as to be in a thorough ill-humour about the whole business. His excuse to the public for having delayed the "exposure" of me so long was, like that of the New York editor, that he had not credited the fact of my attending an abolition meeting till he saw it confirmed in the Liberator, though daily assured of it by many anonymous letters.--In the course of that strange day, many other papers came out, full of fury against me, till Miss Peabody was almost frantic with grief. She had to return to Boston in the evening. Two hours after her return, late in the snowy night, a special messenger brought a letter from Miss Peabody, requiring an immediate answer. The letter told me that the Abolitionists were far from grateful for what I had done, while all the rest of society were alienated; and the justification of this assertion was that an abolition lady had made a saucy speech about it at the supper table of the boarding-house. (I was glad to find afterwards that this was a mistake,--the lady being no Abolitionist, and her meaning being also misapprehended by Miss Peabody.) The main business of the letter was to tell me that there was one newspaper not yet committed against me,--the Atlas; and the Editor had just promised Miss Peabody to wait the return of her messenger for any explanation that I or my friends might send. My reply was, of course, that I had no explanation to give,--the report in the Liberator, on which all this censure was grounded, being perfectly accurate. I requested Miss Peabody to repeat to me no more conversations which were not intended for me to hear, and to burn no more newspapers, which I had a right to see. Next morning, the Atlas came out against me, as strong as all the rest. I was truly concerned for Dr. and Mrs. Walker, who could obtain no guests to meet me but their own relatives, and those, I believe, only by special entreaty.
The day after the declaration of hostilities, while two ladies, yet
ignorant of the hubbub, were calling on me, a coach drove up, and Mr.
Loring entered, looking like a corpse from the grave. He had been confined
to his bed ever since the day of the meeting, had risen from it that
morning, to be wrapped in blankets, and put into the coach, and came over
the long bridge, and through wind and snow to relieve his mind. He
intimated that he must see me alone. I asked him if he could wait till the
ladies were gone. "I can wait all day," he replied. When I
could go to him, I took Miss J. with me as a witness, as I did on all
occasions of importance, lest my deafness should cause mistake, or the
imputation of it. With strong emotion, Mr. Loring said, "I find I
have injured you; and I have come to know if I can make reparation."
My good friend thought he could never be happy again! I bade him be
comforted, telling him that the responsibility of the act of avowal was
mine at bottom. The suggestion was his; the decision was mine. "Thank
God!" he exclaimed: "then my mind is relieved. But the
question is, what can I do?" "Nothing," I told
him:--"that is, supposing the account is accurately given
in the papers which have copied from the Liberator." I asked him
whether he had the Advertiser with him. Yes, he had; but he never
could show it me. I desired to see it, as I could not form a
judgment without. He threw it into my lap, and walked to the window, and up
and down the room, paler, if possible, than before. The facts were
correctly stated, and I had therefore only to send my friend home, desiring
him to get well, and trust me to bear the consequences of saying abroad
what I had long ago printed at home. He left me much relieved, as he said;
but he was long in getting over it. When Miss J. and I were staying at his
house some weeks afterwards, we observed with pain the cloud that came over
the faces of himself and his wife at every slight and insult, public and
private, offered to me. I took occasion one day, when they and I were
alone, to rebuke this, reminding them that when they devoted themselves to
the cause, it was with a determination to bear, for themselves and each
other, all its consequences; and that they ought to exert the
same faith on behalf of their friends. To this they agreed, and never looked grave on the matter again.
As I anticipated, I saw nothing of Boston society, for some time, but
what I had seen before; and at no time was I admitted as I should since
have been, if I had accepted the invitations sent me in recent years, to go
and see what reparation awaited me. I am told that many people who were
panic-stricken during that reign of terror are heartily ashamed now
of their treatment of me. I should be glad if they were more ashamed of the
flatteries and worship with which the Americans received and entertained
me, till I went to that meeting. The "enthusiasm" of which they
boasted, and which, I hereby declare, and my companion can testify, was
always distasteful to me, collapsed instantly when I differed publicly from
them on a sore point: and their homage was proved to be, like all
such idolatries, a worship of the ideal, and no more related to myself, in
fact, than to the heroine of a dream. There was something diverting, but
more vexatious, in the freaks and whims of imaginative people, during the
season of my being (in American phrase) "Lafayetted" in the
United States; that is, during the first half of my stay; and the converse
experience of the last few months was not devoid of amusement, though it
was largely mingled with disgust. The "lion-hunters" who
embarrassed me with invitations which I had no inclination to accept, now
backed out of their liability with a laughable activity. Mrs. Douglass
Cruger, of New York, who amused and bored Sir Walter Scott so wonderfully,
and of whom most English celebrities have curious anecdotes to tell, was
one of the most difficult to deal with, from her pertinacity in insisting
that I should be her guest when I made my stay at New. York: but,
before I went there, I had made my abolition avowal; and never was there
such a list of reasons why a hostess could not invite guests; as Mrs.
Cruger poured out to me when we met in a crowd at a ball; nor any thing so
sudden as her change of tone, with some hesitation lingering in it, when
she saw that I was well received after all. A somewhat similar instance was
that of General and Mrs. Sullivan, of Boston, with whom Miss J. and I had
travelled for
many days together, and who had been urgent in their entreaties that we would spend a long time with them in Boston. On the appearance of the Advertiser article, they ceased their attentions, taking no further notice of me than once inviting me to a family party. Moreover, Dr. Channing inquired of some friends of mine whether I had been informed of the manner in which the Sullivans were speaking of me throughout Boston; for that I ought to be put on my guard against looking for, or accepting attentions from persons who so treated my name. Again, I cared one day Mr. and Mrs. C.G.L., with whom we had had friendship on the Mississippi, and who had been then, and were always afterwards, kind to us in every possible way. I found Mr. L. ill, and almost unable to speak from a swelled face. Mrs. L. explained for him that he was wretched on my account, and had had two sleepless nights. Three gentlemen had called on him, entreating him to use his influence in persuading me not to expose myself to the censure and ridicule of the whole country. In answer to all that I said, Mrs. L. pleaded the wretchedness of her family in hearing "such things" said of me; and she continued piteously beseeching me not to do "such things." She said all Boston was in an uproar about it. Alas! no power availed to put "all Boston in an uproar" about the intolerable lot of millions of slaves, or about the national disgrace of their fate. My friends could lie awake at night from concern about what their neighbours were saying of a passing stranger, to whom Boston opinion would be nothing a year hence; and they could not spare a moment, or an emotion, for the negro mother weeping for her children, nor for the crushed manhood of hundreds of thousands of their countrymen whose welfare was their natural charge. In vain I told my friends how ashamed I was of my troubles being cared for, and how much better their grief and agitation might be bestowed on real sufferers whom they could aid, than on me who complained of nothing, and needed nothing. But really the subservience to opinion in Boston at that time seemed a sort of mania; and the sufferers under it were insane enough to expect that their slavery was to be shared by a foreigner accustomed to a totally different state of society.
For a considerable time, my intercourse was confined to the
Abolitionists and their friends, and my own former friends; but before the
end of my stay, it seemed to be discovered that I was not the monster that
had been described; and sundry balls and parties were given for my
entertainment. In other States, however, the prejudice remained as long as
I was in the country, and some time after, giving place at length to an
earnest desire (to judge by the warmth of invitations from various
quarters) that I would return, and see their country in what my
correspondents call its normal state. I am pleased to find, however, within
the last few days, that in the South I am still reviled, as I was twenty
years ago, and held up, in the good company of Mrs. Chapman and Mrs. Stowe,
to the abhorrence of the South. If I am proud of my company, in one sense,
I am ashamed of it in another. Mrs. Chapman and Mrs. Stowe have really
sacrificed and suffered, and thrown their whole future into the cause;
whereas mine is so cheap a charity that I blush to have it associated with
theirs. By their side, I am but as one who gives a half-penny to a
beggar, in comparison with those who have sold all their goods to feed the
poor.
From Boston I went to New York; and, though several months had passed,
the impression against me was so strong that my host, on whose arm I
entered a ball-room, was "cut" by fourteen of his
acquaintance on that account. When he told me this, as a sign of the time,
he related that, seeing a group of gentlemen gathered round a pompous young
man who was talking vehemently, he put his head in to see what it was all
about, when he heard the following;--"My verdict is that Harriet
Martineau is either an impertinent meddler in our affairs, or a woman of
genius without common sense." My host replied, with equal solemnity,
"If, sir, such be your sentence, Miss Martineau must bear it as she
may!" thus exploding the serious business with a general laugh. These
instances are mere samples of social rudenesses too numerous to be
related.
To return to the Daily Advertiser;--in about ten days, an article
appeared which the Editor declared to be his
amende, and which the public seemed to
consider such. The Editor professed
to choose, from among an amazing number, a letter which was afterwards
avowed to be by Mr. Minot, a respected Boston merchant, and a connexion of
the Sedgwicks. The insertion of this letter was considered by all who
understood the principle involved in the case an aggravation of the
original offense against that principle. It observed that American
travellers were allowed in England, by courtesy, the liberty of expressing
their opinions on all subjects; and it was to be hoped that Boston would
not refuse a similar courtesy to a distinguished lady who was allowed in
private relations to be, &c., &c., and to whom a debt of gratitude
was owing for her writings. I have strong reason to believe that the
discussions arising out of this treatment of me,--the attacks and the
yet worse amende,--roused the minds of
many young citizens to a consideration of the whole subject of freedom of
opinion, and made many converts to that, and also to abolitionism. One
clear consequence of my conversation and experience together was that the
next prosecution for Blasphemy in Massachusetts was the last. An old man,
above seventy, was imprisoned in a grated dungeon for having printed that
he believed the God of the Universalists to be "a chimera of the
imagination." Some who had listened to my assertions of the rights of
thought and speech drew up a
Memorial* to the Governor of the
State for a pardon for old Abner Kneeland,--stating their ground with
great breadth and clearness, while disclaiming any kind of sympathy with
the views and spirit of the victim. The prime mover being a wellknown
religious man, and Dr. Channing being willing to put his name at the head
of the list of requisitionists, the principle of their remonstrance stood
out brightly and unmistakably. The religious corporations opposed the
petitioners with all their efforts; and the newspapers threw dirt at them
with extraordinary vigour; so that the Governor did not grant their
request: but when old Abner Kneeland came out of his prison every
body knew that that ancient phase of society had passed away, and that
there would never again be a prosecution for Blasphemy in Massachusetts.
The civil rights of Atheists have not since been
med-
___________________
dled with, though those of the coloured race and their champions are still precarious or worse.
The general indignation which I encountered at every step was, however
disagreeable, far less painful to me than some experience among my personal
friends. A letter from my Philadelphia host (the same who turned pale at
Dr. Julius's news) grieved me much. He told me that his first
intimation of what I had done was from the abuse in the newspapers; that
his great hope was that I had not acted without purpose; but that still,
under any circumstances, he could not but greatly lament the act, as he
feared it would totally ruin the effect American public of any book I might
write. In my reply I reminded him of his own exhortation to me to forget
all about writing a book, in order that my own impressions and ideas of
what I witnessed might be true and free. He abandoned his objection to my
attending the meeting, but still wished that I had not further committed
myself. When I visited Philadelphia some months afterwards, I found the
aspect of society much changed towards me; and my hostess and her coterie
of friends surrendered none of their objections to what I had done. How
changed is the whole scene now! That host of mine has become one of the
most marked men in the cause. The scales fell from his eyes long years ago,
and he perceived that there can be small virtue in preaching and teaching
which covers up the master sin and sorrow of the time. He has seen from his
pulpit a large proportion of his hearers rise and go away on his first
mention of the subject on which they most needed to hear him, He has
undergone social reproach and family solicitude for doing what I
did,--under the same objection, but at infinitely greater risk, and
under temptations to silence which scarcely another in his profession has
had grace to resist. In those days however, I had to feel that I must stand
alone; and, far worse, my friend's disapprobation (he being the most
unworldly and upright of men) could not but cause some perplexity in my
mind, even so simple an action as this, in the midst of a clamour which
left me scarcely any quietness for reflexion. I found it best to accept
this new trouble as retribution if I had indeed been wrong,
and to defer too close a questioning of past acts to a calmer time. If any are surprised that I could be shaken even thus far, I can only say that they cannot conceive of the hubbub of censure in which I was living,--enough to confound the soberest senses.
On one occasion, my indignation was fairly roused. Among the passengers
in my voyage out was the Rev. Charles Brooks, who showed me great kindness
during our whole acquaintance, and whose first wife was a special friend of
mine. I was their guest at the time of the anniversary festival of
Forefathers' Day, at Plymouth, and I accompanied them to the
celebration. The first incident of the day was a rather curious one. The
orator of the occasion was Senator Sprague, whom I had known well at
Washington. He took particular pains to have me seated where I could hear
him well; and then he fixed his eye on me, as if addressing to me
particularly the absurd abuse of England which occupied much of his
address, and some remarks which were unmistakably intended for my
correction. On our returning to our quarters while the gentlemen went to
dinner, an aged lady who could not brave the cold out of doors, asked me
how I liked Mr. Sprague's address; on which her daughter burst out
with an exclamation which I have never forgotten. The blood rose to her
temples, and she threw her bonnet on the table as she cried "O
mother! I am sick of this boasting and exaltation of ourselves over others.
When I think of what we might be and what we are, I want to say only
'God be merciful to us sinners!'" While we were dressing
for the ball, the gentlemen were dining. When Mr. Brooks came for us, he
bent over my chair to inform me that my health had been proposed by the
President to the Sons of the Pilgrims, and drunk with honour; and that it
had fallen to him to return thanks for me, as my nearest friend present. I
was struck by his perplexed and abashed countenance; but I might have gone
to the ball believing his tale without deduction but for an accident which
gave me some notion of what had really taken place. Mr. Brooks, who always
went out of the room, or at least covered his face with a screen, when the
subject of anti-slavery was mentioned, would willingly have kept
from me, if it had been possible, all knowledge of the
toast: but it was not possible; and he told me himself in order that I might know only what was convenient to him, at the risk of my making myself ridiculous at the ball. Happily, there was some one who served me better.--The method in which the President had introduced my health was this. After designating "the Illustrious Stranger" who was to be toasted, he said that he was confident no son of the Pilgrims would refuse to drink, considering that the lady in question was their guest, and how they and their children were indebted to her for her writings. Considering these things, could they not forgive her, if, holding absurd and mischievous opinions, she had set them in operation in a sphere where she had no concern? Could they not forgive one such act in a guest to whom they were under such large obligations?--What Mr. Brooks took upon him to say for me, I was never able, with all my pains, to ascertain; for the newspapers gave merely an intimation that he acknowledged the toast. From his unwillingness that I should hear exactly what passed, I have always trembled to think what surrender of principle he may have made in my name.
From Boston, the abuse of me ran through almost every paper in the
Union. Newspapers came to me from the South, daring me to enter the Slave
States again, and offering mock invitations to me to come and see how they
would treat foreign incendiaries. They would hang me: they would cut
my tongue out, and cast it on a dunghill; and so forth. The calumnies were
so outrageous, and the appeal to the fears of the Slave-holders so
vehement that I could feel no surprise if certain interested persons were
moved to plot against my life. My name was joined with George
Thompson's, (who had already escaped with difficulty:) I was
represented as a hired agent, and appeals were made to popular passions to
stop my operations. I believe that almost all the extreme violences
perpetrated against Abolitionists have been by the hands of
slave-traders, and not by the ordinary kind of American citizens.
The slave-traders on the great rivers are (or were then) generally
foreigners,--outcasts from European countries,--England and
Ireland among the number. These desperate men, driving a profitable trade,
which they believe to
be endangered by the Abolitionists, were not likely to scruple any means of silencing their enemies. Such, and such only, have I ever believed to have designed any violence against me. Such as these were the instigators of the outrages of the time,--the floggings in the market-places, as in Amos Dresser's case, the tarrings and featherings of travellers who were under suspicion of anti-slavery opinion, and the murder of Lovejoy on his own threshold, in Illinois, on account of his gallant and heroic defence of the liberty of the press on the subject of Slavery.
These fellows haunted the Ohio at the time when I was about to descend
the river with a party of friends, on a visit to the west which was to
occupy the last three months of my stay in America. The party consisted of
Dr. and Mrs. Follen and their child, and Mr. and Mrs. Loring. We intended
first to visit Birney at Cincinnati, and afterwards to meet a brother of
Dr. Follen's, who had a farm in Missouri. We knew that we could not
enter Missouri with safety; but Mr. Follen was to cross the river, and join
us in Illinois. Every thing was arranged for this in the winter, and we
were rejoicing in the prospect, when the consequences of my abolition
avowal interfered to spoil the plan. Miss J. and I were staying at Dr.
Channing's towards spring, when, on our return about eleven
o'clock one night from a visit, we were rather surprised to find Mr.
Loring sitting in Dr. Channing's study. We were surprised, not only
on account of the lateness of the hour, but because Mr. Loring was not then
a visiting acquaintance of Dr. Channing's. Both of us were struck
with the air of gloom in every body's face and manner. We attempted
conversation; but in vain: nobody supported it. Presently, Dr.
Channing crossed the room to say to me "I have requested Mr. Loring
to remain, in order to tell you himself the news he has brought. I desire
that you should hear it from his own lips." It appeared that Mr.
Loring had been waiting some hours. He told us that an eminent merchant of
the city, with whom he was previously unacquainted, had that day called on
him to say that he felt it his duty to give some intelligence to my friends
of a matter which nearly concerned my safety. He took no interest whatever
in the abolition question, on the one
side or the other; but he could not allow the personal safety of a stranger to be imperilled without giving warning. He had been in the West on business, and had there learned that I was expected down the Ohio in the spring: that certain parties had sworn vengeance against me; and that they had set a watch upon the steamboats, where I should be recognised by my trumpet. At Cincinnati, the intention was to prosecute me, if possible; and, at any rate, to prevent my going further. Much worse things were contemplated at the slave-holding city of Louisville. My going upon the Ohio at all would not be permitted, the gentleman was sure, by any who cared for my security; and he explained that he was reporting what he positively knew, from the testimony of his own ears, as well as by trustworthy information; and that the people to be feared were not the regular inhabitants of the towns, but the hangers-on at the wharves; and especially the slave-traders. This gentleman's first business on his return was to ascertain who were my most intimate friends, and to appeal to them to prevent my going near the Ohio. All this seemed so incredible to me that I made light of it at first: but the party looked more and more grave, and Mr. Loring said: "Well, then, I must tell you what they mean to do. They mean to lynch you." And he proceeded to detail the plan. The intention was to hang me on the wharf before the respectable inhabitants could rescue me.
Not wishing to detain Mr. Loring, as it was just midnight, I gave at
once, as my decision, what seemed plain to my own mind. I told him that I
had less means of judging what was likely to happen than natives of the
country; and I would leave it to my own party to determine what should be
done. I supposed that none of them would think of relinquishing such a
scheme for mere threats; and if they were not afraid, neither was I. The
decision must rest with them.--The gloom of the
"good-night" which the Channings gave me oppressed me
even more than what I had just heard. While pondering the affair in the
middle of the night, I recurred to what my brother James had suggested in a
recent letter. He had abstained from giving any opinion. of what I had
done, as none from such a dis-
tance could be of any value: but he had proposed that I should transmit my papers piecemeal to England; for the obvious reason that destroying my papers would be the aim of the enemy, in order to prevent my publication of my journals at home. I had no immediate means of transmitting my papers: but I had obtained permission from a clergyman who was not an Abolitionist to deposit my papers in his unsuspected keeping. I had resolved now that this should be my first work in the morning.
After breakfast, while I was sealing up my parcel, Dr. Channing stood
beside me, more moved than I had ever seen him. He went to his bookshelves,
and came back again, and went again, as if to look at his books, but in
truth to wipe away the tears that rolled down under his spectacles. What he
said I remember and the tone of his voice, as if it was five minutes ago.
"I am ashamed," he said, "that after what you have done
for the people of this country, there should be any part of it in which you
cannot set your foot. We are accustomed to say that we are under
obligations to you; and yet you are not safe among us. I hope that, as soon
as you return home, you will expose these facts with all the boldness of
which you are capable." I replied that I should not publish, in my
accounts of America, any personal narrative of injury: for, besides
the suspicion and odium that attach to a narrative of personal sufferings
from insult, it was to me a much more striking fact that native citizens,
like himself and Mr. Garrison and others, to whom the Constitution
expressly guarantees the liberty of traversing all the States as freely as
any one of them, should be excluded by intimidation from half the States of
the Union. Dr. Channing said, "As to this journey, you must indeed
give it up. I think, if you consider that no immediate call of duty takes
you to the Ohio, and that your destruction might involve that of the whole
party, you will feel it to be your duty to change your plan." My
party unhesitatingly decided this for me. Mrs. Loring declared that she
would not go; and the gentlemen were of opinion that the risk was too
serious. I had myself no idea how I should suffer or act in circumstances
so new. We therefore gave up the idea of visiting Messrs. Birney and
Follen, and determined on another route.
During that spring, as during many preceding months, there were
Lynchings of Abolitionists in various parts of the country, and
threatenings of more. Wherever we went, it was necessary to make up our
minds distinctly, and with the full knowledge of each other, what we should
say and do in regard to the subject which was filling all men's
minds. We resolved, of course, to stand by our anti-slavery
principles, and advocate them, wherever fair occasion offered: and we
never did omit an opportunity of saying what we knew and thought. On every
steamboat, and in every stage (when we entered public conveyances) the
subject arose naturally; for no subject was so universally discussed
throughout the country, though it was interdicted within the walls of the
Capitol at Washington. Mr. Loring joined in the conversation when the legal
aspects of the matter were discussed; and Dr. Follen when the religious and
moral and political bearings of Slavery were the subject. Mrs. Follen and
Mrs. Loring were full of facts and reasons about the working of
Abolitionism in its head quarters. As for me, my topic was Texas, in regard
to which I was qualified to speak by some recent inquiries and experience
at New Orleans. This was three years before the annexation of Texas, and
while the adventurers under Colonel Austin were straining every nerve to
get Texas annexed. They thought that if, among other devices, they could
obtain any sort of sanction from the British government, or could induce
English settlers, in any considerable number, to go to Texas, their chances
of every sort would be improved. My visit to New Orleans was seized on,
among other incidents, for the prosecution of this chance. After duly
preparing me by sending me "information" in the shape of
bragging accounts of the country, they sent a deputation to me at New
Orleans, consisting of the notorious Mrs. Holley (who did more than perhaps
any other individual for the annexation of Texas) and two or three
companions. Concealing from me the fact that Colonel Austin was at that
very time in jail at Mexico, my visitors offered me, in the name of the
Texan authorities, an estate of several thousand acres in a choice part of
the country, and every aid and kindness that could be rendered, if I would
bind myself to live for five years in
Texas, helping to frame their Constitution, and using my influence to bring over English settlers. The conversation was to me a most ludicrous one, from the boasts made by my guests of their happy state of society, though my questions compelled them to admit that they were living without a Constitution, or any safeguard of law; and in fact subject to the dictatorship of Colonel Austin, a mere adventurer, and then actually in the hands of the Mexicans, who were far too merciful in releasing him after a few months' imprisonment. One plea was urged on me which it was hoped I should find irresistible. There was to be no slave-trade or slavery in Texas. I knew there was none before the Americans intruded themselves; but I could not, and did not, believe in this piece of ostentatious virtue in a set of southern speculators who staked their all on the preservation of Slavery in the United States. I was not surprised to find that, in the absence of an avowed slave-trade, there were negroes conveyed from Louisiana, and landed at night on a spit of sand on the frontier, whence in the morning they immigrated into Texas, where they were not to be slaves:--O dear, no!--not slaves but apprentices for ninety-nine years! I gave my visitors a bit of my mind, in return for their obliging offer. An English visitor, a scholar and a minister of religion, was deluded by similar offers and suggestions; and deeply concerned he was that I would not go into the enterprise. He wrote repeatedly to offer his assistance for any number of years, and implored me to consider well before I rejected so unequalled an opportunity of usefulness. He offered to come and see me wherever I might stop on the Mississippi; and he fully believed he should induce me to turn back. Poor gentleman! his was a mournful story. His wife died of consumption, on the bank of the Mississippi, just as I reached New Orleans; and he and his children were in their first desolation when he made up his mind to embrace the Texan enterprise. Soon after I answered his final appeal to me to go, I heard of his death by fever. The disease of the country laid him low at the outset of his first season. His children were most benignantly cared for by the American citizens. One died; but the two little daughters were adopted,--one by a planter's
lady in the West, and the other by an English lady in the North.--My attention being thus turned towards Texas, I was qualified to bring the subject under Dr. Channing's notice as the interest of it deepened; and to converse upon it in our northern journey when we were perpetually encountering citizens who had been listening to the boasts of Austin's emissaries, at New York or elsewhere.--Dr. Channing's "Letter" on the Annexation of Texas is perhaps the most honoured in England of all his writings. The credit of originating it belongs in the first place, and chiefly, to Mr. David Lee Child, who furnished an admirable history of the province, and of its sufferings from the Americans, in the Anti-slavery Quarterly Review. From that article I avowedly derived the facts which I gave as the basis of my own account of the Texas business, in my "Society in America." I besought Dr. Channing's especial attention to that chapter; and the whole subject so moved him that he sat down and wrote that noble "Letter," by the moral effect of which the annexation of Texas was unquestionably deferred for two years. It is not often that the writings of divines have even that much effect in bridling the lusts of ambition and cupidity.
Our route had for its chief objects (after Niagara) the Northern Lakes.
The further we went, the more we heard of Lynchings which had lately taken
place, or were designed for the next Abolitionists who should come that
way. At Detroit, Mr. Loring entered the reading-room of the hotel,
immediately on our arrival; and while he read the newspaper, he heard one
citizen telling another how during the temporary absence of the latter,
there had been a Lynching of a fellow who pretended be a preacher, but was
suspected to be an Abolitionist. The speaker added that a party of
Abolitionists was expected; and that every thing was in readiness to give
them a similar reception. He finished off with saying that Lynching did not
look well in newspapers, or sound well at a distance; but that it was the
only way. Our Abolitionism could be no secret, ready as we always were to
say what we knew and thought: and that very evening, I had the
pleasure of so far converting the Governor of the State (Michigan) as to
possess him with a true idea
of Garrison, and to obtain his promise,--which was indeed freely offered, as we took leave,--to protect to the utmost of his power, every Abolitionist within the boundary of the State.
The woods of Michigan were very beautiful; but danger was about us
there, as everywhere during those three months of travel. It was out of
such glades as those of Michigan that mobs had elsewhere issued to stop the
coach, and demand the victim, and inflict the punishment earned by
compassion for the negro, and assertion of true republican liberty. I
believe there was scarcely a morning during those three months when it was
not my first thought on waking whether I should be alive at night. I am not
aware that the pleasure of that glorious journey was materially impaired by
this: yet I learned by that experience to sympathise with the real
griefs of martyrdom, and to feel something different from contemptuous
compassion for those who quail under the terror of it.--At Pittsburg,
sitting by our open window one hot night, we heard an uproar at a distance,
the cause of which my companions truly divined to be a pro-slavery
riot. "What can it be?" I exclaimed, as it drew nearer.
"Only a little execration coming this way," replied Dr. Follen,
smiling, referring to our reputation as execrated persons. We were not the
objects that night, however: but the houses of several free negro
families were destroyed. What we met with was, usually, prodigious
amazement, a little scorn; and a great many warnings.
After so many weeks, during which the idea of danger had become the
rule, and safety the exception, we were struck with a kind of astonishment
when we entered the great cities,--Philadelphia and New
York,--where the comfortable citizens assumed an air of scepticism
about the critical state of the country which was truly marvellous in
republicans. I have mentioned before how the ladies of one of the first
families in New York were kept in ignorance of riots so serious that one
might almost as soon expect the ladies of Birmingham and Bristol to have
been unaware of the High-church and Reform riots of 1791 and 1831.
We now found that selfish, or aristocratic, or timid citizens had kept
themselves as ignorant of the dangers of their
neighbours as the same kind of men of every country are, in times of great moral revolution. Quiet and complacent were the smiles with which some who ought to have known better declared their disbelief even that threats had been offered to a guest and a woman; and various were the excuses and special reasons given for the many instances of violence to their own citizens which could not be denied. Some were sorry that I believed such threats to myself, and such inflections upon others as were as certainly and notoriously true as the days of the month on which they happened. Some would not listen to the facts at the time: others, who could not doubt them at the time, have tried to get rid of the belief since, but are incessantly thrown back upon the old evidence by the new troubles which arise from day to day out of the cursed and doomed institution of Slavery. I happened to witness the opening of the martyr age of its reformers; and I am thankful that I did witness it. There were times when I was sorry that I was not the victim of the struggle, instead of Lovejoy, or some other murdered citizen. I was sorry, because my being a British subject would have caused wider and deeper consequences to arise from such a murder than followed the slaughter of native Abolitionists,--despised and disowned by their government for their very Abolitionism. The murder of an English traveller would have settled the business of American Slavery (in its federal sense) more speedily than perhaps any other incident. It is no wonder that some Americans, who shut their eyes to the whole subject, should disbelieve in any body being in any danger, and that others should try to make me forget my share of it. The latest and most general method of propitiating me has been by inviting me to go again, and see what Abolitionists my acquaintances have become,--every where north of Mason and Dixon's line.
When I returned home, the daily feeling of security, and of sympathy in
my anti-slavery views gave me a pleasure as intense as if I had
returned from a long exile, instead of a tour of recreation. I was not left
without paltry disturbances, however. In the preface to "Society in
America," I invited correction as to any errors in (not opinion, but)
matters of fact. After this, I
could not, of course, decline receiving letters from America. Several arrived, charged double, treble, even quadruple postage. These consisted mainly of envelopes, made heavy by all manner of devices, with a slip of newspaper in the middle, containing prose paragraphs, or copies of verses, full of insults, and particularly of taunts about my deafness. All but one of these bore the post-mark of Boston. I was ashamed to mention this back to America; and I hope that most of this expensive and paltry insult was the work of one hand.
My story seems a long one: but I do not think it could have been
honestly omitted in a history of my life: and it seems to be worth
telling for another reason,--that it may afford material for an
instructive comparison between the state of the cause, (and of American
society as determined by it,) in 1835 and 1855. When I was at Washington,
the leading statesmen were, or declared themselves to be, confident that
the abolition of Slavery would never be even named in Congress; to which I
replied that when they could hedge in the wind and build out the stars from
their continent, they might succeed in their proposed exclusion: and
now, at the end of twenty years, what has come of the attempt? It was
prosecuted with all diligence. A rigid censorship in the Southern States
expunged from English and other classics every reference to Slavery, and
every perilous aspiration after freedom. Abolitionists were kept out by the
most vigilant cruelty, which inflicted torture on mere suspicion. Free
negroes were lodged in prison, even when they were British sailors; as
indeed they are still liable to be. The right of petition to Congress was
temporarily abolished. Every liberty, personal and social, was sacrificed
in the attempt to enforce silence on that one sore subject. And now the
whole world rings with it. Congress can, in fact, talk about nothing
else: for, whatever subject a debate may ostensibly be upon, it
always merges in a wrangle on Slavery. The entire policy of the Republic
has been shaped by it; and the national mind also, in as far as the public
mind depends on the national policy in a democratic republic. The moral
deterioration has been more rapid than the most cautious of the early
Presidents could have apprehended, or than
the despots of the world could have hoped. Because it was necessary to obtain new territory for the support of the destructive institution, a process of aggression and annexation was entered upon; and that policy has dragged back the mind and morals of the people into that retrograde state in which territorial aggrandisement is the national aim. This, again, implicates foreign nations in the interest of the question. It was not enough that every political movement in the United States was modified by this great controversy;--that it ruined, and still ruins, every statesman who takes the immoral side;--that it destroyed the career and broke the hearts of the most eminent of them,--of Calhoun, of Clay, and of Webster;--that it shattered the reputation of more, and is now rendering absolutely certain the dissolution of the Union, in one way or another, and with more or less chance of its virtuous reconstitution:--it was not enough that all this has happened at home, amidst the most desperate efforts to cover up the difficulty under an enforced silence:--it has enlisted almost every people and ruler in the world on the one side or the other. The Czars are making friendships with the slave power, as the most hopeful ally on earth of Russian tyranny. Spain is immediately interested, because Cuba is the next morsel for which the ogre lusts. The friendship of Western Europe, otherwise so certain to be cordial and durable, is rendered in the last degree precarious by the lawless and barbaric proceedings of the pro-slavery Americans. The depressed nationalities of Europe, who might otherwise look up to America for protection and aid, can now only blush at the disgrace reflected by America on republicanism all over the world, and sigh at the hopelessness of any real assistance from a nation which cannot aid freedom abroad because it has to take care of its own slavery, and beware of its victims at home. That which was the protest of almost a solitary voice when I went to America has now expanded into a world-wide controversy.--It was in 1832 that Garrison, the apostle of the deepest and broadest cause of our century, said those immortal words. "I am aware that many object to the severity of my language; but is there not cause for severity? I will be as harsh as truth, and as
uncompromising as justice. I am in earnest--I will not equivocate--I will not excuse--I will not retreat a single inch--AND I WILL BE HEARD." This humble printer, so speaking after the first taste of persecution, a quarter of a century ago, has made himself "heard" round the globe, and from pole to pole. There is no saying what fates and policies of nations were involved in those first utterances of his. The negroes first heard him, by some untraceable means: and the immediate consequence was the cessation of insurrection. There were frequent risings of the slaves before; and there have been none since. But the lot of the negro race is by no means the only or the chief fate involved in the controversy. Every political and social right of the white citizens has been imperilled in the attempt to enforce silence on the subject of slavery. Garrison will be recognised hereafter, not only as at present,--as the Moses of the enslaved race, leading them out of their captivity,--but as more truly the founder of the republic than Washington himself. Under the first Presidents, democratic republicanism made a false start. It has bolted from the course, and the abolitionists are bringing it back to the starting-post. If it is found capable of winning the race against old despotisms and temporary accommodations of constitutional monarchy, the glory of the consummation will be awarded more plentifully to the regenerators of the republic than to its originators, great as they were; for they left in it a fatal compromise.--But I must not enlarge further on this subject, on which I have written abundantly elsewhere. I could say much; and it requires self-denial to abstain from a statement of what Garrison's friends, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Grafton Chapman, and their relatives on both sides of the house contributed to the cause by deeds and sufferings. But my peculiar connexion with Mrs. Chapman in this memoir renders it impossible to speak as I would. Happily, the claims of that privileged family are and will be understood without any appeal from me to the veneration and gratitude of society.
The accident of my arriving in America in the dawning hour of the great
conflict accounts for the strange story I have had to tell about myself.
Any person from England, so arriving,
pledged as I was to anti-slavery views, and conspicuous enough to draw attention to those views, was sure to meet with just such treatment;--a blinding incense first;and then, if the incense failed to blind, a trial of the method of intimidation. Other English persons were indeed so prepared for and received. Some did not understand their position, and went unconsciously into the snare. Some took fright. Some thought prudence necessary, for the sake of some other cause which they had more at heart. Some were even converted by the romancing of the slave-owners. Some did their duty. It is not, and it never will be, forgotten how Lord Carlisle did his, when, as Lord Morpeth, he traversed the whole country, never failing in the kindliness and candour which adorn his temper, while never blinking the subject of slavery, or disguising his anti-slavery convictions. The reign of terror (for travellers at least) was over before he went; and he would have been safe under any circumstances: but he was subject to insults and slander, and was abundantly visited with a laborious contempt: and in bringing this upon himself and bearing it good-humouredly, he threw his mite into the treasury which is to redeem the slaves. He seems to have been pitied and excused in somewhat the same style as myself by persons who assumed to be our protectors. When I had conversed on board a steamboat with a young lady of colour, well educated and well mannered, and whom I had been acquainted with at Philadelphia, I was of course, the object of much wrath and denunciation on deck; and my spontaneous protectors thought themselves generous in pleading that I ought to be excused for such conduct, on the ground of the "narrowness of my foreign education!" Such were the vindications with which Lord Carlisle also was insulted when he was vindicated at all.
It was impossible, during such a crisis, to avoid judging conspicuous
persons more or less by their conduct in regard to the great conflict of
their time. Ordinary persons might be living as common-place people
do in such times,--in utter unconsciousness of their position. As in
the days of Noah, such people buy and sell and build and plant, and are
troubled by no
forecast of what is to happen. But in a republic, it cannot be so with the conspicuous citizens. The Emersons, for instance, (for the adored Charles Emerson was living then:)--they were not men to join an association for any object; and least of all, for any moral one: nor were they likely to quit their abstract meditations for a concrete employment on behalf of the negroes. Yet they did that which made me feel that I knew them, through the very cause in which they did not implicate themselves. At the time of the hubbub against me in Boston, Charles Emerson stood alone in a large company in defence of the right of free thought and speech, and declared that he had rather see Boston in ashes than that I, or anybody, should be debarred in any way from perfectly free speech. His brother Waldo invited me to be his guest, in the midst of my unpopularity, and, during my visit, told me his course about this matter of slavery. He did not see that there was any particular thing for him to do in it then: but when, in coaches or steamboats or any where else, he saw people of colour ill-used, or heard bad doctrine or sentiment propounded, he did what he could and said what he thought. Since that date, he has spoken more abundantly and boldly the more critical the times became; and he is now, and has long been, completely identified with the Abolitionists in conviction and sentiment, though it is out of his way to join himself to their organisation. The other eminent scholars and thinkers of the country revealed themselves no less clearly,--the literary men of Boston and Cambridge sneering at the controversy as "low" and disagreeable, and troubling to their repose, and Edward Everett, the man of letters par excellence, burning incense to the south, and insulting the abolitionists while they were few and weak, endeavoring to propitiate them as they grew strong, and finally breaking down in irretrievable disgrace under a pressure to which he had exposed himself by ambition, but which he had neither courage nor conscience to abide. I early saw in him the completest illustration I met with of the influences of republican life upon a man of powers without principle, and of knowledge without wisdom. He was still worshipped through vanity, when I knew him, though his true
deserts were well enough understood in private: he had plenty of opportunity to retrieve his political character afterwards: he obtained in England, when ambassador, abundance of the admiration which he sacrificed so much to win; and then at last, when the hour arrived which must test his quality, he sank, and must abide for the rest of his life in a slough of contempt from which there is no rescue. This is precisely what was anticipated twenty years ago by (not his enemies, for I believe he then had none, but) friends who mourned over his quitting a life of scholarship, for which he was eminently qualified, for one of political aspiration. They knew that he had not self-reliance or courage enough for effective ambition, nor virtue enough for a career of independence. It is all over now; and the vainest of men, who lives by the breath of praise, is placed for the sad remnant of his days between the scorn of the many and the pity of the few. Vindicators he has none; and I believe no followers. The Sedgwicks were beginning to be interested in the great controversy; but they were not only constitutionally timid,--with that American timidity which we English can scarcely conceive of,--but they worshipped the parchment idol,--the Act of Union; and they did not yet perceive, as some of them have done since, that a human decree which contravenes the laws of Nature must give way when the two are brought into conflict. I remember Miss Sedgwick starting back in the path, one day when she and I were walking beside the sweet Housatonic, and snatching her arm from mine when I said, in answer to her inquiry, what I thought the issue of the controversy must be. "The dissolution of the Union!" she cried. "The Union is sacred, and must be preserved at all cost." My answer was that the will of God was sacred too, I supposed; and if the will of God which, as she believed, condemned slavery should come into collision with the federal constitution which sanctioned it, the only question was which should give way,--the Divine will or a human compact. It did not appear to me then, any more than now, that the dissolution of the Union need be of a hostile character. That the elimination of the two pro-slavery clauses from the constitution must take place sooner or later was always clear
to me; but I do not see why the scheme should not be immediately and peaceably reconstituted, if the Americans will but foresee the necessity in time. The horror expressed by the Sedgwicks at what seemed so inevitable a consequence of the original compromise surprised me a good deal: and I dare say it seems strange to themselves by this time: for Miss Sedgwick and others of her family have on occasion spoken out bravely on behalf of the liberties of the republic, when they were most compromised. I had a great admiration of much in Miss Sedgwick's character, though we were too opposite in our natures, in many of our views, and in some of our principles, to be very congenial companions. Her domestic attachments and offices were charming to witness; and no one could be further from all conceit and vanity on account of her high reputation in her own country. Her authorship did not constitute her life; and she led a complete life, according to her measure, apart from it: and this is a spectacle which I always enjoy, and especially in the case of a woman. The insuperable difficulty between us,--that which closed our correspondence, though not our good will, was her habit of flattery;--a national weakness, to which I could have wished that she had been superior. But her nature was a timid and sensitive one; and she was thus predisposed to the national failing;--that is, to one side of it; for she could never fall into the cognate error,--of railing and abuse when the flattery no longer answers. She praised or was silent. The mischief was that she praised people to their faces, to a degree which I have never considered it necessary to permit. I told her that I dreaded receiving her letters because, instead of what I wished to hear, I found praise of myself. She informed me that, on trial, she found it a gêne to suppress what she wanted to say; and thus it was natural for us to cease from corresponding. I thought she wanted courage, and shrank from using her great influence on behalf of her own convictions; and she thought me rash and rough. She thought "safety" a legitimate object of pursuit in a gossipping state of society; and I did not care for it,--foreigner as I was, and witnessing, as I did, as critical a struggle as has ever agitated society. I said what I thought and what I knew of the
Websters and the Everetts, and other northern men who are now universally recognised as the disgrace rather than the honour of the region they represented. Their conduct, even then, authorised my judgment of them: but she, a northern woman, shared the northern caution, if not the sectional vanity, which admired and upheld, as long as possible, the men of genius and accomplishment who sustained the intellectual reputation of New England. Through all our differences of view and temperament, I respected and admired Miss Sedgwick, and I was sorry to be absent from England in 1839 when she was in London, and when I should have enjoyed being of any possible use to her and her connexions, who showed me much hospitality and kindness in their own country. What I think of Miss Sedgwick's writings I told in a review of her works in the Westminster Review of October, 1837. Her novels, and her travels, published some years later, had better be passed over with the least possible notice; but I think her smaller tales wonderfully beautiful;--those which, as "Home" and "Live and Let Live," present pictures of the household life of New England which she knows so well, and loves so heartily.
Of Webster, as of Clay, Calhoun, President Jackson and others, I gave my
impressions in my books on America, nearly twenty years ago. I will not
repeat any thing I then and there said: but will merely point out how
their fate corresponded with their ordeal. "My dear woman,"
said Mr. Webster to me at his own table, laying his finger on my arm to
emphasize his words,--"don't you go and believe me to be
ambitious. No man can despise that sort of thing more than I do. I would
not sacrifice an hour of my ease for all the honours and powers in the
world." Mr. Clay made no protestations of the sort to me; nor Mr.
Calhoun, whom, with all his absurdities, I respected by far the most of the
three, in the long run. All were hugely ambitious: but Calhoun was
honest in the main point. He lived and died for the cause of Slavery; and,
however far such a career is from the sympathies of English people, the
openness and directness of his conduct were at least respectable. He was
infatuated by his sectional attachments: but he was outspoken
and consistent. Mr. Clay never satisfied me of his sincerity on the great question of his time; but there was much, outside of that trying matter, that was interesting and even honourable;--a genuine warmth, a capacity for enthusiasm, and vast political ability. Our intercourse amounted to friendship at last; but his unworthy conduct during the closing years of his life overthrew my esteem, and destroyed my regard for him. While professing a desire to provide for the future abolition of slavery, he prevented in some parts its immediate abolition, and he extended in others the area of its prevalence. He was as well aware as any body of the true character of the Colonisation scheme of which he accepted the presidency; and he continued to laud it to foreigners as an agency of emancipation, when he knew that it was established and upheld by slaveholders like himself, for the protection and security of the institution of slavery. His personal ambition was as keen as Webster's; and the failure of both in their aspirations for the Presidentship destroyed them both. In regard to genius, both were of so high an order, and their qualifications were so little alike that there is no need to set the one above the other. Webster's training was the higher; his position as a Massachusetts man the more advantageous, morally and politically; his folly and treachery in striving to win the supreme honours of the state by winning the south, through the sacrifice of the rights and liberties of the north were, of necessity, more extreme and more conspicuous than any double dealing of Mr. Clay's: his retribution was the more striking; and the disgrace which he drew down on his last days was the more damning of the two. But both these men, who might have rivalled the glory of Washington himself, by carrying the state through a stress as real and fearful as that of eighty years ago, will be remembered as warnings and not as examples. As far as appears, they were the last of the really great men who led the statesmanship of the republic; and to their failure, moral and political, may perhaps be mainly charged the fatal mischief which now hangs as a doom over the state, that the best men decline entering political life, and that there is every inducement for the least capable and the least worthy to be placed in the highest
seats. The ablest men of their generation did not attempt to reverse, or even to retard the retrogression of their country; but, on the contrary, for their own ends they precipitated it. I feared this when I observed their proceedings on the spot; and they afterwards proved the fact to all the world; and sad has the spectacle been. There is not even the consolation that, being dishonest, they failed; for their failure was on account of their eminence, and not their dishonesty. They were put aside to make way for knaves of an obscure cast, who might more readily beguile or evade the indignation of the world, which would not waste on a Fillmore or a Pierce the reprobation which would have attended on a Webster or a Clay who had done their deeds and committed their laches. Already, so long ago as twenty years, there was a striking contrast between the speech and manner of venerable elders, like Madison and Chief Justice Marshall, and those of the aspiring statesmen, Webster, Clay, and, in a smaller way, Everett and other second-rate politicians. The integrity, simplicity and heart-breathing earnestness of the aged statesmen were singularly contrasted with the affectations, professions, cautious procedures, and premeditated speech of the leaders of the time. How rapid and how great the deterioration has been since, every new page of American history bears witness. Still, there is no reason for despair. A safe issue is always possible, and most probable, where there is any principled and active body of true patriots, like the abolitionists of the United States. Their light shines the brighter for the gathering darkness about them; and they belong to a people who, however scared at new dangers for a time, cannot for ever love darkness rather than light. The choice is being offered to them more and more plainly; and my knowledge of them, personal and by study, gives me every hope that their choice will be the right one, if only they are compelled to make it before the lust of territorial aggrandisement has become overwhelming by indulgence.
In Margaret Fuller's Memoirs there is a letter which she declared
she sent to me, after copying it into her common-place book. It is a
condemnatory criticism of my "Society in America;" and her
condemnation is grounded on its being what she
called "an abolition book." I remember having a letter from her; and one which I considered unworthy of her and of the occasion, from her regarding the anti-slavery subject as simply a low and disagreeable one, which should be left to unrefined persons to manage, while others were occupied with higher things: but I do not think that the letter I received was the one which stands in her common-place book. I wish that she had mentioned it to me when my guest some years afterwards, or that my reply had appeared with her criticism. However, her letter, taken as it stands, shows exactly the difference between us. She who witnessed and aided the struggles of the oppressed in Italy must have become before her death better aware than when she wrote that letter that the struggle for the personal liberty of millions in her native republic ought to have had more of her sympathy, and none of the discouragement which she haughtily and complacently cast upon the cause. The difference between us was that while she was living and moving in an ideal world, talking in private and discoursing in public about the most fanciful and shallow conceits which the transcendentalists of Boston took for philosophy, she looked down upon persons who acted instead of talking finely, and devoted their fortunes, their peace, their repose, and their very lives to the preservation of the principles of the republic. While Margaret Fuller and her adult pupils sat "gorgeously dressed," talking about Mars and Venus, Plato and Göthe, and fancying themselves the elect of the earth in intellect and refinement, the liberties of the republic were running out as fast as they could go, at a breach which another sort of elect persons were devoting themselves to repair: and my complaint against the "gorgeous" pedants was that they regarded their preservers as hewers of wood and drawers of water, and their work as a less vital one than the pedantic orations which were spoiling a set of well-meaning women in a pitiable way. All that is settled now. It was over years before Margaret died. I mention it now to show, by an example already made public by Margaret herself, what the difference was between me and her, and those who followed her lead. This difference grew up mainly after my return from America. We were there intimate
friends; and I am disposed to consider that period the best of her life, except the short one which intervened between her finding her real self and her death. She told me what danger she had been in from the training her father had given her, and the encouragement to pedantry and rudeness which she derived from the circumstances of her youth. She told me that she was at nineteen the most intolerable girl that ever took a seat in a drawing-room. Her admirable candour, the philosophical way in which she took herself in hand, her genuine heart, her practical insight, and, no doubt, the natural influence of her attachment to myself, endeared her to me, while her powers, and her confidence in the use of them, led me to expect great things from her. We both hoped that she might go to Europe when I returned, with some friends of hers who would have been happy to take her: but her father's death, and the family circumstances rendered her going out of the question. I introduced her to the special care of R. Waldo Emerson and his wife: and I remember what Emerson said in wise and gentle rebuke of my lamentations for Margaret that she could not go to Europe, as she was chafing to do, for purposes of self-improvement. "Does Margaret Fuller,--supposing her to be what you say,--believe her progress to be dependent on whether she is here or there?" I accepted the lesson, and hoped the best. How it might have been with her if she had come to Europe in 1836, I have often speculated. As it was, her life in Boston was little short of destructive. I need but refer to the memoir of her. In the most pedantic age of society in her own country, and in its most pedantic city, she who was just beginning to rise out of pedantic habits of thought and speech relapsed most grievously. She was not only completely spoiled in conversation and manners: she made false estimates of the objects and interests of human life. She was not content with pursuing, and inducing others to pursue, a metaphysical idealism destructive of all genuine feeling and sound activity: she mocked at objects and efforts of a higher order than her own, and despised those who, like myself, could not adopt her scale of valuation. All this might have been spared, a world of mischief saved, and a world of good effected,
if she had found her heart a dozen years sooner, and in America instead of Italy. It is the most grievous loss I have almost ever known in private history,--the deferring of Margaret Fuller's married life so long. The noble last period of her life is, happily, on record as well as the earlier. My friendship with her was in the interval between her first and second stages of pedantry and forwardness: and I saw her again under all the disadvantages of the confirmed bad manners and self-delusions which she brought from home. The ensuing period redeemed all; and I regard her American life as a reflexion, more useful than agreeable, of the prevalent social spirit of her time and place; and the Italian life as the true revelation of the tender and high-souled woman, who had till then been as curiously concealed from herself as from others.
If eccentricities like Margaret Fuller's, essentially sound as she
was in heart and mind, could arise in American society, and not impair her
influence or be a spectacle to the community, it will be inferred that
eccentricity is probably rife in the United States. I certainly thought it
was, in spite (or perhaps in consequence) of the excessive caution which is
prevalent there in regard to the opinion of neighbours and society. It
takes weeks or months for an English person to admit the conception of
American caution, as a habit, and yet more as a spring of action: and
the freedom which we English enjoy in our personal lives and intercourses
must find an equivalent in Americans, somehow or other. Their
eccentricities are, accordingly, monstrous and frequent and various to a
degree incredible to sober English people like myself and my companion. The
worst of it is, there seem to be always mad people, more or fewer, who are
in waiting to pounce upon foreigners of any sort of distinction, as soon as
they land, while others go mad, or show their madness, from point to point
along the route. Something of the same sort happens elsewhere. A Queen, or
a Prime Minister's secretary may be shot at in London, as we know;
and probably there is no person eminent in literature or otherwise, who has
not been the object of some infirm brain or another. But in America, the
evil is sadly common. The first instance I encountered there was of a
gentleman from
the west who foretold my arrival in his country, and the time of it, before I had any notion of going, and who announced a new revelation which I was to aid in promulgating; and this incident startled and dismayed me considerably. I am not going into the history of the freaks of insanity, in that case or any other. Suffice it that, in any true history of a life, this liability must be set down as one condition of literary or other reputation. The case of the poor "High Priest" at Philadelphia was not the only one with which I was troubled in America; and I have met with others at home, both in London and since I have lived at Ambleside.
I encountered one specimen of American oddity before I left home which
should certainly have lessened my surprise at any that I met afterwards.
While I was preparing for my travels, an acquaintance one day brought a
buxom gentleman, whom he introduced to me under the name of Willis. There
was something rather engaging in the round face, brisk air and
enjouement of the young man; but his
conscious dandyism and unparalleled self-complacency spoiled the
satisfaction, though they increased the inclination to laugh. Mr. N.P.
Willis's plea for coming to see me was his gratification that I was
going to America: and his real reason was presently apparent;--a
desire to increase his consequence in London society by giving apparent
proof that he was on intimate terms with every eminent person in America.
He placed himself in an attitude of infinite ease, and whipped his little
bright boot with a little bright cane while he ran over the names of all
his distinguished country-men and country-women, and declared
he should send me letters to them all. This offer of intervention went so
very far that I said (what I have ever since said in the case of
introductions offered by strangers) while thanking him for his intended
good offices, that I was sufficiently uncertain in my plans to beg for
excuse beforehand, in case I should find myself unable to use the letters.
It appeared afterwards that to supply them and not to have them used suited
Mr. Willis's convenience exactly. It made him appear to have the
friendships he boasted of without putting the boast to the proof. It was
immediately before a late dinner that
the gentlemen called; and I found on the breakfast-table, next morning, a great parcel of Mr, Willis's letters, enclosed in a prodigious one to myself, in which he offered advice. Among other things, he desired me not to use his letter to Dr. Channing if I had others from persons more intimate with him; and he proceeded to warn me against two friends of Dr. and Mrs. Channing's, whose names I had never heard, and whom Mr. Willis represented as bad and dangerous people. This gratuitous defamation of strangers whom I was likely to meet confirmed the suspicions my mother and I had confided to each other about the quality of Mr. Willis's introductions. It seemed ungrateful to be so suspicious: but we could not see any good reason for such prodigious efforts on my behalf, nor for his naming any country-women of his to me in a way so spontaneously slanderous. So I resolved to use that packet of letters very cautiously; and to begin with one which should be well accompanied.--In New York harbour, newspapers were brought on board, in one of which was an extract from an article transmitted by Mr. Willis to the "New York Mirror," containing a most audacious account of me as an intimate friend of the writer. The friendship was not stated as a matter of fact, but so conveyed that it cost me much trouble to make it understood and believed, even by Mr. Willis's own family, that I had never seen him but once; and then without having previously heard so much as his name. On my return, the acquaintance who brought him was anxious to ask pardon if he had done mischief,--events having by that time made Mr. Willis's ways pretty well known. His partner in the property and editorship of the "New York Mirror" called on me at West Point, and offered and rendered such extraordinary courtesy that I was at first almost as much perplexed as he and his wife were when they learned that I had never seen Mr. Willis but once. They pondered, they consulted, they cross-questioned me; they inquired whether I had any notion what Mr. Willis could have meant by writing of me as in a state of close intimacy with him. In like manner, when, some time after, I was in a carriage with some members of a pic-nic party to Monument Mountain, a little girl seated at my feet clasped my knees fondly,
looked up in my face, and said "O! Miss Martineau! you are such a friend of my uncle Nathaniel's!" Her father was present; and I tried to get off without explanation. But it was impossible,--they all knew how very intimate I was with "Nathaniel": and there was a renewal of the amazement at my having seen him only once.--I tried three of his letters; and the reception was in each ease much the same,--a throwing down of the letter with an air not to be mistaken. In each case the reply was the same, when I subsequently found myself at liberty to ask what this might mean. "Mr. Willis is not entitled to write to me: he is no acquaintance of mine." As for the two ladies of whom I was especially to beware, I became exceedingly well acquainted with them, to my own advantage and pleasure; and, as a natural consequence, I discovered Mr. Willis's reasons for desiring to keep us apart. I hardly need add that I burned the rest of his letters. He had better have spared himself the trouble of so much manoeuvering, by which he lost a good deal, and could hardly have gained anything. I have simply stated the facts because, in the first place, I do not wish to be considered one of Mr. Willis's friends; and, in the next, it may be useful, and conducive to justice, to show, by a practical instance, what Mr. Willis's pretensions to intimacy are worth. His countrymen and countrywomen accept, in simplicity, his accounts of our aristocracy as from the pen of one of their own coterie; and they may as well have the opportunity of judging for themselves whether their notorious "Penciller" is qualified to write of Scotch Dukes and English Marquises, and European celebrities of all kinds in the way he has done.
For some weeks, my American intercourses were chiefly with literary
people, and with leading members of the Unitarian body,--far more
considerable in America than among us. All manner of persons called on us;
and every conceivable attention and honour was shown us, for the first
year. Of this nothing appears in my journal, except in the facts of what we
saw and did. Such idolatry as is signified by the American
phrase,--that a person is Lafayetted,--is not conceivable in
England: and its manifestations did not appear to me fit matter for a
personal journal.
Not a word is to be found in that journal therefore of either the flatteries of the first year or the insults of the second. A more difficult matter was how to receive them. I was charged with hardness and want of sympathy in easting back praise into people's faces: but what can one do but change the subject as fast as possible? To dwell on the subject of one's own merits is out of the question; but to disclaim praise is to dwell upon it. If one is silent, one is supposed to "swallow every thing." I see nothing for it but to talk of something else, on the first practicable opening. While under the novelty of this infliction of flatterers, it was natural to turn to those most homelike of our acquaintance,--the chief members of the Unitarian body, clergymen and others. Among them we found a welcome refuge, many a time, from the hubbub which confounded our senses: and exemplary was the kindness which some few of the body showed me even throughout the year of my unpopularity. But before that, my destiny had led me much among the families of statesmen, and the interests of political society: and finally, as I have shown, the Abolitionists were my nearest friends, as they have ever since remained.
It was while my companion and I were going from house to house in the
Unitarian connexion, between Philadelphia and our visits to our
Congressional friends, that an incident occurred which is worth relating as
curious in itself, and illustrative of more things than one. Our host in
Philadelphia, (a Unitarian clergyman, as I have said) had a little boy of
six who was a favourite of mine,--as of a good many other people. Mr.
Alcott, the extraordinary self-styled philosopher, whose name is not
unknown in England, was at Philadelphia at that time, trying his hand on
that strange management of children of which I have given my opinion
elsewhere.* Little Willie went to
Mr. Alcott sometimes; and very curious were the ideas and accounts of
lessons which he brought home. Very early in my visit, Willie's
father asked me whether I could throw any light on the authorship of a
parable which was supposed to be English, and which the children had
learned from Mr. Alcott's lips. This parable,
___________________
called "The Wandering Child," was creating such a sensation that it was copied and sent in all directions. It seemed to me, when Willie recited it, that I had somewhere seen it; but the impression was so faint as to be entirely uncertain, even to that extent. From Philadelphia, we went to the house of another clergyman at Baltimore; and there one of the first questions asked by my host was the origin of that parable. He had used the extraordinary license of taking the parable for the text of a recent sermon, instead of a passage of scripture; and his friends wanted to know where it came from. He was sadly disappointed that we could not tell him. More inquiries were made even at Washington, where we had no particular connexion with Unitarians. At Charleston, we found in our host a Unitarian clergyman who knew more of the "Monthly Repository" than any English readers I was acquainted with. He possessed it; and he had a fancy to look there for the parable,--some notion of having seen it there remaining on his mind. I went with him to his study; and there we presently found the parable,--in a not very old volume of the Monthly Repository, and, to my unspeakable amazement, with my own signature, V., at the end of it. By degrees my associations brightened and began to cohere: and at last I perfectly remembered when and where the conception occurred to me, and my writing the parable in my own room at Norwich, and carrying it down to my mother whom I saw in the garden, and her resting on her little spade as she listened.
The readers of Dr. Priestley's Life will not pronounce on me, (as
I was at first disposed to pronounce on myself) that I was losing my wits.
Dr. PriestIey tells how he once found in a friend's library a
pamphlet on some controverted topic which he brought to his friend with
praise, as the best thing he had seen on the subject. He wanted to
know,--the title-page being torn off,--who wrote it. His
friend stared as my Charleston host did; and Dr. Priestiey began to fear
that he was losing his faculties: but he remembered (and this was my
plea after him) that what we give out from our own minds, in speech or in
writing, is not a subject of memory, like what we take in from
other minds: and that there are few who can pretend. to remember what they have said in letters, after a few years. There was the fact, in short, that we had completely forgotten compositions of our own; and that we were not losing our faculties.
Here is the parable which went through such curious adventures.
THE WANDERING CHILD.
"In a solitary place among the groves, a child wandered
whithersoever he would. He believed himself alone, and wist not that one
watched him from the thicket, and that the eye of his parent was on him
continually; neither did he mark whose hand had opened a way for him thus
far. All things that he saw were new to him; therefore he feared nothing.
He cast himself down in the long grass, and as he lay he sang till his
voice of joy rang through the woods. When he nestled among the flowers, a
serpent arose from the midst of them; and when the child saw how its
burnished coat glittered in the sun like a rainbow, he stretched forth his
hand to take it to his bosom. Then the voice of his parent cried from the
thicket 'Beware!' And the child sprang up, and gazed above and
around, to know whence the voice came; but when he saw it not, he presently
remembered it no more.
He watched how a butterfly burst from its shell, and flitted faster than
he could pursue, and soon rose far above his reach.
When he gazed and could trace its flight no more, his father put forth
his hand, and pointed where the butterfly ascended, even into the
clouds.
But the child saw not the sign.
A fountain gushed forth amidst the shadows of the trees, and its waters
flowed into a deep and quiet pool.
The child kneeled on the brink, and looking in, he saw his own bright
face, and it smiled upon him.
As he stooped yet nearer to meet it, the voice once more said
'Beware!'
The child started back; but he saw that a gust had ruffled the waters,
and he said within himself, 'It was but the voice of the
breeze.'
And when the broken sunbeams glanced on the moving waves, he laughed,
and dipped his foot that the waters might again be ruffled: and the
coolness was pleasant to him. The voice was now louder, but he regarded it
not, as the winds bore it away.
At length he saw somewhat glittering in the depths of the pool; and he
plunged in to reach it.
As he sank, he cried aloud for help.
Ere the waters had closed over him, his father's hand was
stretched out to save him.
And while he yet shivered with chillness and fear, his parent said unto
him, 'Mine eye was upon thee, and thou didst not heed; neither hast
thou beheld my sign, nor hearkened to my voice. If thou hadst thought on
me, I had not been hidden.'
Then the child cast himself on his father's bosom and
said,--'Be nigh unto me still; and mine eyes shall wait on thee,
and my ears shall be open unto thy voice for ever more.'"
I need say no more of my American travels. Besides that I have given out
my freshest impressions in the two works on America which were published in
the year after my return, it is as impossible to me here as in other parts
of this Memoir to give any special account of my nearest and dearest
friends. To those who have seen by the volumes I refer to how I lived and
travelled with Dr. and Mrs. Follen no avowal or description of our
intercourse can be necessary; and the relation in which Mrs. Chapman stands
to me now, in the most deliberate and gravest hour of my life, renders it
impossible to lay open our relation further to the world. I will simply
state one fact which may show, without protestation, what my near and dear
American friends were to me. They and I did not half believe, when I came
away, that we had parted: and it was some years before I felt at all
sure that I should not live and die in America, when my domestic duties
should, in the course of nature, have closed. It was my Tynemouth illness,
in fact, which decided the conflict. Something of a conflict it was. If I
had gone to America, it would have been for the sole object of working in
the cause which I believed then, and which I believe now, to be the
greatest pending in the world. While my mother lived, my duty was clear--to remain with her if she and the family desired it. I did not think it the best arrangement; especially when I witnessed the painful effect on her of the resumption of my London life and acquaintances: but she and the others wished things to go on as they were; and I never thought of objecting. I did my utmost to make the two old ladies under my charge happy. It did not last very long,--only two years and a half, when I broke down under the anxiety of my position. During that time, the vision of a scheme of life, in which the anti-slavery cause (for the sake of the liberties of every kind involved in it) should be my vocation, was often before me,--not as a matter of imagination, but for decision by the judgment, when the time should arrive. The immediate objections of the judgment were two:--that, in the first place, it seldom or never answers to wander abroad for duty; every body doing best what lies nearest at hand: and, in the second place, that my relation to Mrs. Chapman required my utmost moral care. The discovery of her moral power and insight was to me so extraordinary that, while I longed to work with and under her, I felt that it must be morally perilous to lean on any one mind as I could not but lean on hers. Thus far, whenever we had differed, (and that had not seldom happened) I had found her right; and so deeply and broadly right as to make me long to commit myself to her guidance. Such a committal can never be otherwise than wrong; and this it was which, more than any thing, made me doubt whether I ought to contemplate the scheme. As usual in such cases, events decided the matter. My mother was removed from under my care by my own illness; and, when I had recovered, and she died at an advanced age, I had a clear course of duty to pursue at home, in which perhaps there may be as decided an implication of human liberties of thought, action and speech as in the anti-slavery cause itself.
To a certain extent, my travels in America answered my purposes of
self-discipline in undertaking them. Fearing that I was growing too
much accustomed to luxury, and to an exclusive regularity in the modes of
living, I desired to "rough it"
for a considerable time. The same purpose would have been answered as well, perhaps, and certainly more according to my inclination, if I could have been quiet, instead of travelling, after my great task was done;--if I could have had repose of body and peace of mind, in freedom from all care. This was impossible; and the next best thing was such a voyage and journey as I took. America was the right country too, (apart from the peculiar agitation it happened to be in when I arrived;) the national boast being a perfectly true one,--that a woman may travel alone from Maine to Georgia without dread of any kind of injury. For two ladies who feared nothing, there was certainly nothing to fear. We had to "rough it" sometimes, as every body must in so new and thinly peopled a country; but we always felt ourselves safe from ill usage of any kind. One night, at New Orleans, we certainly did feel as much alarmed as could well be; but that was nobody's fault. From my childhood up, I believe I have never felt so desolating a sense of fear as for a few moments on that occasion,--which was simply this.
A cousin of mine whom I saw at Mobile had a house at New Orleans,
inhabited by himself or his partner, as they happened to be there or at
Mobile. My cousin kindly offered us the use of this house during our stay,
saying that we might thus obtain some hours of coolness and quiet in the
morning which would be unattainable in a boarding-house, or in the
capacity of guests. The "people," that is, the slaves, received
orders to make us comfortable, and the partner saw that all orders were
obeyed. We arrived at about ten in the forenoon,--exceedingly
tired,--not only by long travel in the southern forests, but
especially by the voyage of the preceding night,--in hot, thundery
weather, a rough sea, and in a steamboat which so swarmed with cockroaches
that we could not bring ourselves to lie down.--It was a day of
considerable excitement. We found a great heap of letters from home; we saw
many friends in the course of the day; and at night I wrote letters so late
that my companion, for once, went to bed before me. We had four rooms
forming a square, or nearly;--two sitting rooms, front
and back; and two bed-rooms opening out of them, and also reaching, like them, from the landing at the top of the stairs to the street front. On account of the heat, we decided to put all our luggage (which was of considerable bulk) into one room, and sleep in the other. The beds were very large, and as hard as the floor,--as they should be in such a climate. Mosquito nets hung from the top; and the room was plentifully provided with sponging baths and water.--Miss J. was in bed before I finished my writing: and I therefore did not call her when I found that the French window opening on the balcony could not be shut, as the spring was broken. Any one could reach the balcony from the street easily enough; and here was an entrance which could not be barred! I set the heaviest chair against it, with the heaviest things piled on it that I could lay my hands on. I need not explain that New Orleans is, of all cities in the civilised world, the most renowned for night robbery and murder. The reputation is deserved; or was at that time: and we had been in the way of hearing some very painful and alarming stories from some of our friends who spoke from their own experience. Miss J. was awake when I was about to step into bed, and thoughtlessly put out the candle. I observed on my folly in doing this, and on our having forgotten to inquire where the slave-quarter was. Here we were, alone in the middle of New Orleans, with no light, no bell, no servants within reach if we had had one, and no idea where the slaves were to be found! We could only hope that nothing would happen: but I took my trumpet with me within the mosquito curtain, and laid it within reach of Miss J.'s hand, in case of her having to tell me any news. I was asleep in a trice. Not so Miss J.
She gently awoke me after what seemed to her a very long time; and,
putting the cup of my tube close to her mouth, whispered slowly, so that I
could hear her, "There is somebody or something walking about the
room." I whispered that we could do nothing: and that, in our
helpless state, the safest way was to go to sleep. "But I
can't," replied she. I cannot describe how sorry I was for her,
sitting up listening to fearful
sounds that I could not hear. I earnestly desired to help hex: but there was nothing that I could do. To sit up, unable to hear anything, and thus losing nerve every minute, was the worst thing of all for us both. I told her to rouse me again if she had the slightest wish: but that I really advised her going to sleep, as I meant to do. She again said she could not. I did; and it must be remembered how remarkably tired I was. After another space, Miss J. woke me again, and in the same cautious manner said, "It is a man without shoes; and he is just at your side of the bed." We each said the same thing as before; and again I went to sleep. Once more she woke me; and this time she spoke with a little less caution. She said he had been walking about all that time,--for hours. He had pushed against the furniture, and especially the washstand, and seemed to be washing his hands: and now he had gone out at the door nearest the stairs. What did I think of her fastening that door? I feared she would let the mosquitoes in if she got up; and there were two other doors to the room; so I did not think we should gain much. She was better satisfied to try; and she drove a heavy trunk against the door, returned without letting in any mosquitoes, and at last obtained some sleep. In the morning we started up to see what we had lost. My watch was safe on the table. My rings were not there; but we soon spied them rolled off to the corners of the room. The water from the baths was spilled; and our clothes were on the floor; but we missed nothing.
We agreed to say and do nothing ungracious to the servants, and to make
no complaint; but to keep on the watch for an explanation of the mystery;
and, if evening came without any light being thrown on the matter, to
consult our friends the Porters about spending another night in that
room.--At breakfast, the slave women, who had been to market, and got
us some young green peas and other good things, hung over our chairs, and
were ready to gossip, as usual. I could make nothing of their jabber; and
Miss J. not much: but she persevered on this occasion; and, before
breakfast was over, she gave me a nod which showed me that our case was
explained. She had been playing with a little
black dog the while: and she told me at length that this little black dog belonged to the personage at the back of my chair; but that the big dog, chained up in the yard, belonged to my cousin; and that the big dog was the one which was unchained the last thing at night, and allowed the range of the premises, to deal with the rats, which abounded in that house as in every other in New Orleans. The city being built in a swamp, innumerable rats are a necessary consequence. The intruder was regarded very differently the next night; and we had no more alarms. I own that the moments when my companion told me that a man without shoes was walking about the room, and when, again, she heard him close by my bedside, were those of very painful fear. I have felt nothing like it on any other occasion, since I grew up.
Safe as we were from ill usage, our friends in America rather wondered
at our fearlessness about the perils of the mere travel. We were supposed,
before we were known, to be fine ladies; and fine ladies are full of
terrors in America, as elsewhere. When it was seen that we could help
ourselves, and had no groundless fears, some of our friends reminded us
that their forests and great rivers were not like our own mailroads; and
that untoward accidents and detentions might take place, when we should be
glad of such aid as could be had from its being known who we were. Chief
Justice Marshall, the survivor of the great men of the best days of the
republic, and the most venerated man in the country, put into my hands
"a general letter," as he called it, commending us to the good
offices of all citizens, in case of need. The letter lies before me; and I
will give it as a curiosity. No occasion of peril called it forth for use;
but it was a show, in many a wild place,--gratifying the eyes of
revering fellow citizens of the majestic old Judge. Here it is.
"I have had the honour of being introduced to, and of forming
some acquaintance with, Miss Martineau and Miss J--, two English
ladies of distinction who are making the tour of the United States. As
casualties to which all travellers, especially those of the female sex, are
liable may expose these ladies to some difficulties in situations remote
from those populous towns in which they my find
persons to whom they will be known, it gives me pleasure to state that these ladies have the fairest claims to the aid, protection and services which their possible situation may require: that they are of high worth and character, and that I shall, individually, feel myself under obligations to any gentleman who, in the event described, shall be in any manner useful to them.
J. MARSHALL.
A parting act of gallantry has puzzled me many a time; and the more I
have thought of it, the less have I known what to make of it. For many
months it had been settled, as I have mentioned, that I was to return in
Captain Bursley's ship,--he being a friend, in virtue of mutual
friendships on both sides the water. Some days before I sailed, my last
American host undertook the business of paying my passage, and changing my
American money for English. We were not aware of any extraordinary
precipitation in settling this business. When I was out at sea, however, a
fellow-passenger, one of our party of six, put into my hands a
packet of money. It was the amount of my fare; and my
fellow-passenger either could not or would not tell me who sent it.
She said she was as helpless in the matter as I was. All that she could ten
me was that somebody had gone, in supposed good time, to pay my passage,
was disconcerted to find I had paid it, and could think of no other way
than returning the money through a fellow-passenger.--I know no
more of the motive than of the person or persons. Whether it was shame at
the treatment I had received on the anti-slavery question, or a
primitive method of hospitality, or any thing else, I have never been able
to satisfy myself, or to get any light from any body. I could do nothing,
and say nothing. The only certain thing about the case is that the act was
meant in kindness: and I need not say that I was grateful
accordingly.
The New York host whom I have referred to was an intimate friend of our
captain: and he knew enough of one or two of the passengers to be
pretty well aware that there would be moral tempests on board, however fair
the weather might be overhead. He and his wife kindly forbore to give me
any hint of coming discomfort which could not be avoided; but they begged
me to
keep a very full journal of the voyage, and send it to them, for their private reading. I did so: and they next requested that I would agree to a proposal to print it,--the names being altered; and the most disgraceful of the incidents (e.g., a plot for the seduction of an orphan girl) being omitted. The narrative accordingly appeared in the "Penny Magazine" of October and November, 1837, under the title of "A Month at Sea." As it may amuse somebody to see, in such detail, what such a voyage was like, the narrative will be found in the Appendix.* It is enough to say here that I had the advantage of the companionship of Professor and Mrs. Farrar, of Harvard University; of Lieutenant Wilkes, who was on his way to England to prepare for the American Exploring Expedition, of which he was Commander; and of two or three younger members of the party, who were good-humoured and agreeable comrades, in the midst of a set of passengers who were as far as possible from being either.
We arrived at Liverpool on the 26th of August, 1836; and there I found
several members of my family awaiting me.
Even people who know nothing of books in a mercantile view to have as
little conception of the true aim and temper of
authorship as the book-merchants themselves, who talk of a book as an "article,"--as the mercer talks of a shawl or a dress. A good, unselfish, affectionate woman, whom I really love, showed me one day how she loves me still as in the old times when I was not yet an author, by evidencing her total lack of sympathy in my thoughts and feelings about my work. I am to her the Harriet of our youth,--the authorship being nothing more between us than something which has made her happy for me, because it has made me happy. I like this,--the being loved as the old Harriet: but, still, I was startled one day by her congratulating me on my success in obtaining fame. I had worked hard for it, and she was so glad I had got it! I do not like disclaiming, or in any way dwelling on this sort of subject; but it was impossible to let this pass. I told her I had never worked for fame. "Well then,--for money." She was so glad I was so successful, and could get such sums for my books. This, again, could not be let pass. I assured her I had never written, or omitted to write, any thing whatever from pecuniary considerations. "Well, then," said she, "for usefulness. I am determined to be right. You write to do good to your fellow-creatures. You must allow that I am right now." I was silent; and when she found that I could allow no such thing, she was puzzled. Her alternatives were exhausted. I told her that I wrote because I could not help it. There was something that I wanted to say, and I said it: that was all. The fame and the money and the usefulness might or might not follow. It was not by my endeavour if they did.
On landing at Liverpool, I found various letters from publishers
awaiting me. One was from Mr. Bentley, reminding me of his having met me at
Miss Berry's, and expressing his hope of having my manuscript
immediately in his hands. My reply was that I had no manuscript. Another
letter was from Messrs. Saunders and Otley to my mother, saying that they
desired the pleasure of publishing my travels. I was disposed to treat with
them, because the negotiation for the "Two Old Men's
Tales" had been an agreeable one. I therefore explained to these
gentlemen the precise state of the case, and at length agreed to an
interview when I should return to town. My mother and I reached home before London began to fill; and I took some pains to remain unseen for two or three weeks, while arranging my books, and my dress and my other affairs. One November morning, however, my return was announced in the "Morning Chronicle;" and such a day as that I never passed, and hoped at the time never to pass again.
First, Mr. Bentley bustled down, and obtained entrance to my study
before any body else. Mr. Colburn came next, and had to wait. He bided his
time in the drawing-room. In a few minutes arrived Mr. Saunders, and
was shown into my mother's parlour. These gentlemen were all
notoriously on the worst terms with each other; and the fear was that they
should meet and quarrel on the stairs. Some friends who happened to call at
the time were beyond measure amused.
Mr. Bentley began business. Looking hard into the fire, he "made
no doubt" I remembered the promise I had made him at Miss
Berry's house. I had no recollection of having promised any thing to
Mr. Bentley. He told me it was impossible should forget having assured him
that if any body published for me, except Fox, it should be himself. I
laughed at the idea of such an engagement. Mr. Bentley declared it might be
his silliness; but he should go to his grave persuaded that I had made him
such a promise. It might be his silliness, he repeated. I replied that
indeed it was; as I had a perfect recollection that no book of mine was in
question at all, but the Series, which he had talked of putting among his
Standard Novels. He now offered the most extravagant terms for a book on
America, and threw in, as a bribe, an offer of a thousand pounds for the
first novel I should write. Though my refusals were as positive as I could
make them, I had great difficulty in getting rid of him: and I doubt
whether I was so rude to Mr. Harper himself as the London
speculator.--Mr. Colburn, meantime, sent in his letter of
introduction, which was from the poet Campbell, with a message that he
would shortly return. So Mr. Saunders entered next. I liked him, as before;
and our conversation about the book became quite confidential. I explained
to him fully
my doubt as to the reception of the work, on the ground of its broad republican character. I told him plainly that I believed it would ruin me, because it would be the principle of the book to regard every thing American from the American point of view: and this method, though the only fair one, was so unlike the usual practice, and must lead to a judgment so unlike what English people were prepared for, that I should not be surprised by a total condemnation of my book and myself. I told him that, after this warning, he could retreat or negotiate, as he pleased: but that, being thus warned, he and not I must propose terms: and moreover, it must be understood that, our negotiation once concluded, I could listen to no remonstrance or objection, in regard to the contents of my book. Mr. Saunders replied that he had no difficulty in agreeing to these conditions, and that we might now proceed to business. When he had ascertained that the work would consist of three volumes, and what their probable size would be, the amusing part of the affair began. "Well, Ma'am," said he, "what do you propose that, we should give you for the copyright of the first edition?" "Why, you know," said I, "I have written to you, from the beginning, that I would propose no terms. I am quite resolved against it."--"Well, Ma'am; supposing the edition to consist of three thousand copies, will you just give me an idea what you would expect for it?"--"No, Mr. Saunders: that is your business. I wait to hear your terms."
So I sat strenuously looking into the fire,--Mr. Saunders no less
strenuously looking at me, till it was all I could do to keep my
countenance. He waited far me to speak; but I would not and I wondered
where the matter would end, when he at last opened his lips. "What
would you think, Ma'am, of £900 for the first
edition?"--"Including the twenty-five copies I
stipulated for?"--"Including twenty-five copies of
the work, and all proceeds of the sale in America, over and above
expenses." I thought these liberal terms; and I said so; but
suggested that each party should take a day or two for consideration, to
leave no room for repentance hereafter. I inquired whether Messrs. Saunders
and Otley had any objection to my
naming their house as the one I was negotiating with, as I disliked the appearance of entertaining the proffers of various houses, which yet I could not get rid of without a distinct answer to give. Apparently amused at the question, Mr. Saunders replied that it would be gratifying to them to be so named.
On the stairs, Mr. Saunders met Mr. Colburn, who chose to be confident
that Campbell's introduction would secure to him all he wished. The
interview was remarkably disagreeable, from his refusing to be refused, and
pretending to believe that what I wanted was more and more money. At last,
on my giving him a broad hint to go away, he said that, having no intention
of giving up his object, he should spend the day at a coffee-house
in the neighbourhood, whence he should shortly send in terms for my
consideration. He now only implored a promise that I would not finally pass
my word that day. The moment he was gone, I slipped out into the Park to
refresh my mind and body; for I was heated and wearied with the conferences
of the morning. On my return, I found that Mr. Colburn had called
again: and while we were at dinner, he sent in a letter, containing
his fresh terms. They were so absurdly high that if I had had any
confidence in the soundness of the negotiation before, it would now be
overthrown. Mr. Colburn offered £2,000 for the present work, on the
supposition of the sale of I forget what number, and £1,000 for the
first novel I should write. The worst of it was, he left word that he
should call again at ten o'clock in the evening. When we were at tea,
Mr. Bentley sent in a set of amended proposals; and at ten, Mr. Colburn
arrived. He set forth his whole array of "advantages," and
declared himself positive that no house in London could have offered higher
terms than his. I reminded him that I had been telling him all day that my
objections did not relate to the amoumt of money; and that I was going to
accept much less: that it was impossible that my work should yield
what he had offered, and leave anything over for himself; and that I
therefore felt that these people were intended to bind me to his
house,--an obligation which I did not choose to incur. He pathetically
complained of having raised up rivals to himself in the assistants whom
he had trained, and concluded with an affected air of resignation which was highly amusing. Hanging his head on one side, and sighing, he enunciated the sentiment: "When, in pursuing any praiseworthy object, we have done all we can, and find it in vain, we can but be resigned." With great satisfaction I saw him lighted down stairs, and heard the house-door locked, at near midnight, on the last of the booksellers for that day. From that time forward, Mr. Colburn was seen, on the appearance of any of my works, to declare himself "singularly unfortunate" in having been always too late. He professed to have the best reason to know that if he had been a day or so earlier in his application, he would have been my publisher. This was in each case a delusion. I never, for a moment, encouraged any such expectation; and when, in course of time, Mr. Colburn's piracies of Sparks's Washington and other works were brought before the law courts, I was glad to have avoided all connection with the house.--The only reasons for dwelling on the matter at all are that, in the first place, it is desirable to put on record exactly what did happen on an occasion which was a good deal talked about; and next, because it may be well to show how the degradation of literature comes about, in times when speculating publishers try to make grasping authors, and to convert the serious function of authorship into a gambling match. The way in which authors allowed themselves to be put up to auction, and publishers squabbled at the sale was a real and perpetual grief to me to witness. It reminded me but too often of the stand and the gesticulating man with the hammer, and the crowding competitors whom I had seen jostling each other in the slave-markets of the United States. I went to bed that night with a disgusted and offended feeling of having been offered bribes, all day long, with a confidence which was not a little insulting.
My transactions with Messrs. Sanriders and Otley were always very
satisfactory. I did not receive a penny from the sale of my American books
in the United States, though my American friends exerted themselves to
protect the work from being pirated: but the disappointment was the
fault of my publishers' agent; and they were as sorry for it as I
was. Soon after the
appearance of "Society in America," Mr. Saunders called on me to propose a second work, which should have more the character of travel, and be of a lighter quality to both writer and reader. I had plenty of material; and, though I should have liked some rest, this was no sufficient reason for refusing. The publishers offered me £600 for this, in addition to the attendant advantages allowed with the former work.--Even through these liberal and honourable publishers, however, I became acquainted with one of the tricks of the trade which surprised me a good deal. After telling me the day of publication, and announcing that my twenty-five copies would be ready, Mr. Saunders inquired when I should like to come to their back padour, "and write the notes."--"What notes?"--"The notes for the Reviews, you know, Ma'am." He was surprised at being obliged to explain that authors write notes to friends and acquaintances connected with periodicals, "to request favourable notices of the work." I did not know how to credit this; and Mr. Saunders was amazed that I had never heard of it. "I assure you, Ma'am,-- -- does it; and all our authors do it." On my emphatically declining, he replied "As you please, Ma'am: but it is the universal practice, I believe." I have always been related to the Reviews exactly like the ordinary public. I have never inquired who had reviewed me, or known who was going to do so, except by public rumour. I do not very highly respect reviews, nor like to write them; for the simple reason that in ninety-nine cases out of a hundred, the author understands his subject better than the reviewer. It can hardly be otherwise while the author treats one subject, to his study of which his book itself is a strong testimony; whereas the reviewer is expected to pass from topic to topic, to any extent, pronouncing, out of his brief survey, on the results of deep and protracted study. Of all the many reviews of my books on America and Egypt, there was not, as far as I know, one which did not betray ignorance of the respective countries. And, on the other hand, there is no book, except the very few which have appeared on my own particular subjects, that I could venture to pronounce on; as, in every other case, I feel myself compelled to approach a book as a learner, and not
as a judge. This is the same thing as saying that reviewing, in the wholesale way in which it is done in our time, is a radically vicious practice; and such is indeed my opinion. I am glad to see scientific men, and men of erudition, and true connoisseurs in art, examining what has been done in their respective departments: and every body is glad of good essays, whether they appear in books called Reviews or elsewhere. But of the reviews of our day, properly so called, the vast majority must be worthless, because the reviewer knows less than the author of the matter in hand.
In choosing the ground of my work, "Society in
America,"--(which should have been called, but for the objection
of my publishers, "Theory and Practice of Society in America,")
I desired fairness in the first place: and. I believe it was most
fair to take my stand on the American point of view,--judging American
society, in its spirit and methods, by the American tests,--the
Declaration of Independence, and the constitutions based upon its
principles. It had become a practice so completely established to treat of
America in a mode of comparison with Europe, that I had little hope of
being at first understood by more than a few. The Americans themselves had
been so accustomed to be held up in contrast with Europeans by travellers
that they could not get rid of the prepossession, even while reading my
book. What praise there was excited vanity, as if such a thing had never
been heard of before: and any censure was supposed to be sufficiently
answered by evidence that the same evils existed in England. I anticipated
this; and that consternation would be excited by some of my republican and
other principles. Some of this consternation, and much of the censure
followed, with a good deal that I had not conceived of. All this was of
little consequence, in comparison with the comfort of having done some
good, however little, in both countries. The fundamental fault of the book
did not become apparent to me for some time after;--its metaphysical
framework, and the abstract treatment of what must necessarily be a
concrete subject. The fault is not exclusively mine. It rests with the
American theory which I had taken for my stand-
point: but it was the weakness of an immature mind to choose that method of treatment; just as it was the act of immature politicians to make after the same method the first American constitution,--the one which would not work, and which gave place to the present arrangement. Again, I was infected to a certain degree with the American method of dissertation or preaching; and I was also full of Carlylism, like the friends I had left in the western world. So that my book, while most carefully true in its facts, had a strong leaning towards the American fashion of theorising; and it was far more useful on the other side of the Atlantic than on this. The order of people here who answer to the existing state of the Americans took the book to heart very earnestly, if I may judge by the letters from strangers which flowed in upon me, even for years after its publication. The applications made to me for guidance and counsel,--applications which even put into my hand the disposal of a whole life, in various instances,--arose, not from agreement in political opinion, nor from discontent with things at home; but from my hearty conviction that social affairs are the personal duty of every individual, and from my freedom in saying what I thought. The stories that I could tell, from letters which exist among my papers, or from those which I thought it right to burn at once, would move the coldest, and rouse the laziest. Those which touched me most related to the oppressions which women in England suffer from the law and custom of the country. Some offered evidence of intolerable oppression, if I could point out how it might be used. Others offered money, effort, courage in enduring obloquy, every thing, if I could show them how to obtain, and lead them in obtaining, arrangements by which they could be free in spirit, and in outward liberty to make what they could of life. I feel strongly tempted to give here two or three narratives: but it would not be right. The applicants and their friends may be living; and I might he betraying confidence, though nearly twenty years have elapsed. Suffice it that though I now disapprove the American form and style of the book, not the less standing by my choice of the American point of view, I have never regret-
ted its boldness of speech. I felt a relief in having opened my mind which I would at no time have exchanged for any gain of reputation or fortune. The time had come when, having experienced what might be called the extremes of obscurity and difficulty first, and influence and success afterwards, I could pronounce that there was nothing for which it was worth sacrificing freedom of thought and speech. I enjoyed in addition the consolidation of invaluable friendships in America, and the acquisition of new ones at home. Altogether, I am well pleased that I wrote the book, though I now see how much better it might have been done if I had not been at the metaphysical period of my life when I had to treat of the most metaphysical constitution and people in the world.
Some of the wisest of my friends at home,--and especially, I
remember Sydney Smith and Carlyle,--gently offered their criticism on
my more abstract American book in the pleasant form of praise of the more
concrete one. The "Retrospect of Western Travel" was very
successful,--as indeed the other was, though not, I believe, to the
extent of the publishers' expectations. Sydney Smith showed but too
surely, not long after, in his dealings with American Repudiation, that he
did not trouble himself with any study of the Constitution of the United
States; for he crowded almost as many mistakes as possible into his
procedure,--supposing Congress to be answerable for the doings of
Pennsylvania, and Pennsylvania to have repudiated her debts; which she
never did. Readers who thus read for amusement, and skip the politics,
liked my second book best: and so did those who, like Carlyle, wisely
desire us to see what we can, and tell what we see, without spinning out of
ourselves systems and final causes, and all manner of notions which, as
self-derived, are no part of our business or proper material in
giving an account of an existing nation. Carlyle wrote me that he had
rather read of Webster's cavernous eyes and arm under his
coat-tail, than all the political speculation that a
cut-and-dried system could suggest. I find before me a
memorandum that Lord Holland sent me by General Fox a motto for the chapter
on Washington. How it came about, I do not
exactly remember; but I am sure my readers, as well as I, were obliged to Lord Holland for as exquisite an appropriation of an exquisite eulogy as was ever proposed. The lines are the Duke of Buckingham's on Lord Fairfax.
"He might have been a
king
But that he
understood
How much it was a meaner thing
To
be unjustly great than honourably good."
It was in September of that year (1837) that I began to keep a Diary. My
reason was that I saw so many wise people, and heard so much valuable
conversation, that my memory would not serve me to retain what I was sorry
to lose. I continued the practice for about five years, when I found it
becoming, not only burdensome, but, (as I was ill and living in solitude,)
pernicious. I find, by the first portion of my Diary, that I finished the
"Retrospect of Western Travel" on the first of December, 1837,
having written a good many other things during the autumn, of which I now
remember nothing. It was in August of that year that the Editor of the
Westminster Review (then the property of Mr. J.S. Mill) called on me, and
asked me to write a review of Miss Sedgwick's works. I did so for the
October number, and I believe I supplied about half-a-dozen
articles in the course of the next two years,--the best known of which
is "The Martyr Age of the United States,"--a sketch of the
history of Abolitionism in the United States, up to that time. I find
mentioned in my Diary of articles for the "Penny Magazine,"
before and after the one already referred to,--the "Month at
Sea:" and I remember that I earned Knight's
"Gallery of Portraits," and some other valuable books in that
pleasant way. The most puzzling thing to me is to find repeated references
to a set of Essays called "The Christian Seer," with some
speculation on their quality, while I can recal nothing whatever about
them,--their object, their subject, their mode of publication, or any
thing else. I can only hope that others have forgotten them as completely
as I have; for they would not have been worth much, if I have never heard
thought of them since. They seem to have cost me some pains and care; and they were probably not the better for that.--The entry in my Diary on the completion of the "Retrospect" brings back some very deep feelings. "I care little about this book of mine. I have not done it carelessly. I believe it is true: but it will fill no place in my mind and life; and I am glad it is done. Shall I despise myself hereafter for my expectations from my novel?"
Great were my expectations from my novel, for this reason chiefly; that
for many years now my writing had been almost entirely about fact:
facts of society and of individuals: and the constraint of the effort
to be always correct, and to bear without solicitude the questioning of my
correctness, had become burdensome. I felt myself in danger of losing
nerve, and dreading criticism on the one hand, and of growing rigid and
narrow about accuracy on the other. I longed inexpressibly for the liberty
of fiction, while occasionally doubting whether I had the power to use that
freedom as I could have done ten years before. The intimate friend, on
whose literary counsel, as I have said, I reposed so thankfully, and at
whose country-house I found such sweet refreshment every autumn, was
the confidante of my aspirations about a novel; and many a talk she and I
had that autumn about the novel I was to write in the course of the next
year. She never flattered me; and her own relish of fiction made her all
the more careful not to mislead me as to my chances of success in a new
walk of literature. But her deliberate expectation was that I should
succeed; and her expectation was grounded, like my own, on the fact that my
heart and mind were deeply stirred on one or two moral subjects on which I
wanted the relief of speech, or which could be well expressed in fiction as
in any other way,--and perhaps with more freedom and earnestness than
under any other form. After finishing my American subjects, I was to take a
holiday,--to spend whole days without putting pen to paper; and then I
was to do my best with my novel.
Such was the scheme: and so it went on up to the finishing of the
year's engagements, and the first day of holiday, when I
found reason to suspect that I had been under too long a strain of work and of anxiety. During that summer, I failed somewhat in strength, and, to my own surprise, in spirits. I told no person of this, except the friend and hostess just referred to. Within two years we found that I had already begun to sink under domestic anxieties, and the toil which was my only practicable refuge from them. The illness which prostrated me in 1839 was making itself felt,--though not recognised,--in 1837. I was dimly aware of overstrained strength, on the first experiment of holiday, when something happened which threw me into great perturbation. Nothing disturbs me so much as to have to make a choice between nearly equal alternatives; and it was a very serious choice that I had to make now. A member of an eminent publishing firm called on me on the eleventh of December, to propose that his house should set up a periodical which was certainly much wanted,--an Economical Magazine,--of which I was to have the sole charge. The salary offered was one which would have made me entirely easy about income: the subject was one which I need not fear to undertake: the work was wanted: and considerations like these were not strongly balanced by the facts that I felt tired and longed for rest, or by the prospect of the confinement which the editorship would impose. The vacillation of my mind was for some days very painful. I find, two days later, this entry. "In the morning, I am pro, and at night, and in the night, con the scheme. I wonder how it will end. I see such an opening in it for things that I want to say! and I seem to be the person to undertake such a thing. I can toil--I am persevering, and in the habit of keeping my troubles to myself. If suffering be the worst on the con side, let it come. It will be a fine discipline of taste, temper, thought and spirits. But I don't expect -- and -- will accede to my last stipulations. If not, there's an end. If they do, I think I shall make the plunge." Two days later:--"After tea, sat down before the fire with pencil and paper, to make out a list of subjects, contributors and books, for my periodical. Presently came a letter from -- and --, which I knew must nearly decide my fate in regard to the pro-
ject. I distinctly felt that it could not hurt me, either way, as the pros and cons seem so nearly balanced that I should be rather thankful to have the matter decided for me. -- and -- grant all that I have asked; and it looks much as if we were to proceed. So I went on with my pondering till past ten, by which time I had got a sheetful of subjects." I certainly dreaded the enterprise more than I desired it. "It is an awful choice before me! Such facilities for usefulness and activity of knowledge; such certain toil and bondage; such risk of failure and descent from my position! The realities of life press upon me now. If I do this, I must brace myself up to do and suffer like a man. No more waywardness, precipitation, and reliance on allowance from others! Undertaking a man's duty, I must brave a man's fate. I must be prudent, independent, serene, good-humoured; earnest with cheerfulness. The possibility is open before me of showing what a periodical with a perfect temper may be:--also, of setting women forward at once into the rank of men of business. But the hazards are great. I wonder how it will end." I had consulted two or three intimate friends, when I wrote these entries: and had written to my brother James for his opinion. The friends at hand were all in favour of my undertaking the enterprise. If the one remaining opinion had been in agreement with theirs, I should have followed the unanimous advice: but on the nineteenth, I find, "James is altogether against the periodical plan." I wrote my final refusal on that day; and again I was at liberty to ponder my novel.
My doctrine about plots in fiction has been given at sufficient length.
It follows of course that I looked into real life for mine. I attached
myself strongly to one which it cost me much to surrender. It is a story
from real life which Miss Sedgwick has offered in her piece called
"Old Maids," in her volume of "Tales and Sketches,"
not likely to be known in England:--a story of two sisters, ten
years apart in age, the younger of whom loves and finally marries the
betrothed of the elder. Miss Sedgwick told me the real story, with some
circumstances of the deepest interest which she, for good reasons,
suppressed, but which I might have used. If I had wrought out this story, I
should of
course have acknowledged its source. But I deferred it,--and it is well I did. Mrs. S. Carter Hall relates it as the story of two Irish sisters, and impresses the anecdote by a striking woodcut, in her "Ireland:" and Mrs. Browning has it again, in her beautiful "Bertha in the Lane."
I was completely carried away by the article on St. Domingo in the
Quarterly Review, (vol. xxi.) which I lighted upon, one day at this time,
while looking for the noted article on the Grecian Philosophy in the same
volume. I pursued the study of Toussaint L'Ouverture's
character in the Biographie Universelle; and, though it is badly done, and
made a mere patch-work of irreconcilable views of him, the real man
shone out into my mind, through all mists and shadows. I went to my
confidante, with a sheetful of notes, and a heartful of longings to draw
that glorious character,--with its singular mixture of negro
temperament, heathen morality, and as much of Christianity as agreed with
the two. But my friend could not see the subject as I did. She honestly
stood by her objections, and I felt that I could not proceed against the
counsel of my only adviser. I gave it up: but a few years after, when
ill at Tynemouth, I reverted to my scheme and fulfilled it: and my
kind adviser, while never liking the subject in an artistic sense,
graciously told me that the book had kept her up, over her
dressing-room fire, till three in the morning. There was a police
report, during that winter,--very brief,--only one short
paragraph,--which moved me profoundly, and which I was sure I could
work out into a novel of the deepest interest. My fear was that that one
paragraph would affect other readers as it did me, and be remembered, so
that the catastrophe of my tale would be known from the beginning: so
we deferred that plot, meaning that I should really work upon it one day.
The reason why I never did is that, as I have grown older, I have seen more
and more the importance of dwelling on things honest, lovely, hopeful and
bright, rather than on the darker and fouler passions and most mournful
weaknesses of human nature. Therefore it was that I reverted to Toussaint,
rather than to the moral victim who was the hero of the police-court
story.
What then was to be done? We came back, after every divergence, to the
single fact (as I then believed it) that a friend of our family, whom I had
not seen very often, but whom I had revered from my youth up, had been
cruelly driven, by a match-making lady, to propose to the sister of
the woman he loved,--on private information that the elder had lost
her heart to him, and that he had shown her attention enough to warrant it.
The marriage was not a very happy one, good as were the persons concerned,
in their various ways. I altered the circumstances as much as I could, and
drew the character, not of our English but of an American friend, whose
domestic position is altogether different: and lo! it came to my
knowledge, years afterwards, that the story of our friend's mischance
was not at all true. I was rejoiced to hear it. Not only was I relieved
from the fear of hurting a good man's feelings, if he should ever
read "Deerbrook:" but "Deerbrook" was a
fiction, after all, in. its groundwork.
The process was an anxious one. I could not at all tell whether I was
equal to my enterprise. I found in it a relief to many pent-up
sufferings, feelings, and convictions: and I can truly say that it
was uttered from the heart. But my friend seemed nearly as doubtful of
success as I was. She feared to mislead me; and she honestly and kindly
said less than she felt in its favour. From the time when one day I saw a
bright little tear fall on her embroidery, I was nearly at ease; but that
was in the last volume. I have often doubted whether I could have worked
through that fearful period of domestic trouble, with heart and hope enough
to finish a book of a new kind, but for a singular source of
refreshment,--a picture. Mr. Vincent Thompson and his lady took me to
the private view of the pictures at the British Institution; and I
persisted in admiring a landscape in North Wales by Baker, to which I
returned again and again, to feast on the gush of sunlight between two
mountains, and the settling of the shadows upon the woods at their base.
Mr. Thompson at length returned too, and finally told me that it
was a good picture. Several weeks afterwards, I heard an
unusual lumbering mode of coming upstairs; and Mr. Thompson
was shown in, bearing the picture, and saying that as I should certainly be getting pictures together some time or other, Mrs. Thompson had sent me this to begin with. I sat opposite that landscape while writing "Deerbrook;" and many a dark passage did its sunshine light me through. Now that I live among mountains, that landscape is as beautiful as ever in my eyes: but nowhere could it be such a benefaction as in my little study in Fludyer Street, where dingy red walls rose up almost within reach, and idle clerks of the Foreign Office lolled out of dusty windows, to stare down upon their opposite neighbours.
I was not uneasy about getting my novel published. On May-day,
1838, six weeks before I put pen to paper, I received a note from a friend
who announced what appeared to me a remarkable fact;--that Mr. Murray,
though he had never listened to an application to publish a novel since
Scott's, was willing to enter into a negotiation for mine. I was not
aware then how strong was the hold on the public mind which "the
silver-fork school" had gained; and I discovered it by Mr.
Murray's refusal at last to publish "Deerbrook." He was
more than civil;--he was kind, and, I believe, sincere in his regrets.
The execution was not the ground of refusal. It was, as I had afterwards
reason to know, the scene being laid in middle life. I do not know whether
it is true that Mr. Lockhart advised Mr. Murray to decline it; But Mr.
Lockhart's clique gave out on the eve of publication that the hero
was an apothecary. People liked high life in novels, and low life and
ancient life; and life of any rank presented by Dickens, in his peculiar
artistic light, which is very unlike the broad daylight of actual
existence, English or other: but it was not supposed that they would
bear a presentment of the familiar life of every day. It was a mistake to
suppose so; and Mr. Murray finally regretted his decision. Mr. Moxon, to
whom, by Mr. Rogers's advice, I offered it, had reason to rejoice in
it. "Deerbrook" had a larger circulation than novels usually
obtain; two large editions having been long exhausted, and the work being
still in constant demand.--I was rather amused at the turn that
criticism took among people of the same class as my personages,--the
class which I chose be-
cause it was my own, and the one that I understood best. It was droll to hear the daughters of dissenting ministers and manufacturers expressing disgust that the heroine came from Birmingham, and that the hero was a surgeon. Youths and maidens in those days looked for lords and ladies in every page of a new novel.--My own judgment of "Deerbrook" was for some years more favourable than it is now. The work was faithful in principle and sentiment to the then state of my mind; and that satisfied me for a time. I should now require more of myself, if I were to attempt a novel,--(which I should not do, if I were sure of living another quarter of a century.) I should require more simplicity, and a far more objective character,--not of delineation but of scheme. The laborious portions of meditation, obtruded at intervals, are wholly objectionable in my eyes. Neither morally nor artistically can they be justified. I know the book to have been true to the state of thought and feeling I was then in, which I now regard as imperfect and very far from lofty:--I believe it to have been useful, not only in overcoming a prejudice against the use of middle-class life in fiction, but in a more special application to the discipline of temper; and therefore I am glad I wrote it: but I do not think it would be fair to judge me from it, any later than the time in which it was written.
When Mr. Murray perceived that the book had a decided though gradual
success, he sent a mutual friend to me with a remarkable message,
absolutely secret at the time, but no longer needing to be so. He said that
he could help me to a boundless fortune, and a mighty future fame, if I
would adopt his advice. He advised me to write a novel in profound secrecy,
and under appearances which would prevent suspicion of the authorship from
being directed towards me. He desired to publish this novel in monthly
numbers; and was willing to pledge his reputation for experience on our
obtaining a circulation as large as had ever been known. It would give him
high satisfaction, he declared, to see my writings on thousands of tables
from which my name would exclude every thing I published under it:
and he should enjoy being the means of my obtaining such fortune,
and such an ultimate fame as I might confidently reckon on, if I would accept his offer. I refused it at once. I could not undertake to introduce a protracted mystery into my life which would destroy its openness and freedom. This was one reason: but there was a far more serious one;--more important because it was not personal. I could not conscientiously adopt any method so unprincipled in an artistic sense as piecemeal publication. Whatever other merits it may have, a work of fiction cannot possibly be good in an artistic sense which can be cut up into portions of an arbitrary length. The success of the portions requires that each should have some sort of effective close; and to provide a certain number of these at regular intervals, is like breaking up the broad lights and shadows of a great picture, and spoiling it as a composition. I might never do any thing to advance or sustain literary art; but I would do nothing to corrupt it, by adopting a false principle of composition. The more license was afforded by the popular taste of the time, the more careful should authors be to adhere to sound principle in their art. Mr. Murray and our friend evidently thought me very foolish; but I am as sure now as I was then that, my aim not being money or fame, I was right.
While pondering my novel, I wrote (as I see by my diary) various small
pieces, stories, and didactic articles, for special
purposes,--religious or benevolent, American and English: and in
April and May I cleared my mind and hands of a long-standing
engagement. The Chapter which I mentioned having written at sea, on
"How to observe Morals and Manners," was, by the desire of the
proposer and of Mr. Knight, to be expanded into a volume; and this piece of
tough work, which required a good deal of reading and thinking, I
accomplished this spring. The earlier numbers of the "Guide to
Service," beginning with "The Maid of All Work," were
written in the same spring. In the first days of June, I wrote an article
on "Domestic Service in England" for the Westminster
Review: and then, after a few days with my friends the Fs. on one of
our Box Hill expeditions, I was ready and eager to sit down to the first
chapter of my first novel on my birthday,--June 12th, 1838. By the end
of
August, I had finished the first volume, and written "The Lady's Maid," for the "Service" series. As I then travelled, it was November before I could return to "Deerbrook." I finished it on the first of the next February: and it was published before Easter.
The political interests of this period were strong. The old King was
manifestly infirm and feeble when I last saw him, in the spring of 1837. I
was taking a drive with Lady S--, when her carriage drew up to the
roadside and stopped, because the King and Queen were coming. He touched
his hat as he leaned back, looking small and aged. I could not but feel
something more than the ordinary interest in the young girl who was so near
the throne. At a concert at the Hanover Square Rooms, some time before (I
forget what year it was) the Duchess of Kent sent Sir John Conroy to me
with a message of acknowledgment of the usefulness of my books to the
Princess: and I afterwards heard more particulars of the eagerness
with which the little lady read the stories on the first day of the month.
A friend of mine who was at Kensington Palace one evening when my Political
Economy series was coming to an end, told me how the Princess came, running
and skipping, to show her mother the advertisement of the
"Illustrations of Taxation," and to get leave to order them.
Her "favourite" of my stories is "Ella of
Garveloch."--It was at breakfast that we heard of the
King's death. In the course of the morning, while I was out, a friend
came to invite my old ladies to go with him to a place near, where they
could at their ease see the Queen presented to the people. They went into
the park, and stood in front of the window at St. James's Palace,
where, (among other places) the sovereigns are proclaimed and presented.
Scarcely half-a-dozen people were there; for very few were
aware of the custom. There stood the young creature, in the simplest
mourning, with her sleek bands of brown hair as plain as her dress. The
tears ran fast down her cheeks, as Lord Melbourne stood by her side, and
she was presented to my mother and aunt and the other half-dozen as
their sovereign.--I have never gone out of my way to see great people;
but the Queen went abroad abundantly,
and I saw her very often. I saw her go to dissolve Parliament; and on the 9th of November, to the Guildhall banquet; and several times from Mr. Macready's box at the theatre. It so happened that I never saw her when she was not laughing and talking, and moving about. At a tragedy, and going to a banquet and to dissolve her predecessor's parliament, it was just the same. It was not pleasant to see her, when Macready's "Lear" was fixing all other hearts and eyes, chattering to the Lord Chamberlain, and laughing, with her shoulder turned to the stage. I was indignant, like a good many other people: but, in the fourth act, I saw her attention fixed; and then she laughed no more. She was interested like the rest of the audience; and, in one way, more than others. Probably she was the only person present to whom the play was entirely new. I heard from one who knew her and the incidents of that evening too well to be mistaken, that the story was absolutely new to her, inasmuch as she was not previously aware that King Lear had any daughters. In remarkable contrast with her was one of the gentlemen in attendance upon her,--the Lord Albemarle of that day. He forgot every thing but the play,--by degrees leaned forward between the Queen and the stage, and wept till his limp handkerchief would hold no more tears.
Those were the days when there was least pleasure to the loyal in seeing
their Queen. At her accession, I was agreeably surprised at her appearance.
The upper part of her face was really pretty, and there was an ingenuous
and serene air which seemed full of promise. At the end of a year, the
change was melancholy. The expression of her face was wholly altered. It
had become bold and discontented. That was, it is now supposed, the least
happy part of her life. Released from the salutary restraints of youth,
flattered and pampered by the elated Whigs who kept her to themselves,
misled by Lord Melbourne, and not yet having found her home, she was not
like the same girl that she was before, nor the same woman that she has
been since. Her mother had gone off the scene, and her husband had not come
on; and in the lonely and homeless interval there was much cause for sorrow
to herself and others. The Whigs about
her made a great boast of the obligations she was under to Lord Melbourne: but the rest of the world perceives that all her serious mistakes were made while she was in Lord Melbourne's hands, and that all went well after she was once fairly under the guidance of Sir Robert Peel, and happy in a virtuous home of her own.
I was at her Coronation: and great is the wonder with which I have
looked back to the enterprise ever since. I had not the slightest desire to
go, but every inclination to stay at home: but it was the only
coronation likely to happen in my lifetime, and it was a clear duty to
witness it. I was quite aware that it was an occasion (I believe the only
one) on which a lady could be alone in public, without impropriety or
inconvenience: and I knew of several daughters of peeresses who were
going singly to different parts of the Abbey, their tickets being for
different places in the building. Tickets were offered me for the two
brothers who were then in London; but they were for the nave; and I had the
luck of one for the transept-gallery. The streets had hedges of
police from our little street to the gates of the Abbey; and none were
allowed to pass but the bearers of tickets; so nothing could be safer. I
was aware of all this, and had breakfasted, and was at our hall-door
in time, when one of my brothers, who would not believe it, would not let
me go for another half-hour, while he breakfasted. As I anticipated,
the police turned him back, and I missed the front row where I might have
heard and seen every thing. Ten minutes sooner, I might have succeeded in
witnessing what would never happen again in my time. It was a bitter
disappointment; but I bent all my strength to see what I could from the
back row. Hearing was out of the question, except the loudest of the
music.--The maids called me at half-past two that June
morning,--mistaking the clock. I slept no more, and rose at
half-past three. As I began to dress, the twenty-one guns
were fired which must have awakened all the sleepers in London. When the
maid came to dress me, she said numbers of ladies were already hurrying to
the Abbey. I saw the grey old Abbey from my window as I dressed, and
thought what would have gone forward within
it before the sun set upon it. My mother had laid out her pearl ornaments for me. The feeling was very strange of dressing in crape, blonde and pearls at four in the morning. Owing to the delay I have referred to, the Poets' Corner entrance was half full when I took my place there. I was glad to see the Somervilles just before me, though we presently parted at the foot of the staircase. On reaching the gallery, I found that a back seat was so far better than a middle one that I should have a pillar to lean against, and a nice corner for my shawl and bag of sandwiches. Two lady-like girls, prettily dressed, sat beside me, and were glad of the use of my copy of the service and programme. The sight of the rapid filling of the Abbey was enough to go for. The stone architecture contrasted finely with the gay colours of the multitude. From my high seat I commanded the whole north transept, the area with the throne, and many portions of galleries, and the balconies which were called the vaultings. Except a mere sprinkling of oddities, every body was in full dress. In the whole assemblage, I counted six bonnets. The scarlet of the military officers mixed in well; and the groups of the clergy were dignified; but to an unaccustomed eye the prevalence of court-dresses had a curious effect. I was perpetually taking whole groups of gentlemen for quakers till I recollected myself. The Earl Marshal's assistants, called Gold Sticks, looked well from above, lightly flitting about in white breeches, silk stockings, blue laced frocks, and white sashes. The throne, an armchair with a round back, covered, as was its footstool, with cloth of gold, stood on an elevation of four steps, in the centre of the area. The first peeress took her seat in the north transept opposite at a quarter before seven: and three of the bishops came next. From that time, the peers and their ladies arrived faster and faster. Each peeress was conducted by two Gold Sticks, one of whom handed her to her seat, and the other bore and arranged her train on her lap, and saw that her coronet, footstool and book were comfortably placed. I never saw any where so remarkable a contrast between youth and age as in those noble ladies. None of the decent differences of dress which, according to middle-class custom, pertain to contrasting periods of life seem
to be admissible on these grand court occasions. Old hags, with their dyed or false hair drawn to the top of the head, to allow the putting on of the coronet, had their necks and arms bare and glittering with diamonds: and those necks and arms were so brown and wrinkled as to make one sick; or dusted over with white powder which was worse than what it disguised. I saw something of this from my seat in the transept gallery, but much more when the ceremonial was over, and the peeresses were passing to their carriages, or waiting for them. The younger were as lovely as the aged were haggard. One beautiful creature, with a transcendent complexion and form, and coils upon coils of light hair, was terribly embarrassed about her coronet. She had apparently forgotten that her hair must be disposed with a view to it: and the large braids at the back would in no way permit the coronet to keep on. She and her neighbour tugged vehemently at her braids; and at last the thing was done after a manner, but so as to spoil the wonderful effect of the simultaneous self-coroneting of all the peeresses.--About nine, the first gleams of the sun slanted into the Abbey, and presently travelled down to the peeresses. I had never before seen the full effect of diamonds. As the light travelled, each peeress shone like a rainbow. The brightness, vastness, and dreamy magnificence of the scene produced a strange effect of exhaustion and sleepiness. About nine o'clock, I felt this so disagreeably that I determined to withdraw my senses from the scene, in order to reserve my strength (which was not great at that time) for the ceremonial to come. I had carried a book; and I read and ate a sandwich, leaning against my friendly pillar, till I felt refreshed.
The guns told when the Queen had set forth; and there was renewed
animation. The gold sticks flitted about; there was tuning in the
orchestra; and the foreign ambassadors and their suites arrived in quick
succession. Prince Esterhazy, crossing a bar of sunshine, was the most
prodigious rainbow of all. He was covered with diamonds and pearls; and as
he dangled his hat, it cast a dancing radiance all round. While he was thus
glittering and gleaming, people were saying, I know not how truly, that he
had to redeem those jewels from pawn, as usual,
for the occasion.--At half-past eleven, the guns told that the Queen had arrived: but, as there was much to be done in the robing-room, there was a long pause before she appeared. A burst from the orchestra marked her appearance at the doors, and the anthem "I was glad" rang through the abbey. Every body rose: and the holders of the first and second rows of our gallery stood up so high that I saw nothing of the entrance, nor of the Recognition, except the Archbishop of Canterbury reading at one of the angles of the platform. The "God save the Queen" of the organ swelled gloriously forth after the recognition. The services which followed were seen by a very small proportion of those present. The acclamation when the crown was put on her head was very animating: and in the midst of it, in an instant of time, the peeresses were all coroneted:--all but the fair creature already described. In order to see the enthroning, I stood on the rail behind our seats, holding by another rail. I was in nobody's way; and I could not resist the temptation, though every moment expecting that the rail would break. Her small dark crown looked pretty, and her mantle of cloth of gold very regal. She herself looked so small as to appear puny. The homage was as pretty a sight as any; trains of peers touching her crown, and then kissing her hand. It was in the midst of that process that poor Lord Rolle's disaster sent a shock through the whole assemblage. It turned me very sick. The large, infirm old man was held up by two peers, and had nearly reached the royal footstool when he slipped through the hands of his supporters, and rolled over and over down the steps, lying at the bottom, coiled up in his robes. He was instantly lifted up; and he tried again and again, amidst shouts of admiration of his valour. The Queen at length spoke to Lord Melbourne, who stood at her shoulder, and he bowed approval; on which she rose, leaned forward, and held out her hand to the old man, dispensing with his touching the crown. He was not hurt, and his self-quizzing on his misadventure was as brave as his behaviour at the time. A foreigner in London gravely reported to his own countrymen, what he entirely believed on the word of a wag, that the Lords Rolle held their title on the condition of performing the feat at every coronation.
The departure of a large proportion of the assemblage when the
Communion-service began afforded me a good opportunity for joining
some friends who, like myself, preferred staying to see more of the Queen
in the Abbey, to running away for the procession. I then obtained a good
study of the peers, and of the Queen and her train-bearers when she
returned to the throne. The enormous purple and crimson trains, borne by
her ladies, dressed all alike, made the Queen look smaller than ever. I
watched her out at the doors, and then became aware how fearfully fatigued
I was. I never remember any thing like it. While waiting in the passages
and between the barriers, several ladies sat or lay down on the ground. I
did not like to sink down in dust half a foot deep, to the spoiling of my
dress and the loss of my self-respect; but it was really a terrible
waiting till my brothers appeared at the end of the barrier. The crowd had
rendered our return impossible till then; and even then, we had to make a
circuit. I satisfied my thirst, and went to sleep; and woke up to tea, and
to keep house with my mother, while every body else went out to see the
illuminations. I did not; but was glad to go to bed at midnight, and sleep
eight hours at a stretch, for once.
It was a wonderful day; and one which I am glad to have witnessed:
but it had not the effect on me which I was surprised to observe in others.
It strengthened, instead of relaxing my sense of the unreal character of
monarchy in England. The contrast between the traditional ascription of
power to the sovereign and the actual fact was too strong to be overpowered
by pageantry, music, and the blasphemous religious services of the day.
After all was said and sung, the sovereign remained a nominal ruler, who
could not govern by her own mind and will; who had influence, but no
political power; a throne and crown, but with the knowledge of every body
that the virtue had gone out of them. The festival was a highly barbaric
one, to my eyes. The theological part especially was worthy only of the old
Pharaonic times in Egypt, and those of the Kings in Palestine. Really, it
was only by old musical and devotional association that the services could
go down with people of any reverence at all. There was such a
mixing up of the Queen and the God, such homage to both, and adulation so like in kind and degree that, when one came to think of it, it made one's blood run cold to consider that this was commended to all that assemblage as religion. God was represented as merely the King of kings and Lord of lords;--the lowest of the low views in which the Unknown is regarded or described. There is, I believe, no public religious service which is not offensive to thoughtful and reverent persons, from its ascription of human faculties, affections, qualities and actions to the assumed First Cause of the universe: but the Jewish or heathen ascription to him of military and aristocratic rank, and regal prerogative, side by side with the same ascription to the Queen, was the most coarse and irreverent celebration that I was ever a witness to. The performance of the Messiah, so beautiful and touching as a work of art, or as the sincere homage of superstition, is saddening and full of shame when regarded as worship. The promises--all broken; the exultation--all falsified by the event; the prophecies--all discredited by the experience of eighteen centuries, and the boasts of prevalence, rung out gloriously when Christianity is dying out among the foremost peoples of the earth;--all these, so beautiful as art or history, are very painful when regarded as religion. As an apotheosis of Osiris, under his ancient name, or his more modern image of Christ, the Messiah of Handel is the finest treat in the whole range of art: but it is too low for religion. Yet more striking was the Coronation service to me, in the same light. Splendid and moving as addressed to a Jehovah, on the coronation of a Solomon, it was offensive as offered to the God of the nineteenth century in the western world.--I have refreshed my memory about the incidents of that twenty-eighth of June, 1838, from my Diary. The part which least needs refreshing is this last. I remember remarking to my mother on the impiety of the service, when a copy of it was kindly sent to me the evening before; and I told her when the celebration was over, that this part of it had turned out even worse than I expected; and that I could not imagine how so many people could hear it as a matter of course.
One of the strongest interests of the year 1838 was Lord Durham's
going out as Governor-General of the North American colonies. I have
given my account of that matter in my History of the Peace, and I will not
enlarge on it now. I was concerned when I heard of his acceptance of the
post, because the difficulties appeared all but insuperable at best; and I
knew too much of Lord Brougham's jealousy and Lord Melbourne's
laxity to hope that he would be duly supported from home, or even left
unmolested. He said himself that he felt "inexpressible
reluctance" to undertake the charge: but his confiding temper
misled him into trusting his political comrades,--Lord Melbourne and
his Ministry--for "cordial and energetic support," and his
political opponents,--Lord Brougham and those who pulled his
wires,--for "generous forbearance." In talking over the
matter one day with our mutual friend, Lady Charlotte Lindsay, I did not
conceal my regret and apprehension. She called one day, soon after, to tell
me honestly that she had told Lord Durham, the night before, that I was not
sanguine about his success. He questioned her anxiously as to my exact
meaning; and she referred him to me. I had no wish to disturb him, now that
it was too late, with my bad opinion of those in whose hands he was placing
his fate: and I did not do so. I answered all his questions about
Canada and the United States as well as I could. Charles and Arthur Buller
obtained introductions and information from me; and Charles spent many
hours by my fireside, diligently discussing business, and giving me the
strongest impression of his heart being deep in his work. His poor mother,
who worshipped him, came one day, just before they sailed, nervous and
flushed, and half laughing, telling me what a fright she had
had:--that she had been assured that the Hastings
man-of-war, in which her sons were to attend Lord Durham,
would certainly sink from the weight of the Governor-General's
plate. This was a specimen of the vulgar jokes of the Brougham
clique: and it produced an effect on others than poor Mrs. Buller.
Lord Chandos founded a motion on it,--objecting to the expense to the
country!--the Governor-General going out unsalaried, to save a
group of colonies to the empire, in an hour of extreme danger!
The intolerable treatment he met with shocked me as much as if I had
anticipated any thing better: and his own magnanimous conduct on his
return moved me as deeply as if I had not known him to be capable of it. He
was calm, cheerful, winning in his manners as ever, and quite willing to
trust his friends for their friendship while himself desiring no
demonstration of it which should overthrow the tottering Government, and
embarrass the Queen for his sake. Lady Durham necessarily resigned her
office about the Queen's person: but no word or sign of
reproach ever reached her royal mistress for her fatal fickleness in first
writing an autograph letter of the warmest thankfulness for his ordinances,
and then disallowing those same ordinances, and permitting every kind of
insult to be offered to the devoted statesman who had sacrificed his
comfort and ease in her service, and was about to yield his life under the
torture which she allowed to be inflicted on him. To the last moment, her
old friends, who might have expected something very different from her
sense of early obligation, maintained that she meant well, but was
misguided. When I last saw Lord Durham it was in his own house in Cleveland
Row, when a note was brought in from the Colonial Office, the contents of
which he communicated to me:--that he could not have any copies
of his own Report without paying four shillings and threepence apiece for
them, He had gone unsalaried, had spent £10,000 out of his private
property, and had produced a Report of unequalled value, at an unparalleled
sacrifice; and he was now insulted in this petty way. He smilingly promised
me a four-and-threepenny Report notwithstanding.--His
successor, Lord Sydenham (who had not yet got his patent) was diligently
studying Canadian affairs every day, with Lord Durham and the Bullers, in
order to carry out their scheme. We had a world of talk about the Western
Continent that night: But I never much liked Poulett Thomson. He had
great qualities,--a very remarkable industry, and personal fortitude,
long and thoroughly tested: but he was luxurious, affectedly indolent
in manner, and with a curious stamp of meanness on both person and manners.
I never saw him again, either. He was on the eve of departure for his
government,
whence he never returned. If I remember right, that was the day of Lord Normanby's appointment to the Colonial Office. He complained, half in earnest, of the hardship of never getting a foreign tour, like other people,--passing as he had done from Jamaica to Ireland, and now having all the colonies on his hands. I entirely agreed with him as to the weight of the charge: whereupon he asked me what I should have done first, if I had been in his place that day. My answer was that I should have gone immediately to the globe, to see where the forty-three colonies were that I was to govern. He laughed; but I thought it a serious matter enough that any Minister should be burdened with a work which it was so impossible that he should do properly. Well!--that night I bade Lord and Lady Durham farewell, little imagining that I should never more see either of them. I knew he was more delicate in health even than usual; and that he was exerting himself much to keep up till the Ministry or the session should close. "Till Easter" politicians said the Ministry might last; and this was a pretty good hit, as the Bedchamber Question came on just after Easter. Before that time I was abroad; and I was brought home on a couch, and carried through London at once to Newcastle-on Tyne, where I staid some months at my brother-in-law's. Repeated invitations to Lambton Castle came to me there; but I was too ill to leave the house. In the course of the next spring, Lord Durham was ordered to the south of Europe; but he got no further than Cowes, where he died in July,--the vitality of his heart and animation of his mind flattering the hopes of his family to the last. Lady Durham took her young family to Italy, but died before they had reached their destination. For his death I was prepared: but the news of hers was a great shock. I was very ill then; and when the orphaned girls came to see me at Tynemouth, I behaved (it seemed to me) unpardonably. I could not stop my tears, in the presence of those who had so much more reason and so much more right to be inconsolable. But I always have felt, and I feel still, that that story is one of the most tragic I have ever known. In my early youth I had been accustomed to hear my revered eldest brother say that the
best man in the House of Commons--the one who would turn out a hero and a statesman in the worst or the best of times,--was John George Lambton. I had watched his career through the worst of times till he came into power, and made the Reform Bill. I then became acquainted with him, and found in him a solid justification of the highest hopes; and now he was dead, in middle life, broken-hearted by injury, treachery and insult; and his devoted wife presently followed him.
Their eldest daughter was profoundly impressed by the serious
responsibilities which rested on her as the head of the family during her
brother's boyhood; and she took me along with her in her efforts and
her cares. It was she and I who origninated the "Weekly
Volume,"--our scheme being taken up and carried out by Mr.
Charles Knight, in the way which is so well known. The singular
satisfaction has been hers of seeing the redemption of Canada carried out
by her husband from her father's beginning. She has the best possible
consolation for such a fate as that of her parents that their work has been
gloriously achieved by one whom she has made their son.
On looking at my Diary, I am not at all surprised that it was considered
desirable for me to take another journey in the autumn of 1838. I was sorry
to leave "Deerbrook" at the end of the first volume: but
there was every other reason why I should take the refreshment of a journey
after two years of close work, and no other reason why I should not. Either
the growing domestic anxiety or the ever-increasing calls of work
and of society would have been enough for the strongest and
gayest-hearted: and I had both kinds of burdens on me. I find
in my Diary more and more self-exhortations and self-censures
about the sufferings of that year 1838. I had by that time resolved on the
wisdom which I try to this day to practice:--longing for quiet,
and yet finding it impossible in the nature of things that my life should
be any thing but a busy, public, and diversified one,--to keep a
quiet mind. I did strive; and to a considerable extent I succeeded;
but my nerves were, and had long been, overstrained; and my wisest friends
continued to advise me to leave home more frequently than my
inclination would have disposed me to do. My mother was well pleased to let me go on this occasion, as my rooms would be at her disposal for her hospitalities; and I therefore agreed to join a party of friends, to attend the meeting of the British Association at Newcastle first, and then proceed to the Lake District, which I had never seen, and into Scotland, visiting both Western and Northern Highlands. It is always pleasant, I find, to have some object in view, even in the direction of a journey of pleasure: and this was supplied to me by Mr. Knight's request that I would explore the topography of Shakspere's Scotch play now; and of the Italian plays when I went to the continent the next year. "Do this for me," said Mr. Knight, "and I will give you ten copies of my Shakspere." Two copies of the Shakspere satisfied me; for indeed the work was purely pleasurable. A few months after that time, my companions were walking Padua through and through with me, for the shrewish Katherine's and delectable Portia's sake; and looking for Juliet at Verona, and exploring the Jew quarter at Venice, and fixing on the very house whence Jesslea eloped; and seeing at the arsenal what Othello meant by his business at the Sagittary. In like manner we now traced out the haunts of Macbeth, living and dead. When we were at Lord Murray's, at Strachur, his brother gave us a letter of introduction which opened to us all the known recesses of Glammis Castle. We sat down and lingered on the Witches' Heath, between Nairn and Forres, and examined Cawdor Castle. Best of all, we went to Iona, and saw Macbeth's grave in the line of those of the Scottish kings. I have seen many wonders and beauties in many lands; but no one scene remains so deeply impressed on my very heart as that sacred Iona, as we saw it, with its Cathedral standing up against a bar of yellow western sky, while the myrtle-green tumbling sea seemed to show it to be unattainable. We had reached it however; and had examined its relics with speechless interest. I do not know whether any of the air of the localities hangs about those notes of mine in Mr. Knight's Shakspere; but to me, the gathering up of knowledge and associations for them was almost as pleasant work as any I ever had to do.
We were tempted to go to Newcastle by sea, by a steamer having been
engaged to convey a freight of savans. A
curious company of passengers we were on board the Ocean:--sound
scientific men; a literary humbug or two; a statistical pretender or two;
and a few gentlemen, clerical or other. When we entered Shields Harbour,
the whole company were on deck, to see Tynemouth Priory, and the other
beauties of that coast; and the Shields people gathered on the quays to
stare at the strange vessel. When they hailed, and asked who we were, the
great men on the deck shouted in reply
"savans,"
"philosophers," "nondescripts."
That was the Meeting of the British Association at which, (Dr. Lardner
being present) the report was industriously spread that the Great
Western,--the first steamer to America on her first
voyage,--"had been seen in the middle of the Atlantic,
broken-backed, and in great distress." The words sank heavily
upon my heart; for I was acquainted with several persons on board; and it
shed more or less gloom over the whole week. Many observed at the time that
it was just the thing likely to be said by Dr. Lardner and his friends,
considering his pledges of his scientific reputation on the impossibility
of crossing the Atlantic by steam; and in this every body agreed: but
the suspense was painful; and it outlasted the week; as it was intended to
do. Dr. Lardner's final disgraces had not yet taken place; but I saw
how coldly he was noticed, when he was not entirely ignored: and when
I curtseyed to him at the ball, I was warned by a friend not to notice him
if I could avoid it. I was glad then that I had not entertained his
proposal when, as editor of the Encyclopedia which goes under his name, he
wrote to me, and called, and endeavoured to obtain my promise to write a
volume for him. A cousin of mine, who is so little fond of the pen as to
find letter-writing a grievance, was highly amused at receiving (I
think while I was abroad) a flattering letter from Dr. Lardner, requesting
a volume from her for his series. Not very long after that Newcastle
meeting, he made his notorious flight to America; and I have heard nothing
of him since.
What I saw of that meeting certainly convinced me of the justice, in the
main, of Carlyle's sarcasms on that kind of celebration. I have no
doubt of the opportunity afforded for the promotion of science in various
ways: but the occasion is really so sadly spoiled (or was in those
days) by the obtrusions of coxcombs, the conceit of third-rate men
with their specialities, the tiresome talk of one-idead men, who
scruple no means of swelling out what they call the evidence of their
doctrines, and the disagreeable footing of the ladies, that I internally
vowed that I would never again go in the way of one of those anniversaries.
I heard two or three valuable addresses; but, on the whole, the humbugs and
small men carried all before them: and, I am sorry to say, Sir John
Herschel himself so far succumbed to the spirit of the occasion as to
congratulate his scientific brethren on the "crowning houour"
among many, of the presence of the fair sex at their sections! That same
fair sex, meantime, was there to sketch the
savans, under cover of mantle, shawl or
little parasol, or to pass the time by watching and quizzing the members.
Scarcely any of the ladies sat still for half an hour. They wandered in and
out, with their half-hidden sketch-books, seeking amusement
as their grandmothers did at auctions. I was in truth much ashamed of the
ladies; and I wished they had staid at home, preparing hospitalities for
the tired savans, and showing themselves only
at the evening promenade in the Green Market, and at the ball. The
promenade was really a pretty sight,--not only from the beauty of the
place and its decorations, but on account of the presence of the Quaker
body, who, excluded from the other forms of social amusement, eagerly grasp
at this one lawful exception. They made the very most of it; and I, for
one, can testify to their capacity for staring at an anti-slavery
confessor. My sister, who bore a family likeness to me, proposed to dress
her hair like mine, borrow a trumpet from a deaf friend who was present,
and walk up and down the opposite side, to draw off my "tail,"
which was declared to be "three times as long as
O'Connell's."
It was the accident of Professor Daubeney putting some American
newspapers into my hand one day that week which
occa-
sioned the appearance of one of my most heart-felt writings. The Editor of the Westminster Review was impressed by what I showed and told him of the life and murder of Lovejoy, the first American witness unto death in the cause of liberty of speech; and he requested from me a vivid historical sketch of the cause, from the beginning to Lovejoy's murder. This was the origin of "The Martyr Age of the United States" which has been elsewhere sufficiently referred to. It appeared in the Christmas number of the Westminster Review.
With joy we left the crowded scene which was such a mixture of soundness
and pretence, wisdom and vanity, and matter for pride and shame, and betook
ourselves to the Lake district. I had never seen it before, and had no
distinct anticipation of seeing it again. What should I have felt, if I had
been told that, after one more painful stage of my life, I should make my
home in that divine region till death! It was on the 2nd of September that
we drove through Ambleside, from Bowness to Grasmere, passing the field in
which I am now abiding,--on which I am at this moment looking forth. I
wonder whether my eye rested for a moment on the knoll whereon my house now
stands. We returned through Ambleside to go to Patterdale; and a pencil
entry in my diary calls up the remembrance of the soft sadness with which
we caught "our last view of Windermere";--that Windermere
which was to become to me the most familiar of all waters.
While at Strachur, Lord Murray's seat in Argyleshire, we found
ourselves treated with singular hospitality. Lord Murray placed the little
Loch Fyne steamer at our disposal. He and Lady Murray insisted on receiving
our entire party; and every facility was afforded for all of us seeing
every thing. Every Highland production, in the form of fish, flesh and
fowl, was carefully collected; salmon and Loch herrings, grouse pies, and
red-deer soup, and so forth. What I best remember, however, is a
conversation with Lord Murray by the loch side. He invited me there for a
walk; and he had two things to say. He wanted me to write some papers on
prison management, for Chambers's Journal, or some other popular
periodical, for the
purpose of familiarising the Scotch with the principle of punishment, and the attendant facts of American imprisonment. He lost his Prisons Bill in the preceding session, and wanted the support of Scotch public opinion before the next. This being settled, he wrote to Messrs. Chambers at Edinburgh; and I there saw one of the brothers for the first time. The papers were agreed upon, written and published. Mr. Robert Chambers I did not see till some few years later, when he called on me at Tynemouth, during my recovery by mesmerism, for the purpose of investigating the subject. Our acquaintance, then begun, has since ripened into friendship, both on his own account, and for the sake of his brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Wills, who, becoming known to me through my being a contributor to "Household Words," have largely increased the pleasures of my latest years by their friendly offices of every kind, and their hearty affection. Edinburgh was quite a different place to me when I went for my third Scotch journey in 1852, by Robert Chambers's charming home being open to me; and London has a new familiar interest to me now that I have another home there at Mr. Wills's.
To return to that walk with the Lord Advocate. He wished to know my
opinion on a subject which was then more talked of than almost any
other;--our probable relations with Russia. I hardly know now how the
notion came to spread as it did that the Czar had a mind to annex us:
but it was talked over in all drawing-room, and, as I now found, in
the Cabinet. I had nothing to say,--so astonished was I to hear it
thus gravely and expressly brought forward. I could only say that the idea
of our ever submitting to Russia seemed too monstrous to be entertained.
Lord Murray had no formed opinion to produce but he
offered,--"as a speculation:--just as a ground for
speculation,"- the fact that for centuries no quarter of a
century had passed without the incorporation of some country with Russia;
some country which no doubt once regarded its absorption by Russia as the
same unimaginable thing that our own appeared to us now. He said that if we
commit two stone bottles to the stream, and one breaks the other, it is
nearly an even chance
whether it will break or be broken next time: but, when the same has broken a score, the chances are almost anything to nothing that it will break the twenty-first. Therefore he thought we might as well not be so entirely complacent and secure as we were, but think over such a liability with some little sobriety and sense. So there was a new and very horrible speculation for me to carry away with me: and highly curious it is to recur to now (August, 1855) when we find that Russia, after nearly twenty years' more leisure for preparation, cannot meet us at sea, or win a battle on land. At least, after a year and a half of warfare, she has as yet done neither.
From Strachur, we pursued our way to the Western Islands: and,
after being weather-bound in Mull, we accomplished the visit to Iona
which I have referred to. We saw Staffa, and had the captain's
spontaneous promise to take us round by Garveloch, that I might see the
homes of the personages about whom I had written so familiarly: but
the weather was too rough; and I did not see the Garveloch Isles till a
glorious sunny day in July, 1852.
It was October before we reached Edinburgh; and there my kind companions
and I parted. Miss Rogers and a young friend were staying at Lord
Jeffrey's, where I met them; and Miss Rogers urged me to take a seat
in her carriage as far as Newcastle, where I was to stop for a week or two.
We saw Abbotsford and Dryburgh under great advantages of weather; but my
surprise at the smallness and toy-character of Abbotsford was
extreme. It was impossible but that both Scott and Lockhart must know what
a good Scotch house is; and their glorification of this place shakes
one's faith in their other descriptions.
That journey of 1838 was beneficial to me to a certain extent; and it
would have been more so, but for its close. I was called home from
Newcastle under circumstances which made my long solitary mail journey a
very heavy one, full of apprehension and pain. I was, though without being
fully conscious of it, becoming too ill to bear the shocks of that unhappy
year as I had borne all manner of shocks, all my life. The internal disease
which was soon to prostrate me entirely had made considerable
prog-
ress, though I had no more than a vague notion that there was something wrong. The refreshment from the journey was not lasting; but its pleasures were. One of the noticeable things about it was that it introduced me to Mrs. Crowe, whose acquaintance has since yielded me very great pleasure. And she, again, has been the main cause or occasion of my friendship with Dr. Samuel Brown and his wife, who have been intimates of my latest years,--too much so to permit more than such a notice as this. Another marked thing about that autumn trip was that it introduced me to that pleasant experience of middle age,--the consideration of the young. I had always been among the youngest at home in my childhood; and of late years had ministered, in the capacity of youngster, to my old ladies. Now, for the first time, I experienced the luxury of being tended as an elderly person. Though some years younger than the two heads of our travelling party, I was of their generation; and the four young people were most attentive in saving us elders fatigue, making tea, giving us the sofas and warm corners, and so on. From that time I have taken rank among the elders, and enjoyed the comfort of it.
The readers of my "Retrospect of Western Travel" may
remember the story* of the slave
child Ailsie, whose mistress died at New Orleans, leaving that beautiful
little creature to be a most embarrassing charge to the widower. My
description of this child, and of the interest felt in her fate by me and
mine, reached the eye of the widower; and he wrote to entreat me to take
charge of the girl, (by that time twelve years old.) He avowed his
inability to protect her, and offered to send over a yearly allowance for
her maintenance, if I would receive and adopt her. I declined the annual
allowance, because my friend's money was derived from
slave-labour, and I would not touch it: but otherwise, I
accepted his proposal, and did not see why he should not lodge in a bank,
for her ultimate benefit, such money as he believed her to have earned. I
intended first to train her as my little maid, and have her attend a school
near, so that I might ascertain what she was most fit for. All this winter,
we
___________________
were in daily expectation of her arrival. Her little bed awaited her in my room; and we had arranged about having her vaccinated at once, and clothed like English children, instead of having her brilliant eyes and beautiful mulatto face surmounted by the yellow turban which became her so well. But Ailsie, for whose reception all arrangements were complete when I went to Scotland, did not appear all the winter; and I wrote again, very urgently, to her master. I had to make arrangements again when I went to the continent in April: but his final letter came at last. It was the letter of an almost broken-hearted man; and it almost broke our hearts to read it. He, Irish by birth, had never been more or less reconciled to "the peculiar institutions." Involved in it before he was of age, he had no power to extricate himself from it,--at least till he had paid off all the liabilities under which young planters enter life. His beloved young wife had received this child as a gift from her mother in Tennessee,--the child's life being in danger on her native plantation, through the fierce jealousies which attend upon a system of concubinage. It never occured to the widower that he could not freely dispose of his wife's little slave: but his mother-in-law demanded the girl back again. In her ripening beauty she was too valuable to be given to me. For what purposes she was detained as of course, there is no need to describe. She was already lost and gone; and I have never heard of her since. Her voice often comes back upon my memory, and her vivid affectionate countenance, as she pulled at her mistress's gown, and clasped her knees with the anxious question,--"Ain't you well?" This one illustration of the villainy of the system roused more indignation and sympathy in many hearts than a whole row of books of argument or description of Slave institutions in the abstract. I could not have done for Ailsie what I purposed, as my affairs turned out; but there were many of my friends who could, and who were anxious to assume the charge. But she was never to be heard of more.
The continental journey that I have referred to was undertaken chiefly
for the sake of escorting an invalid cousin to Switzerland. As soon as
"Deerbrook" was published, and my "Guides to
Service" finished, the weather was fine enough to permit our departure. Two mutual friends joined us; and our party thus consisted of four ladies, a maid-servant and a courier. We crossed to Rotterdam on the 17th of April, went up the Rhine, and by the usual route to Lausanne, except that one of my companions slipped across the frontier with me, for the sake of seeing Toussaint L'Ouverture's prison and grave. I was furnished with a copious and comprehensive passport for myself and maid, obtained by the Lord Advocate's kindness from the Secretary of State, as the Austrian interdict against my entrance into the empire might otherwise be still an impediment. My friend offered to personate my maid just for the day which would take us from the frontier to the castle of Joux. We excited great wonder at the douane, of course, with our destitution of baggage, and our avowed intention of leaving France in the afternoon; but we accomplished our purpose, and it was virtually decided that "The Hour and the Man" should be written.
While I was walking up a hill in Germany, one of my companions had
observed to another that I was, in her opinion, on the verge of some
terrible illness. It was at Venice that the extent of my illness became
unquestionable. My cousin had been deposited at her place of abode; and the
rest of us had gone on to Venice, intending to take a look at her at
Lausanne on our return. My illness, however, broke up all our plans. My
kind nurses contrived a couch for me in the carriage; and on that I was
brought home by the straightest road,--by the Via Emilia, and the St.
Gothard, down the Rhine, where we were joined by one of my brothers and a
brother-in-law. We took passage to London, from
Antwerp: and I was soon on my mother's couch in Fludyer Street.
Not to remain, however. I was conveyed without delay to
Newcastle-upon-Tyne, to be under the care of my
brother-in-law; and from that neighbourhood I did not remove
for nearly six years.
Here closed the anxious period during which my reputation, and my
industry, and my social intercourses were at their height of prosperity;
but which was so charged with troubles that when
I lay down on my couch of pain in my Tynemouth lodging, for a confinement of nearly six years, I felt myself comparatively happy in my release from responsibility, anxiety and suspense. The worst sufferings of my life were over now; and its best enjoyments and privileges were to come,--though I little knew it, and they were as yet a good way off.
ligious books swarm among us, and are thrust into the hands of every body by every body else, which describe the sufferings of illness, and generate vanity and egotism about bodily pain and early death,--rendering these disgraces of our ignorance and barbarism attractive to the foolish and the vain, and actually shaming the wholesome, natural desire for "a sound mind in a sound body." The Christian superstition, now at last giving way before science, of the contemptible nature of the body, and its antagonism to the soul, has shockingly perverted our morals, as well as injured the health of Christendom: and every book, tract, and narrative which sets forth a sick-room as a condition of honour, blessing and moral safety, helps to sustain a delusion and corruption which have already cost the world too dear. I know too much of all this from my own experience to choose to do any thing towards encouragement of the morbid appetite for pathological contemplation,--physical or moral. My youthful vanity took the direction which might be expected in the case of a pious child. I was patient in illness and pain because I was proud of the distinction, and of being taken into such special pupilage by God; and I hoped for, and expected early death it was too late to die early. It is grievous to me now to think what an amount of time and thought I have wasted in thinking about dying,--really believing as I did for many years that life was a mere preparation for dying: and now, after a pretty long life, when I find myself really about to die, the event seems to me so simple, natural, and, as I may say, negative in comparison with life and its interests, that I cannot but marvel at the quantity of attention and solicitude I lavished upon it while it was yet so far off as to require no attention at all. To think no more of death than is necessary for the winding up of the business of life, and to dwell no more upon sickness than is necessary for its treatment, or to learn to prevent it, seems to me the simple wisdom of the case,--totally opposite as this is to the sentiment and method of the religious world.
On the other hand, I do not propose to nourish a foolish pride by
disguising, through shame, the facts of sickness and suffering. Pain and
untimely death are, no doubt, the tokens of
our ignorance, and of our sins against the laws of nature. I conceive our business to be to accept these consequences of our ignorance and weakness, with as little personal shame on the one hand as vanity or pride on the other. As far as any sickness of mine can afford warning, I am willing to disclose it; and I have every desire to acknowledge my own fault or folly in regard to it, while wholly averse to treat it as a matter of sentiment,--even to the degree in which I did it, sincerely enough, in "Life in the Sick-room," a dozen years ago. I propose, therefore, to be now as brief as I can, and at the same time, as frank, in speaking of the years between 1839 and 1845.--I have mentioned before, in regard to my deafness, that I have no doubt of its having been seriously aggravated by nervous excitement, at the age when I lived in reverie and vanities of the imitation; and that it was suddenly and severely increased by a sort of accident. That sort of accident was the result of ignorance in a person whom I need not point out: and thus it seems that my deafness is largely ascribable to disobedience to the laws of nature. And thus in regard to the disease which at this time was laying me low for so many years. It was unquestionably the result of excessive anxiety of mind,--of the extreme tension of nerves under which I had been living for some years, while the three anxious members of my family were, I may say, on my hands,--not in regard to money, but to care of a more important kind. My dear aunt, the sweetest of old ladies, was now extremely old, and required shielding from the anxiety caused by the other two. My mother was old, and fast becoming blind; and the irritability caused in her first by my position in society, and next by the wearing trial of her own increasing infirmity, told fearfully upon my already reduced health. My mother's dignified patience in the direct endurance of her blindness was a really beautiful spectacle: but the natural irritability found vent in other directions; and especially was it visited upon me. Heaven knows, I never sought fame; and I would thankfully have given it all away in exchange for domestic peace and ease: but there it was! and I had to bear the consequences. I was overworked,
fearfully, in addition to the pain of mind I had to bear. I was not allowed to have a maid, at my own expense, or even to employ a workwoman; and thus, many were the hours after midnight when I ought to have been asleep, when I was sitting up to mend my clothes. Far worse than this, my mother would not be taken care of. She was daily getting out into the crowded streets by herself, when she could not see a yard before her. What the distress from this was to me may be judged of by the fact that for many months after my retreat to Tynemouth, I rarely slept without starting from a dream that my mother had fallen from a precipice, or over the bannisters, or from a cathedral spire; and that it was my fault. These cares, to say nothing of the toils, had long been wearing me down, so that I became subject to attacks of faintness, on occasion of any domestic uneasiness; and two or three intimate friends, as well as some members of the family, urged my leaving home as frequently as possible, for my mother's sake as well as my own, as my return was always a joyful occasion to her. My habits and likings made this moving about a very irksome thing to me; and especially when arrangements had to be made about my work,--from which I had never any holiday. I loved, as I still love, the most monotonous life possible: but I took refuge in change, as the only relief from a pressure of trouble which was breaking me down,--I was not aware how rapidly. An internal disease was gaining ground for months or years before I was aware of it. A tumour was forming of a kind which usually originates in mental suffering; and when at last I broke down completely, and settled myself in a lodging at Tynemouth, I long felt that the lying down, in solitude and silence, free from responsibility and domestic care, was a blessed change from the life I had led since my return from America. My dear old aunt soon died: my mother was established at Liverpool, in the neighbourhood of three of her children; and the other claimant of my anxious care emigrated. It is impossible to deny that the illness under which I lay suffering for five years was induced by flagrant violations of the laws of nature: and I then failed to appropriate the comforts with which Chris-
tians deprave their moral sense in such a case, as I also felt unable to blame myself individually for my incapacity. No doubt, if I had felt less respect and less affection for my mother, I might have taken the management of matters more into my own hands, and should have felt her discontent with me less than I did; and again, if I had already found the supports of philosophy on relinquishing the selfish complacencies of religion, I should have borne my troubles with strength and ease. But, as it was, I was neither proud or vain of my discipline on the one hand, nor ashamed of it on the other, while fully aware that it was the result of fault and imperfection, moral and intellectual.
On my return from Italy, ill, my sister and her husband hospitably urged
my taking up my abode with them, at least till the nature and prospects of
my case were ascertained. After spending a month at a lodging in their
neighbourhood in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, I removed to their
hospitable house, where I was taken all possible care of for six months.
They most generously desired me to remain: but there were various
reasons which determined me to decline their kindness. It would have been
clearly wrong to occupy their guest chamber permanently, and to impose
restraints upon a healthy household: and, for my own part, I had an
unspeakable longing for stillness and solitude. I therefore decided for
myself that I would go to a lodging at Tynemouth, where my medical
brother-in-law could reach me by railway in twenty minutes,
while I was removed from the bustle and smoke of Newcastle by an interval
of nine miles. With an affectionate reluctance and grudging, my family let
me try this as an experiment,--all of them being fully convinced that
I could not long bear the solitude and monotony, after the life of
excitement and constant variety to which I had been accustomed for above
seven years. I was right, however, and they were wrong. On the sofa where I
stretched myself after my drive to Tynemouth, on the sixteenth of March,
1840, I lay for nearly five years, till obedience to a
newly-discovered law of nature raised me up, and sent me forth into
the world again, for another ten years of strenuous
work, and almost undisturbed peace and enjoyment of mind and heart.
I had two rooms on the first floor in this house of my honest hostess,
Mrs. Halliday, who little imagined, that March day, that the luck was
happening to her of a lodger who would stay, summer and winter, for nearly
five years. I had no servant with me at first; for I was not only suddenly
cut off from my literary engagements, and almost from the power of work,
but I had invested £1,000 of my earnings in a deferred annuity, two
years before;--a step which seemed prudent at the time, and which I
still consider to have been so; but which deprived me of immediate
resources. It was not long before two generous ladies, (sisters) old
friends of mine, sent me, to my amazement, a bank-note for
£100, saying that my illness had probably interfered with certain
plans which they knew I entertained. The generosity was of a kind which it
was impossible to refuse, because it extended through me to others. I took
the money, and applied it as intended. I need hardly say that when my
working days and my prosperity returned, I repaid the sum, which was, as I
knew it would be, lodged in the hands of sufferers as needy as I was when
it came to me.
I was waited upon in my lodging by a sickly-looking, untidy
little orphan girl of fourteen,--untidy, because the state of her eyes
was such that she could not sew, or have any fair chance for cleanliness.
She was the niece and dependent of my hostess, by whom she was scolded
without mercy, and, it seemed to me, incessantly. Her quiet and cheerful
submission impressed me at once; and I heard such a report of her from the
lady who had preceded me in the lodgings, and who had known the child from
early infancy, that I took an interest in her, and studied her character
from the outset. Her character was easily known; for a more simple,
upright, truthful, ingenuous child could not be. She was, in fact, as
intellectually incapable as morally indisposed to deception of any kind.
This was "the girl Jane" who recovered her health by mesmerism
in companionship with me, and whom I was required by the doctors, and by
the Athenæum, to "give up" as "an impostor,"
after five years' household
inter-
course with her, in addition to my indirect knowledge of her, through my neighbour, from the age of three. I may mention here that my unvarying good opinion of her was confirmed after the recovery of both by the experience of her household qualities for seven years, during which period she lived with me as my cook, till she emigrated to Australia, where she has lived in high credit from the beginning of 1853 till now. This Jane, destined to so curious an experience, and to so discreditable a persecution, (which she bore in the finest spirit) was at the door of my Tynemouth lodging when I arrived: and many were the heartaches I had for her, during the years that her muscles looked like dough, and her eyes like ........ I will not say what. I suffered from the untidiness of my rooms, I own; and I soon found that my Norfolk notions of cleanliness met with no response at Tynemouth. Before long, I was shifted from purgatory to paradise in this essential matter. An uncle and some cousins, who had always been kind to me, were shocked to find that I was waited upon by only the people of the house; and they provided me with a maid, who happened to be the cleanliest of her sex. She remained with me during the whole of my illness: and never, in all that time, did I see a needless grain of dust on the furniture, nor a speck on the window panes that was not removed next morning.
For the view from my window, and the details of my mode of life as an
invalid I must refer all who wish to know my Tynemouth self to "Life
in the Sick-room." They will find there what the sea and shore
were to me, and how kind friends came to see me, and my family were at my
call; and for what reasons, and how peremptorily, I chose to live alone.
One half year was rendered miserably burdensome by the cheating intrusion
of an unwelcome and uncongenial person who came, (as I believed because I
was told) for a month, and stayed seven, in a lodging next door. More
serious mischiefs than the immediate annoyance were caused by this
unwarrantable liberty taken with my comfort and convenience; and the
suffering occasioned by them set me back in health not a little: but
with the exception of that period, I obtained the quiet I so needed and
desired.
During the first half of the time, I was able to work,--though with
no great willingness, and with such extreme exhaustion that it became at
length necessary to give up every exertion of the kind.
"Deerbrook" had come out in the spring of 1839, just before my
illness declared itself. That conception being wrought out and done with, I
reverted to the one which I had held in abeyance, through the objections
made to it by my friend Mrs.-- -- --, whom alone I consulted
in such matters, and on whose knowledge of books and taste in literature I
reposed my judgment. Now that she was far away, my affections sprang back
to the character and fortunes of Toussaint L'Ouverture. I speedily
made up my mind to present that genuine hero with his actual sayings and
doings (as far as they were extant) to the world. When I had been some time
at Tynemouth, finding my strength and spirits declining, I gave up the
practice of keeping a diary, for two reasons which I now think good and
sufficient;--first, that I found it becoming a burden; and next, that
a diary, kept under such circumstances, must be mainly a record of frames
and feelings,--many of them morbid, and few fit for any but
pathological uses: but I cannot be sorry that I continued my journal
for some months, as it preserves the traces of my progress in a work which
I regard with some affection, though, to say the truth, without any
admiration whatever. I find, in the sickly handwriting of that spring of
1840, notices of how my subject opened before me, and of how, as I lay
gazing upon the moon-lit sea, in the evenings of April and May, new
traits in the man, new links between the personages, and a clearer
perception of the guiding principle of the work disclosed themselves to me.
I find, by this record, that I wrote the concluding portion of "The
Hour and the Man" first, for the same reason that I am now writing
the fifth period of this Memoir before the fourth,--lest I should not
live to do the whole. It was on Saturday, the 2nd of May, 1840, that I
began the book, with Toussaint's arrival at the Jura. My notice is
that I was sadly tired with the effort, but more struck than ever with the
springing up of ideas by the way, in the act of writing, so much more than
in that of reading,--though in reading, the
profit is more from the ideas suggested than from those received. This work was a resource, and some anxiety to me, all summer: on the 17th of November, I corrected the last proof-sheet, and before the end of the month, the opinions of my friends were, for the most part, known to me. I find in my diary of this period, under the date of November 26th, an entry which it may be worth while to give here, both as an authentication of some things I have said elsewhere, and as saving explanations which might appear like afterthoughts, in regard to a point in my character which has been important to my happiness, if not to matters of higher consequence. "A letter from Moxon about the publication of my book holds out a very poor prospect. Under 500 copies are subscribed for. He offers me twenty-five copies more, both of it and of 'Deerbrook,' if I like to have them,--showing that he does not expect to sell them. If the book succeeds after this, it will be by its own merits purely. This seems the only good derivable from the news. Yet, as I sat at work, my spirits rose, the more I thought it over. It always is the way with me, and has been since I grew up, that personal mortifications (except such as arise from my own faults, and sometimes even then) put me in a happy state of mind. This is the news of all others (about my own affairs) which I had rather not have had: yet I don't know when I have been more cheery than now, in consequence of it. It is always so with hostile reviewers;--the more brutal, the more animating, in a very little while. In that case it is that one's feelings are engrossed in concern for the perpetrators, and in an anxious desire to do them good,--and looking forward to the day when their feelings will be healthier." The lighting upon this entry reminds me of some marked days of my literary life, made happy by this tendency in me; and especially the two days which might seem to have been the most mortifying;--that of the publication of the brutal review of my Political Economy series in the Quarterly, and that on which I received the news from the publisher of the total failure (as far as money was concerned) of my "Forest and Game Law tales,"--of which no more than 2,000 copies have been sold to this day. In the first case, there was every sort of
personal insult which could make a woman recoil; and in the other there was that sense of wasted labour which to me, with my strong economic faculty, was always excessively disagreeable: yet did both carry with them so direct an appeal to one's inner force, and especially to one's disinterestedness, that the reaction was immediate, and the rebound from mortification to joyful acquiescence was one of the most delightful experiences have ever had. Those several occasions are white days in the calendar of my life.--As for the success of "The Hour and the Man" and "Deerbrook," it is enough to say that both passed through two editions, and have been purchased of me for a third.*
Before my book was well out, I had planned the light and easy work, (for
which alone I was now fit) of a series of children's tales, for which
a friend then nursing me suggested the capital title of "The
Playfellow." While in spirits about the reception of my novel, I
conceived the plot of the first of those tales,--"Settlers at
Home," concerning which I find this entry in my diary. "How
curious it would be to refer back to the sources of as many ideas as
possible, in any thing one writes! Tait's Magazine of last year had
an article of De Quincy's which made me think of snow-storms
for a story:--then it occurred to me that floods were less
hackneyed, and would do as well for purposes of adventure and peril. But De
Quincy's tale (a true one) is fairly the origin of mine.--Floods
suggested Lincolnshire for the scene and Lauder's book (Sir Thomas
Dick Lauder's "Floods in Morayshire," read many years
before) for the material. For Lincolnshire I looked into the Penny
Cyclopedia, and there found references to other articles,-
particularly "Axholme." Hence,--finding
gypsum in that region,--came the precise
scene and occupations. A paragraph in a Poor Law Report on a gypsy
"born in a long meadow," suggested, (together with fishers and
fowlers in the marshes) the Roger of my tale. I finished this first of my
four volumes of "The Playfellow" by the end of the
year,--of my first year of solitary residence at Tynemouth. The close
was, on the whole, satisfactory. I found
___________________
the wintry aspects of the sea wonderfully impressive, and sometimes very beautiful. I had been visited by affectionate members of my own family, and by friends,--one of whom devoted herself to me with a singular power of sympathy, and consummate nursing ability. I had reason to hope that my book had done good to the Anti-slavery cause by bringing into full notice the intellectual and moral genius of as black a negro as was ever seen; and I had begun a new kind of work,--not too heavy for my condition of health, and sure of a prosperous circulation in Mr. Knight's hands. All this was more or less spoiled in actual experience by the state of incessant uneasiness of body and unstringing of nerves in which I was: but it was one year of the five over, and I can regard it now, as I did even then, (blank as was the future before me,) with some complacency. The remnant of life was not wholly lost, in regard to usefulness: and, as to the enjoyment, that was of small consequence.
The second volume of "The Playfellow" was wrought upon the
suggestion of a friend, for whose ability in instigation I had the highest
respect. By this time I hardly needed further evidence that one mind cannot
(in literature) work well upon the materials suggested by another:
but if I had needed such evidence, I found it here. The story of "the
Prince" was by far the least successful of the set, except among poor
people, who read it with wonderful eagerness. Some of them called it
"the French revelation;" and the copy in Lending Libraries was
more thumbed than the others; but among children and the general reading
public, there was less interest about it than any of the rest. I suppose
other authors who have found, as I have, that plenty of friends have advice
to give them how to write their books, (no two friends agreeing in their
advice) have also found themselves called self-willed and obstinate,
as I have, for not writing their books in some other way than their own. In
this case, I liked the suggestion, and felt obliged by it, and did my best
with it; and yet the result was a failure, in comparison with those which
were purely self-derived. Throughout my whole literary career, I
have found the same thing happen; and I can assure any young author who may
ever read this that he
need feel no remorse, no misgiving about conceit or obstinacy, if he finds it impossible to work so well upon the suggestions of another mind as upon those of his own. He will be charged with obstinacy and conceit, as I have been. He is sure of that, at all events; for among a dozen advisers, he can obey only one; and the other eleven will be offended. He had better make it known, as I had occasion to do, that advice is of value in any work of art when it is asked, and not otherwise; and that in a view more serious than the artistic,--when convictions have to be uttered,--advice cannot, by the very nature of things, be taken, because no conscience can prescribe or act for another. This seems to be the place for relating what my own practice has been in this important matter. In regard to literature, and all other affairs, my method has been to ask advice very rarely,--always to follow it when asked,--and rarely to follow unasked advice. In other words, I have consulted those only whom I believed to be the very best judges of the case in hand; and, believing them the very best judges, I have of course been thankful for their guidance: whereas, the officious givers of unsought advice are pretty sure not to be good judges of the case in hand; and their counsel is therefore worth nothing. The case of criticism as to what is already wrought is different. I have accepted or neglected that, according as it seemed to me sound or unsound; and I believe I have accepted it much oftener than not. I have adopted subjects suggested by others, invariably with ill-success. I have always declined assistance as to the mode of treating my own subjects from persons who could not possibly be competent to advise, for want of knowing my point of view, my principle, and my materials. I was rather amused, a few weeks ago, by the proffer of a piece of counsel, by an able man who, on the mere hearing that I was too ill to defer any longer the writing of this Memoir, wrote me his advice how to do it,--to make it amusing, and "not too abstract" &c., &c., while in total ignorance of the purposes with which I was undertaking the labour,--whether to make an "amusing," book, or for a more serious object. It reminded me of an incident which I may relate here, though it occurred three years before the time
under notice. It is so immediately connected with the topic I am now treating, that there could not be a better place for it.
When I was writing "Society in America," a lady of my
acquaintance sat down in a determined manner, face to face with me, to ask
me some questions. A more kind-hearted woman could not be; but her
one requirement was that all her friends,--or at least all her
protégés,--should let her manage their affairs for
them,--either with her own head and hands, or by sending round her
intelligence or her notions, so as to get somebody else to do the managing
before the curtain while she prompted from behind. This lady brought her
sister up to me, one day, in her own house, and they asked me, point blank,
whether I was going to say any thing about this, that, and the other, in my
book on America. Among the rest, they asked whether I was going to say
something about the position of women in the United States. I replied
"of course. My subject is Society in America; and women constitute
one half of it." They entreated me "to omit that." I told
them that the thing was done; and that when the book appeared, they would
see that it was necessary. Finding me impracticable, (conceited and
obstinate, of course) they next called on my mother, for the purpose of
alarming her into using her influence with me. They reckoned without their
host, however; for my mother was thoroughly sound in doctrine, and just and
generous in practice, on that great matter. She told them that she never
interfered with my work,--both because she considered herself
incompetent to judge till she knew the whole bearing of it, and because she
feared it would be turned into patch-work if more minds than one
were employed upon it without concert. Foiled in this direction, the
anxious meddler betook herself to a mutual friend,--a literary
man,--the Edinburgh reviewer of my Political Economy tales,--and
most unwarrantably engaged his interference. He did not come to me, or
write, but actually sent a message through a third friend, (who was most
reluctant to convey it) requesting me to say nothing about the position of
women in America, for fear of the consequences from the unacceptableness of
the topic, &c, &c. When matters had come to
this pass, it was clear that I must plainly assert the principle of authorship and the rights of authors, or be subject to the interference of meddlers, and in constant danger of quarrels, from that time forward. I therefore wrote to my reviewer the letter which I will here cite. It was not sent at once, because our intermediary feared it would hurt him so deeply as to break off our intercourse: but he questioned her so closely as to learn that there was a letter; and then he read it, declared we could never quarrel, and sent the reply which, in fairness to him, I append to my letter. The reply shows that he no more discerned the principle of the case after reading my letter than before; and in fact, if he had been restricted in his habit of advising every body on all occasions, he would have felt his occupation gone: but his kindly and generous temper abundantly compensated for that serious mistake in judgment, and our good understanding remained unimpaired to the day of his death.
March 5th, 1837.
"MY DEAR FRIEND,--I have received
through Mrs. W-- a message from you, advising me not to put into my
book any opinions concerning what are vulgarly called the "Rights of
Woman."
My replying to you is rendered unnecessary by the fact
that what I have to say on that subject at present has been printed these
two months: but I think it desirable to write, to settle at once and
for ever this matter of interference with opinions, or the expression of
them. You and I differ so hopelessly on the very principle of the matter,
that I have no expectation of converting you: but my declaration of
my own principle may at least guide you in future as to how to treat me on
such matters.
I say nothing to you of the clear
impertinence (in some through whom I conclude you had your information) of
questioning an author as to what is to be in his book, in order to
remonstrate, and get others to remonstrate, against it. You will agree with
me in this. It was in answer to questions only that I mentioned the subject
at all, to some friends of ours.
Nor need I tell you how earnestly I
have been besought by various persons to say nothing about Democracy,
nothing about Slavery, Commerce, Religion, &c.; and again, to write
about nothing else but each of these. In giving me advice how to write my
book, you are
only following a score of other friends, who have for the most part far less weight with me.
But you ought to know better than they what it
is to write a book. You surely must know that it is one of the most sacred
acts of conscience to settle with one's own intellect what is really
and solemnly believed, and is therefore to be simply and courageously
spoken. You ought to be aware that no second mind can come into the council
at all;--can judge as to what are the actual decisions of the
intellect, or felt obligations of the conscience.--If you regard a
book in the other aspect, of a work of Art, are you not aware that only one
mind can work out the conceptions of one mind? If you would not have the
sculptor instructed how to bring out his Apollo; or Handel helped to make
an oratorio,--on the same principle you should not interfere with the
very humblest efforts of the humblest writer who really has any thing to
say. In the present case, the appearance of my book will show you the
impossibility of any one who does not know the scheme of it being able to
offer applicable advice. I analyse Society in America,--of which women
constitute the half. I test all by their own avowed democratic principles.
The result, you see, is inevitable.
Either you think the opinions
objectionable, or you kindly fear the consequences to myself, or act from a
more general regard to my influence. Probably you are under all the three
fears. If the opinions are objectionable, controvert them. The press is as
open to you as to me. But do not seek to suppress the persuasions of a mind
which, for aught you know, has been as patient, and careful, and
industrious in ascertaining its convictions as your own.
Perhaps you
fear for my influence. I fully agree with an American friend of mine who
says, in answer to the same plea addressed to him as an abolitionist,
"I do not know what influence is good for if it is not to be
used." For my own part, I have never sought influence: and by
God's blessing, I never will seek it, nor study how to use it, as
influence. This is a care which God has never appointed to creatures so
incapable of foresight as we are. Happily, all we have to do is to be true
in thought and speech. What comes of our truth is a care which we may cast
with our other cares, upon him.
This is answer enough to your kind
concern for myself. I know well enough what are likely to be the
consequences of a perfectly free expression of opinion on any moral subject
whatever. I will not say how I can bear them: but I must try. You and
I differ as to what I can do; and what, if I am to render any service to
society, is the
kind of service which I am likely to render. You estimate what would be commonly called my talent far higher than I do. We will not dispute about what can be proved only by the event. But I will tell you what I know,--that any human being, however humble or liable to erorr, may render an essential service to society by making, through a whole lifetime, a steady, uncompromising, dispassionate declaration of his convictions as they are matured. This is the duty to which I some time ago addressed myself. What my talents, my influence, my prosperity may turn out to be, I care little. What my fidelity may be eventually proved to have been, I do care,--more than for life, and all that makes life so sweet as it is. My best friends will not seek to divert me from my aim.
You
may think I am making too serious a matter of this. I can only say that I
think it a very serious one. The encroachment of mind upon mind should be
checked in its smallest beginning, for the sake of the young and timid who
shrink from asserting their own liberty.
May I ask you not to destroy
this letter: but to keep it as a check upon any future solicitudes
which may arise out of your friendship for me? When shall we see
you?
Believe me &c., &c.,
H. MARTINEAU."
[Answer.]
"MY DEAR FRIEND,--Many thanks for the unreservedness of
your letter, which I only got yesterday, when I called on Mrs. W--. It
sets me quite at ease, in this instance, on the serious question of
self-reproach at the reluctance and almost cowardice with which I
usually set about to offer my advice to my friends. It would be personally
an infinite relief to me if all those in whom I am interested would release
me from what I feel to be one of the most painful obligations of
friendship, by telling me with equal frankness, that advice tendered under
any of the points of view which you enumerate was an undue encroachment of
mind on mind.
Do not imagine that my personal interest in your
happiness and usefulness will be one jot less sincere when the expression
of it is limited within the conditions which you require.
If I can
call to-day, &c., &c.
W. EMPSON."
I will add only one more incident in connexion with this subject. The
friend who suggested the taking the life of Louis
XVII. for my tale was one of my rebukers for not taking counsel--that is, for not adopting all his suggestions when he would suggest a dozen volumes in the course of a single evening. I adopted more of his than of any body's, because I often admired them. (I wrote "How to Observe" at his request, and a good many things besides.) He one day desired to be allowed to see and criticize the first chapter of my "Retrospect of Western Travel." I gave him the M.S. at night; and in the morning he produced it, covered with pencil marks. I found on examination, and I convinced him, that he had altered about half the words;--on an average, every other word in the chapter: and I put it to him what would become of my book if I submitted the M.S. to other friendly critics, equally anxious to deal with it. He could not answer the question, of course; so he called me conceited and obstinate, and I rubbed out his pencil marks,--without any detriment on either side to our friendship. My chapter would have cut a curious figure, dressed in his legal phraseology; as I should expect his legal opinions to do, if I were to express them in my own unprofessional style. Painters complain of interference: musicians, I believe, do not. Amateurs let them alone. It is to be hoped that, some time or other, literary works of art,--to say nothing of literary utterance being a work of conscience,--will be left to the artist to work out, according to his own conception and conviction. At present, it seems as if few but authors had any comprehension whatever of the seriousness of writing a book.
There is something to be told about the orion of the third volume of
"The Playfellow." I had nearly fixed on a subject of a totally
different kind when Mr. Laing's book on Norway fell in my way, and
set my imagination floating on the fiords, and climbing the slopes of the
Dovre Fjeld. I procured Inglis's travels, and every thing that I
could get hold of about the state of Norway while connected with Denmark;
and hence arose "Feats on the Fiord." Two or three years
afterwards, a note from Mr. Laing to a relative of his in Scotland
travelled round to me, in which he inquired whether his relative could tell
him, or could learn, when and for how long I had resided in Norway,
as he concluded I had, on the evidence of that story. I had the pleasure of transmitting to him the fact that I knew scarcely any thing about Norway, and had chosen another scene and subject, when his book caught my fancy, and became the originator of my tale. I hope he enjoyed the incident as much as I did.
The fourth and last volume,--"The Crofton
Boys"--was written under the belief that it was my last word
through the press. There are some things in it which I could not have
written except under that persuasion. By that time, I was very ill, and so
sunk in strength that it was obvious that I must lay aside the pen. I
longed to do so; and yet I certainly had much enjoyment in the free
outpouring of that book. When it was sealed up and sent, I stretched myself
on my sofa, and said to myself, with entire sincerity, that my career as an
author was closed. I find an entry in my Diary of the extreme need in which
I was,--not of idleness, but of my mind being free of all
engagement to work. I was under the constant
sense of obligation to do what I am doing now,--to write my life; but
otherwise I was at liberty and leisure. The strictest economy in my way of
living was necessary from the time of my ceasing to earn; but my relations
now, as I explained before, enabled me to have a servant. My lodgings were
really the only considerable expense I had besides; for I had left off
dining from total failure of appetite, and my consumption of food had
become so small that the wonder was how life could be supported upon
it.
To finish the subject of my authorship during this period, I will now
tell how my anonymous volume, "Life in the Sickroom," came into
existence, and how I, who never had a secret before or since, (as far as I
can now remember) came to have one then.--In the book itself it is
seen what I have to say on the subject of sympathy with the sick. When I
had been living for above three years alone (for the most part) and with
merely the change from one room to another,--from bed to
sofa,--in constant uneasiness, and under the depression caused both by
the nature of my disease and by heavy domestic cares, I had accumulated a
weight of ideas and experiences which I longed to
utter, and which indeed I needed to cast off. I need not repeat (what is amply explained in the book) that it was wholly my own doing that I lived alone, and why such was my choice; and the letters which I afterwards received from invalids satisfied me, and all who saw those letters, that my method was rational and prudent. It was not because I was destitute of kind nurses and visitors that I needed to pour out what was in my mind, but because the most perfect sympathy one can meet with in any trial common to humanity is reached by an appeal to the whole mind of society. It was on the fifteenth of September, 1843, that this mode of relief occurred to me, while I lay on my sofa at work on my inexhaustible resource, fancy-work. I kept no diary at that time; but I find inserted under that date in a note-book, "A new and imperative idea occurred to me,--'Essays from a Sick-room.'" This conception was certainly the greatest refreshment I had during all those heavy years. During the next few days, while some of my family were with me, I brooded over the idea; and on the nineteenth, I wrote the first of the Essays. I never wrote any thing so fast as that book. It went off like sleep. I was hardly conscious of the act, while writing or afterwards,--so strong was the need to speak. I wrote the Essays as the subject pressed, and not in the order in which they stand. As I could not speak of them to any body, I suspended the indulgence of writing them while receiving the visits which I usually had in October,--preparatory to the long winter solitude; and it was therefore November when I finished my volume. I wrote the last Essay on the fourth. It was now necessary to tell one person;--viz, a publisher. I wrote confidentially to Mr. Moxon who, curiously enough, wrote to me on the same day, (so that our letters crossed,) to ask whether I was not able, after so long an interval of rest, to promise him some work to publish. My letter had a favourable reception; he carefully considered my wishes, and kept my secret, and I corrected my last proof on the twenty-sixth of November. On the seventh of December, the first news of the volume being out arrived in the shape of other letters than Mr. Moxon's. I was instantly and universally detected, as I had indeed supposed
must be the case. On that day, my mother and eldest sister came over from Newcastle to see me. It was due to them not to let them hear such a fact in my history from the newspapers or from strangers; so, assuring them that it was the first time I had opened my lips on the subject, and that Mr. Moxon was the only person who had known it at all, I told them what I had done, and lent them my copy to take home. They were somewhat hurt, as were one or two more distant friends, who had no manner of right to be so. It proved to me how little reticence I can boast of, or have the credit for, that several friends confidently denied that the book was mine, on the ground that I had not told them a word about it,--a conviction in which I think them perfectly justified. There could not be a stronger proof of how I felt that book than my inability to speak of it except to my unknown comrades in suffering. My mother and sister had a special trial, I knew, to bear in discovering how great my suffering really was; and I could not but see that it was too much for them, and that from that time forward they were never again to me what they had been.
What the "success" of the book was, the fact of a speedy
sale of the whole edition presently showed. What my own opinion of it is,
at the distance of a dozen years, it may be worth while to record. My
note-book of that November says that I wrote the Essays from the
heart, and that there never was a truer book as to conviction. Such being
the fact, I can only now say that I am ashamed, considering my years and
experience of suffering, that my state of mind was so crude, if not morbid,
as I now see it to have been. I say this, not from any saucy elevation of
health and prosperity, but in an hour of pain and feebleness, under a more
serious and certainly fatal illness than that of 1843, and after ten
intervening years of health and strength, ease and prosperity. All the
facts in the book, and some of the practical doctrine of the
sick-room, I could still swear to: but the magnifying of my
own experience, the desperate concern as to my own ease and happiness, the
moaning undertone running through what many people have called the
stoicism, and the total inability to distinguish between
the metaphysically apparent and the positively true, make me, to say the truth, heartily despise a considerable part of the book. Great allowance is to be made, no doubt, for the effect of a depressing malady, and of the anxieties which caused it, and for an exile of years from fresh air, exercise, and change of scene. Let such allowance be made; but the very demand shows that the book is morbid,--or that part of it which needs such allowance. Stoical! Why, if I had been stoical I should not have written the book at all:--not that book; but if any, one wholly clear of the dismal self-consciousness which I then thought it my business to detail. The fact is, as I now see, that I was lingering in the metaphysical stage of mind, because I was not perfectly emancipated from the débris of the theological. The day of final release from both was drawing nigh, as I shall have occasion to show: but I had not yet ascertained my own position. I had quitted the old untenable point of view, and had not yet found the one on which I was soon to take my stand. And, while attesting the truth of the book on the whole,--its truth as a reflexion of my mind of that date,--I still can hardly reconcile with sincerity the religious remains that are found in it. To be sure, they are meagre and incoherent enough; but, such as they are they are compatible, I fear, with only a metaphysical, and not a positive order of sincerity. I had not yet learned, with decision and accuracy, what conviction is. I had yet no firm grasp of it; and I gave forth the contemporary persuasions of the imagination, or narratives of old traditions, as if they had been durable convictions, ascertained by personal exertion of my faculties. I suffered the retribution of this unsound dealing,--the results of this crude state of mind,--in the latent fear and blazoned pain through which passed during that period; and if any one now demurs to my present judgment, on the score of lapse of time and change of circumstances, I would just remind him that I am again ill, as hopelessly, and more certainly fatally than I was then. I cannot be mistaken in what I am now feeling so sensibly from day to day,--that my condition is bliss itself in comparison with that of twelve years ago; and that I am now above the reach
(while my brain remains unaffected by disease) of the solicitudes, regrets, apprehensions, self-regards, and inbred miseries of various kinds, which breathe through these Sick-room Essays, even where the language appears the least selfish and cowardly. I should not now write a sick-room book at all, except for express pathological purposes: but if I did, I should have a very different tale to tell. If not, the ten best years of my life--the ten which intervened between the two illnesses,--would have been lost upon me.
Before I dismiss this book, I must mention that its publisher did his
duty amply by it and me. I told him at first to say nothing to me about
money, as I could not bear to think of selling such an experience while in
the midst of it. Long after, when I was in health and strength, he wrote
that circumstances had now completely changed, and that life was again open
before me; and he sent me a cheque for £75. On occasion of another
edition, he sent me £50 more.
The subject of money reminds me that by this time a matter was finally
settled which appears of less consequence to me than many have
supposed,--probably because my mind was clear on the point when the
moment of action came. On my first going to reside in London, at the end of
1832, a friend of Lord Brougham's told me that there was an intention
on the part of government to give me a pension which should make me
independent for life. The story then told me, I believed of course, though
it was not long before I found that it was almost entirely one of Lord
Brougham's imaginations or fictions. He said that Lord Grey, then
Premier, wished to make me independent, that I might not be tempted, or
compelled, to spend my powers (such as they were) on writing for
periodicals: that he (Lord Brougham) had spoken to the King about it,
and that the King had said divers gracious things on the occasion; but that
the two Ministers had judged it best for me to wait till my Political
Economy series was finished, lest the Radicals should charge me with having
been bought by the Whigs. Fully believing this story, I consulted,
confidentially, three friends,--a Tory friend, my Whig Edinburgh
reviewer,
and my brother James. The two first counselled my accepting the pension,--seeing no reason why I should not. My brother advised my declining it. If it had then been offered, I believe I should have accepted it, with some doubt and misgiving, and simply because I did not then feel able to assign sufficient reasons for doing an ungracious act.--The next I heard of the matter was a year afterwards, when I was two-thirds through my long work. Lord Durham then told me, after inquiring of Lord Grey, that the subject had never been mentioned to the King at all; but that Lord Grey intended that it should be, and that I should have my pension. Some months afterwards, when I was about to go to America, Lord Grey sent to Lord Durham for my address, for the avowed purpose of informing me of the intended gift. I left England immediately after, and fully understood that, on my return, I should be made easy for life by a pension of £300 a year. Presently, the Whigs went out, and Sir R. Peel was Premier for five months, to be succeeded by the Whigs, who were in power on my return. But meantime, my mind had become clear about refusing the pension. When at a distance from the scene of my labours, and able to think quietly, and to ascertain my own feelings at leisure, the latent repugnance to that mode of provision came up again, and I was persuaded that I should lose more independence in one way than I should gain in another. I wrote to Lord Durham from America, requesting him to beg of Lord Grey that the idea might be laid aside, and that no application might be made to me which would compel me to appear ungrateful and ungracious. Lord Grey saw that letter of mine; and I supposed and hoped that the whole subject was at an end.
After my return, however, and repeatedly during the next two years (1837
and 1838) some friends of the government, who were kind friends of my own,
remonstrated with me about my refusal. I could never make them understand
the ground of my dislike of a pension. One could see in it nothing but
pride, and held up to me the name of Southey, and others whom I cordially
honoured, and told me that I might well accept what they had not demurred
to. Another chid me for practically censuring all
acceptors of pensions; whereas, it was so earnestly my desire to avoid all appearance of such insolence and narrowness, that entreated that the express offer might not be made. As for Lord Brougham, he said testily, before many hearers, when my name was mentioned,--"Harriet Martineau! I hate her!" Being asked why, he replied "I hate a woman who has opinions. She has refused a pension,--making herself out to be better than other people." Having done all I could to be quiet about the matter, and to avoid having to appear to imply a censure of other people by an open refusal, I took these misconceptions as patiently as I could; and I can sincerely declare that I never did, in my inmost mind, judge any receiver of a pension by my own action in a matter which was more one of feeling than of judgment or principle. When my part was taken beyond recall, a friend of mine showed me cause for belief that it would have been convenient for me to have accepted a pension at that time, on account of an exposure of some jobbery, and a consequent stir about the bestowal of pensions. Certainly, the few most popular pensioners' names were paraded in parliament and the newspapers in a way which I should not relish; and though no suspicion of my name being desired for justificatory reasons had any thing to do with my refusal, I was more than ever satisfied with what I had done when I saw the course that matters were taking.
The subject was revived at the close of 1840, through an old friend of
mine; and again in August, 1841, just before Lord Melbourne went out of
office. Mr. Charles Buller wrote to me to say that Lord Melbourne
understood how my earnings were invested (in a deferred annuity) and was
anxious to give me present ease in regard to money: that he was sorry
to have no more to offer at the moment than £150 a year, (which
however I was given to understand might be increased when opportunity
offered;) and that my answer must be immediate, as Lord Melbourne was going
out so soon as to require the necessary information by return of post. I
was very ill, the evening that this letter arrived,--too ill to write
myself; but my brother Robert and his wife happened to be with me; and my
brother transmit-
ted my reply.* I did not
feel a moment's hesitation about it. While fully sensible of Lord
Melbourne's kindness, I felt that I could not, with satisfaction to
myself, accept such a boon at his hands, or as a matter of favouritism from
any minister. I should have proudly and thankfully accepted ease and
independence in the form of a pension bestowed by parliament, or by some
better judge than Minister or Sovereign can easily be: but, distinct
and generous as were the assurances given that the pension was offered for
past services, and ought not to interfere with my political independence, I
felt that practically the sense of obligation would weigh heavily upon me,
and that I could never again feel perfectly free to speak my mind on
politics. At that time, too, the popular adversity was very great; and I
preferred sharing the poverty of the multitude to being helped out of the
public purse. From time to time since, I have been made sensible of the
prudence of my decision; and especially in regard to that large undertaking
of a subsequent period,--my "History of the Thirty Years'
Peace." No person in receipt of a pension from government, bestowed
by Lord Melbourne, could have written that History; and I have had more
satisfaction and pleasure from that work than any amount of pension could
have given me. My family,--the whole clan,--behaved admirably
about the business, except the adviser in the former case, who had changed
his mind, and blamed me for my decision. All the rest, whether agreeing
with me or not as to my reasons or feelings, said very cordially, that, as
such were my reasons and feelings, I had done rightly; and very cheering to
me, in those sickly days of anxious conscience, was their generous
approval. Some of the newspapers insulted me: but I did not care for
that. All the mockery of strangers all over the world could be nothing in
comparison with the gratification afforded by one incident, with which the
honoured name of Lady Byron is connected. Lady Byron, with whom I had
occasionally corresponded, wrote to a visitor of mine at that time that
henceforth no one could pity me for narrow circumstances which were my own
free choice: but that she thought it hard that I should not
___________________
have the pleasure of helping people poorer than myself. She had actually placed in the bank, and at my disposal, £100 for beneficent purposes: and, lest there should be any possible injury to me from the circumstances becoming known, she made the money payable to another person. How rich and how happy I felt with that £100! It lasted nearly the whole time of my illness; and I trust it was not ill-spent.
During the whole time of my illness, comforts and pleasures were
lavishly supplied to me. Sydney Smith said that every body who sent me
game, fruit and flowers was sure of Heaven, provided always that they
punctually paid the dues of the Church of England. If so, many of my
friends are safe. Among other memorials of that time which are still
preserved and prized in my home are drawings sent me by the Miss
Nightingales, and an envelope-case, (in daily use) from the hands of
the immortal Florence. I was one of the sick to whom she first ministered;
and it happened through my friendship with some of her family.
Some time after the final settlement of this pension business, some
friends of mine set about the generous task of raising a Testimonial Fund
for my benefit. It is necessary for me to offer the statement, as expressly
and distinctly as possible, that I had nothing whatever to do with this
proceeding, and that I did every thing in my power to avoid knowing any
particulars while the scheme was in progress. This declaration,
indispensable to my honour, is rendered necessary by the behaviour of one
person whose indiscretion and double-dealing involved me in trouble
about the testimonial business. It is enough to say here that so determined
was I to hear nothing of the particulars of the affair that, when I found
it impossible to prevent that officious person telling me all she knew, and
representing me as compelling her to tell it, in excuse for her own
indiscretion, I engaged my aunts, who were then lodging close by, to come
in whenever that visitor entered,--to stop her when she spoke on the
forbidden subject, and to bear witness that it was my resolute purpose to
hear nothing about it. One of my dear aunts was always instantly on the
spot, accordingly, to the discomfiture of the
gos-
sip, who complained that she never saw me alone: and at last, (but not till I was liable to serious injury in the minds of many people) I succeeded in being so completely outside of the affair as to be ignorant of all but the first steps taken. To this day I have never seen the list of subscribers, nor heard, probably, more than ten or twelve of them. The money raised was mainly invested, with the entire approbation of the managers of the business, in the Long Annuities,--the object being to obtain the latest income procurable from £1,400 for the period during which it was then supposed that I might live. I have since enjoyed ten years of health, (after many months more of that sickness) and it seemed probable that I should outlive that investment. Now again the scene is changed; and it appears that I shall leave the remnant of the kindly gift behind me. I do not know that I could better express the relief and satisfaction that I derived from that movement of my friends than by citing here the circular in which I made my acknowledgments.
"TO THE CONTRIBUTORS TO A TESTIMONIAL TO H.
MARTINEAU.--"
"MY DEAR FRIENDS,--To reach you
individually from my retirement is not very easy; and to convey to you the
feelings with which I accept your kindness is impossible: yet I
cannot but attempt to present to each of you my acknowledgments, and the
assurance of the comfort I feel, from day to day, in the honour and
independence which you have conferred upon me. By your generous testimony
to my past services you have set me free from all personal considerations,
in case of my becoming capable of future exertion. The assurance which I
possess of your esteem and sympathy will be a stimulus to labour, if I find
I have still work to do: and if I remain in my present useless
condition, it will be a solace to me under suffering, and a cordial under
the depressions of illness and confinement.
I am with affectionate
gratitude,
Your Friend and Servant,
HARRIET
MARTINEAU."
Tynemouth, October 22nd, 1848.
grandmother, the head of one side of our house, died; and, on the other, the beloved old aunt who had lived with us, and the old uncle whose effectual sympathy in my great enterprise of the Political Economy series I described in its place; and three cousins of my own generation; and a nephew of the generation below. Several friends of my father and mother, to whom I had looked up during my childhood and youth, slipped away during the period when I was lying waiting for death as my release from dreary pain: and also a whole group of my political friends, acquired since I entered the world of literature. Lord and Lady Durham died, after having sympathised with me in my illness; and Lord Sydenham, who had made me known to them in my writings: and Lord Congleton: and Thomas Drummond, who had been the medium of some of my communications with Lord Grey's government: and Lord Henley, who had suggested and determined my going to America: and old Lord Leicester, who had been, under the name of Mr. Coke, my early ideal of the patriot gentleman of England; and others of less note, or a remoter interest to myself. Most various and impressive had been the modes of their death. Some few by mere old age and ordinary disease; but others by heart-break, by over-anxious toil in the public service, by suicide, and by insanity! Then, among my American friends, there were several whom I had left not long before, in the full exercise of important functions, and in the bright enjoyment of life;--Judge Porter of Louisiana, one of the leading Senators of the United States, and perhaps the most genial and merry of my American friends; Dr. Henry Ware, the model of a good clergyman; and Dr. Channing, who had just cheered me by his fervent blessing on my portraiture of Toussaint L'Ouverture. And then again, there were literary men who were much connected with the last preceding phase of my life;--Southey, after his dreary decline, and Campbell; and Dr. Dalton, who remains a venerable picture in my memory; and John Murray who had refused (with hesitation) to publish "Deerbrook," and had found the refusal a mistake. And there were others who were living influences to me, as they were to multitudes more, who had never seen them,
--as Grace Darling, of whom every storm of that same sea reminded me. The departure of these and many more kept the subject of death vividly before me, and compelled me to reduce my vague and fanciful speculations on "the divine government" and human destiny to a greater precision and accuracy. The old perplexity about the apparent cruelty and injustice of the scheme of "divine government" began at last to suggest the right issue. I had long perceived the worse than uselessness of enforcing principles of justice and mercy by an appeal to the example of God. I had long seen that the orthodox fruitlessly attempt to get rid of the difficulty by presenting the two-fold aspect of God,--the Father being the model of justice, and the Son of love and mercy,--the inevitable result being that he who is especially called God is regarded as an unmitigated tyrant and spontaneous torturer, while the sweeter and nobler attributes are engrossed by the man Jesus,--whose fate only deepens the opprobrium of the Divine cruelty: while the heretics whose souls recoil from such a doctrine, and who strive to explain away the recorded dogmas of tyranny and torture, in fact give up the Christian revelation by rejecting its essential postulates. All this I had long seen: and I now began to obtain glimpses of the conclusion which at present seems to me so simple that it is a marvel why I waited for it so long;--that it is possible that we human beings, with our mere human faculty, may not understand the scheme, or nature, or fact of the universe! I began to see that we, with our mere human faculty, are not in the least likely to understand it, any more than the minnow in the creek, as Carlyle has it, can comprehend the perturbations caused in his world of existence by the tides. I saw that no revelation can by possibility set men right on these matters, for want of faculty in man to understand anything beyond human ken; as all instruction whatever offered to the minnow must fail to make it comprehend the action of the moon on the oceans of the earth, or receive the barest conception of any such action. Thus far I began to see now. It was not for long after I that perceived further that the conception itself of moral government, of moral qualities, of the necessity of a preponderance of happi-
ness over misery, must be essentially false beyond the sphere of human action, because it relates merely to human faculties. But this matter,--of a truer stand-point,--will be better treated hereafter, in connexion with the period in which I perceived it within my horizon. As to death and the question of a future life,--I was some time in learning to be faithful to my best light,--faint as it yet was. I remember asserting to a friend who was willing to leave that future life a matter of doubt, that we were justified in expecting whatever the human race had agreed in desiring. I had long seen that the "future life" of the New Testament was the Millennium looked for by the apostles, according to Christ's bidding,--the glorious reign of 1,000 years in Judea, when the Messiah should be the Prince, and his apostles his councillors and functionaries, and which was to begin within the then existing generation. I had long given up, in moral disgust, the conception of life after death as a matter of compensation for the ills of humanity, or a police and penal resource of "the divine government." I had perceived that the doctrines of the immortality of the soul and the resurrection of the body were incompatible; and that, while the latter was clearly impossible, we were wholly without evidence of the former. But I still resorted, in indolence and prejudice, to the plea of instinct,--the instinctive and universal love of life, and inability to conceive of its extinction. My Sick-room book shows that such was my view when I wrote those essays: but I now feel pretty certain that I was not, even then, dealing truly with my own mind,--that I was unconsciously trying to gain strength of conviction by vigour of assertion. It seems to me now that I might then have seen how delusive, in regard to fact, are various genuine and universal instincts; and, again, that this direction of the instinct in question is by no means so universal and so uniform as I declared it to be. I might then have seen, if I had been open-minded, that the instinct to fetishism, for instance, is more general,--is indeed absolutely universal, while it is false in regard to fact; and that it is, in natural course, overpowered and annihilated by higher instincts, leading to true knowledge.
In such progress as I did make, I derived great assistance from the
visits of a remarkable variety of friends, and from the confidence reposed
in me during
tête-à-tête
conversations, such as could hardly have occurred under any other
circumstances. Some dear old friends came, one at a time, and established
themselves at the inn or in lodgings near, for weeks together, and spent
with me such hours of the day as I could render (by opiates) fit for
converse with them. Others stopped at Tynemouth, in the midst of a journey,
and gave me a day or two; and with many I had a single interview which was
afterwards remembered with pleasure. During many a summer evening, while I
lay on my window-couch, and my guest of the day sat beside me,
overlooking the purple sea, or watching for the moon to rise up from it,
like a planet growing into a sun, things were said, high and deep, which
are fixed into my memory now, like stars in a dark firmament. Now a
philosopher, now a poet, now a moralist, opened to me speculation, vision,
or conviction; and, numerous as all the speculations, visions and
convictions together, were the doubts confided to my meditation and my
discretion. I am not going to violate any confidence here, of course, which
I have considered sacred in life. I refer to these conversations with the
thoughtful and the wise merely to acknowledge my obligations to them, and
to explain certain consequences to myself which may perhaps be best
conveyed by an anecdote.--During the latter part of my Tynemouth
sojourn, a friend, who could minister to me in all manner of ways except
philosophy, was speaking of the indispensableness of religion, and of her
mode of religion especially, to a good state of mind. Not at all agreeing
with her, I told her I had had a good deal of opportunity of knowing states
of mind since I lay down on that sofa; and that what I had seen had much
deepened the impression which I had begun to have long before,--that
the best state of mind was to be found, however it might he accounted for,
in those who were called philosophical atheists. Her exclamation of
amazement showed me that I had said something very desperate: but the
conversation had gone too far to stop abruptly. She asked me what on earth
I could mean: and I was obliged
to explain. I told her that I knew several of that class,--some avowed and some not; and that I had for several years felt that they were among my most honoured acquaintances and friends; and that now that I knew them more deeply and thoroughly, I must say that, for conscientiousness, sincerity, integrity, seriousness, effective intellect, and the true religious spirit, I knew nothing like them. She burst out a laughing, and said she could conceive how, amidst fortunate circumstances, they might have been trained to morality; but how they could have the religious spirit, she could in no way conceive. It seemed to her absolute nonsense. I explained what I meant, being very careful, according to my state of mind at that time, to assure her that I was not of their way of thinking: nevertheless, it did seem to me, I said, that the philosophical atheists were the most humble-minded in the presence of the mysteries of the universe, the most equable in spirit and temper amidst the affairs of life, the most devout in their contemplation of the unknown, and the most disinterested in their management of themselves, and their expectations from the human lot;--showing, in short, the moral advantages of knowledge (however limited) and of freedom (however isolated and mournful) over superstition as shared by the multitude. I have reason to believe that, amazed as my visitor was, she was not so struck as to derive benefit from the statement of an unusual experience like mine, in my sudden translation from the vividness of literary and political life in London to the quietness of the sick-room and its converse. She had not forgotten the conversation many years afterwards; but it had not borne fruit to her. On the contrary, she was so shocked at my opinions, as avowed in the "Letters on Man's Nature and Development" as to be one of the very few who retreated from intercourse with me on account of them. There was a pretext or two for ceasing to correspond; but I believe there is no doubt that my heresies were the cause. What I said to her I said to several other people; and I doubt whether any one of them was unprepared for what was pretty certain to be the result when I had once attained to the estimate of the free-thinkers of my acquaintance which I have just recorded.
under mesmerism, when all other treatment had long been useless. Mr. and Mrs. Basil Montagu wrote to entreat me to try mesmerism, and related the story of their own conversion to it by seeing the case of Ann Vials treated by their "dear young friend, Henry Atkinson,"--of whom I had never heard. The third was from a wholly different quarter, but contained the same counsel, on very similar grounds. Presently after, I was astonished at what my brother-in-law said in one of his visits. He told me that Mr. Spencer Hall, of whom I had never heard, was lecturing in Newcastle on mesmerism; that he (my brother) had gone to the lecture out of curiosity, and had been put into the chair, on the clear understanding that he accepted the post only to see fair play, and not at all as countenancing mesmerism, of which he fairly owned that he knew nothing whatever: that he had been deeply impressed by what he saw, and was entirely perplexed,--the only clear conviction that he had brought away being of the honesty and fairness of the lecturer, who was the first to announce such failures as occurred; and that he, (my brother) was anxious to see more of the lecturer, and disposed to advise my trying the experiment of being mesmerised, as possibly affording me some release from the opiates to which I was obliged to have constant recourse. I was as much pleased as surprised at all this, and I eagerly accepted the proposal that Mr. Spencer Hall should be brought to see me, if he would come. Some of my family were sadly annoyed by this proceeding; but, as the move was not mine, I felt no scruple about accepting its benefits. For between five and six years, every thing that medical skill and family care could do for me had been tried, without any avail; and it was now long since the best opinions had declared that the case was hopeless,--that, though I might live on, even for years, if my state of exhaustion should permit, the disease was incurable. I had tried all the methods, and taken all the medicines prescribed, "without" as my brother-in-law declared in writing, "any effect whatever having been produced on the disease;" and, now that a new experiment was proposed to me by my medical attendant himself, I had nothing to do but try it. This appears plain and rational enough to me now, as it did
then; and I am as much surprised now as I was then that any evil influence should have availed to persuade my mother and eldest sister that my trial of mesmerism was a slight to the medical adviser who proposed it, and my recovery by means of it a fit occasion for a family quarrel. For my part,--if any friend of mine had been lying in a suffering and hopeless state for nearly six years, and if she had fancied she might get well by standing on her head instead of her heels, or reciting charms or bestriding a broomstick, I should have helped her to try: and thus was I aided by some of my family, and by a further sympathy in others: but two or three of them were induced by an evil influence to regard my experiment and recovery as an unpardonable offence; and by them I never was pardoned. It is a common story. Many or most of those who have been restored by mesmerism have something of the same sort to tell; and the commonness of this experience releases me from the necessity of going into detail upon the subject.
I may also omit the narrative of my recovery, because it is given in
"Letters on Mesmerism" which I was presently compelled to
publish. There is among my papers my diary of the case,--a record
carefully kept from day to day of the symptoms, the treatment, and the
results. The medical men, and the few private friends who have seen that
journal (which I showed to my medical adviser) have agreed in saying that
it is as cool as if written by a professional observer, while
it is so conclusive as to the fact of my restoration by the means tried in
1844, that "we must cease to say that any thing is the cause of any
other thing, if the recovery was not wrought by mesmerism." These are
the words which are before me in the hand-writing of a wholly
impartial reader of that journal.
I had every desire to bear patiently any troubles sure to arise in such
a case from professional bigotry, and popular prejudice; but I must think
that I had more than my share of persecution for the offence of recovery
from a hopeless illness by a new method.--Occasion of offence was
certainly given by some advocates of mesmerism, strangers to me, by their
putting letters into the newspapers, praising me for my experiment, and
ridi-
culing the doctors for their repugnance to it; and one at least of these officious persons made several mistakes in his statement. I knew nothing of this for some time; and then only by the consequences. I must repeat here, what I have said elsewhere, that Mr. Spencer Hall had nothing to do with all this. Though he might naturally have been pleased with his own share in the business, and though many men would have considered themselves released from all obligation to silence by the publicity the matter soon obtained, he remained honourably silent, till he had my express permission to tell the story when and where he pleased. When he did tell it, it was with absolute accuracy. The first letters to the newspapers, meanwhile, drew out from the grossest and more ignorant of the medical profession, and also from some who ought to have been above exposing themselves to be so classified, speculations, comments, and narratives, not only foolish and utterly false in regard to facts, but so offensive that it was absolutely necessary to take some step, as no one intervened for my protection from a persecution most odious to a woman. After much consideration, it seemed to me best to send to (not a newspaper, but,) a scientific journal, a simple narrative of the facts,--making no allusion to any thing already published, but so offering the story as to lift it out of the professional mire into which it had been dragged, and to place it on its right ground as a matter of scientific observation. This was the act which was called "rushing into print."
The conduct of the editor who accepted and profited by my "Letters
on Mesmerism" is so capital an illustration of the mode in which I
and my coadjutors were treated on this occasion, and of that in which
persons concerned in any new natural discovery are usually treated, that it
may be profitable to give a brief statement of the facts as a compendium of
the whole subject.--I wrote to one of the staff of the
Athenæum, saying that I found it necessary to write my
experience; and that I preferred a periodical like the Athenæum to a
newspaper, because I wanted to lift up the subject out of the dirt into
which it had been plunged, and to place it on a scientific ground, if
possible. I said that I was aware that the editor of the Athenæum was
an unbeliever
in mesmerism; but that this was no sufficient reason for my concluding that his periodical would be closed against a plain story on a controverted subject. I begged, at the outset, to say that I could take no money for my articles, under the circumstances; and that, if it was the rule of the Athenæum, as of some publications, to take no contributions that were not paid for, perhaps the editor might think fit to give the money to some charity. What I did require, I said, was, that my articles should appear unaltered, and that they and I should be treated with the respect due to the utterance and intentions of a conscientious and thoughtful observer. I hold the reply, in the hand-writing of the editor, who eagerly accepted the proposed articles; and agreed without reserve to my conditions. The six "Letters" that I sent carried six numbers of the Athenæum through three editions. Appended to the last was a string of comments by the editor, consulting and slanderous to the last degree. For a course of weeks and months from that time, that periodical assailed the characters of my mesmeriser and of my fellow-patient, the excellent girl whom I before described. It held out inducements to two medical men to terrify some of the witnesses, and traduce others, till the controversy expired in the sheer inability of the honest party to compete with rogues who stuck at no falsehoods: and finally, the Athenæum gave public notice that it would receive communications from our adversaries, and not from us. Meantime, Mr. Moxon wrote to ask me to allow him to reprint the "Letters" as a pamphlet; and I gave permission, declining to receive any profit from the sale. While the "Letters" were reprinting, the editor of the Athenæum actually wrote, and then sent his lawyer, to forbid Mr. Moxon to proceed, declaring that he claimed the property of the "Letters" by which he had already pocketed so large a profit. Of course the claim was absurd,--nothing having been paid for the articles,--which I had also told the editor it was my intention to allow to be reprinted. The editor finally stooped to say that I did not know that he had not given money on account of the "Letters" to some charity: but, when we asked whether he had, there was no reply forthcoming. Mr. Moxon of course proceeded in his re-publication, and the editor
gained nothing by his move but the reputation, wherever the facts were
known, of having achieved the most ill-conditioned transaction, in
regard to principle, temper and taste, known to any of those who read his
letters, public and private, or heard the story.--As for me, what I
did was this. When I found that a conscientious witness has no chance
against unscrupulous informers, I ceased to bandy statements in regard to
the characters of my coadjutors: (nobody attacked
mine*) but I took measures which
would avail to rectify the whole business, if it should ever become
necessary to any of the injured parties to do so. I sent my solicitor to
one of the unscrupulous doctors, to require from him a retractation of his
original statement. This retractation, obtained in the presence, and under
the sanction, of the doctor's witness, (his pastor) I now hold, in
the slanderer's own hand-writing: and it effectually
served to keep him quiet henceforward. I hold also an additional legal
declaration which establishes the main fact on which the somnambule's
story of the
___________________
shipwreck was attempted to be overthrown. The whole set of documents has been shown to a great variety of people,--lawyers and clergymen, among others; and all but medical men have declared, under one form of expression or another, that the evidence is as strong as evidence can be on any transaction whatever. One eminent lawyer told me that the twelve Judges would be unanimous in regard to the truth of the parties concerned, and the certainty of the facts, from the documents which were offered to the public, and the two or three which I have held in readiness to fill up any gaps of which we were not in the first instance aware.--Such a persecution could hardly be repeated now, in regard to the particular subject,--after the great amount of evidence of the facts of mesmerism which the intervening years have yielded; but it will be repeated in regard to every new discovery of a power or leading fact in nature. Human pride and prejudice cannot brook discoveries which innovate upon old associations, and expose human ignorance; and, as long as any thing in the laws of the universe remains to be revealed, there is a tolerable certainty that somebody will yet be persecuted, whatever is the age of the world. We may hope, however, that long before that, men will have become ashamed of allowing rapacity and bad faith to make use of such occasions, as the Athenæum did in the year 1844.--I may just mention that the editor was an entire stranger to me. I had never had any acquaintance with him then; and I need not say that I have desired none since.
I was as familiar as most people with the old story of the unkindly
reception of new truth in natural or moral science. I had talked and
moralized, like every body else, on the early Christians, on Galileo, on
Harvey and his discovery, and so forth: but it all came upon me like
novelty when I saw it so near, and in a certain degree, though slightly,
felt it myself. It is a very great privilege to have such an experience;
and especially to one who, like me, is too anxious for sympathy, and for
the good opinion of personal friends. That season of recovery was one of
most profitable discipline to me. At times my heart would swell that people
could be so cruel to sufferers, like poor
Jane and myself, recovering from years of hopeless pain; and again my
spirit rose against the rank injustice of attempting to destroy reputations
in a matter of scientific inquiry. But, on the whole, my strength kept up
very well. I kept to myself my quiverings at the sight of the postman, and
of newspapers and letters. After the first stab of every new insult, my
spirit rose, and shed forth the vis
medicatrix of which we all carry an inexhaustible fountain within
us. I knew, steadily, and from first to last, that we were right,--my
coadjutors and I. I knew that we were secure as to our facts and innocent
in our intentions: and it was my earnest desire and endeavour to be
no less right in temper. How I succeeded, others can tell better than I. I
only know that my recovery, and the sweet sensations of restored health
disposed me to good-humour, and continually reminded me how much I
had gained in comparison with what I had to bear. I owed much to the fine
example of poor Jane. That good girl, whose health was much less firmly
established, at that time, than mine, was an orphan, and wholly dependent
on her own industry,--that industry being dependent on her precarious
health, and on the character which two or three physicians first, and two
or three journalists after them, strove by the most profligate
plotting,* to deprive her of.
They tried to confound her with a woman of loose character; they bullied
and threatened her; they tried to set her relations against her. But she
said cheerfully that people ought not to grumble at having some penalty to
pay for such blessings as rescue from blindness and restoration to health
by a new method; and moreover, that they should be glad to tell the truth
about it, under any abuse, and to spread the blessing if they could. So she
bore her share very quietly, and with wonderful courage resisted the
bullies who waited for my separation from her to frighten her into
con-
___________________
cessions: and, from that day to this, her healing hand, her time and her efforts have ever been at the service of the sick, to not a few of whom she has been a benefactress in their time of need. She has long been valued as she deserved; and she has probably forgotten that season of trial of her temper: but I felt at the time that I should never forget it; and I never have.
I was much aided and comforted during the five months that my recovery
was proceeding by the visits of friends who knew more about mesmerism than
I did, and who entirely approved my recourse to it. Among others came a
gentleman and his wife whose name and connexions were well known to me, but
whom I had not chanced ever to meet. The gentleman was one of the very
earliest inquirers into mesmerism in England in our time; and he was a
practiced operator. He came out of pure benevolence, at the suggestion of a
mutual friend who saw, and who told him, that this was a case of life and
death, which might terminate according to the preponderance of
discouragement from my own neighbouring family, or encouragement from those
who understood the subject better. He came, bringing his wife; and their
visit was not the less pleasant for the urgent
need of it being almost past. They found me going on well under the hands of the kind lady who was restoring me. But it is clear that even then we were so moderate in our hopes as not to expect any thing like complete restoration. When they bade us farewell, we talked of meeting again at Tynemouth,--having no idea of my ever leaving the place; and in truth a journey did then appear about the most impossible of all achievements. A few weeks later, however, we had agreed that I should confirm my recovery by change of scene, and that the scene should be Windermere, on the shores of which my new friends were then living. They kindly urged their invitation on the ground that I must not give up being mesmerised suddenly or too soon, and that in their house there would be every facility for its daily use. So, early in January, 1845, my mesmeriser and I left Tynemouth, little thinking that I should never return to it. I had no sooner left my late home, however, than the evil spirit broke out so strongly, in the medical profession and in the discontented part of the family, that the consideration was forced upon me--why I should go back. There was indeed no attraction whatever but the sea; and if there had been every thing that there was not,--society, books, fine scenery, &c.,--they could have been no compensation for nonintercourse with the relations who were disconcerted at my mode of recovery.
My first anxiety was to ascertain whether, in the opinion of the family,
my mother should be left undisturbed in her present arrangements at
Liverpool, or whether I had further services to render to her. To allow
time for the fullest understanding on this head, I resolved to spend six
months or more in visiting those of my family who had approved my
proceedings, and in lodgings near Windermere; after which, I would
determine on my course of life.
One wintry morning, while walking to Waterhead with my host, we said
"what wonderful things do come to pass!" We looked back to that
day twelve months, when I was lying, sick and suffering for life, as every
body supposed, on my couch at Tynemouth; and we wondered what I should have
said if any
prophet had told me that that day twelve months I should be walking in a snow storm, with a host whom I had then never seen, looking for lodgings in which to undergo my transformation into a Laker!
quitted,--with the same associates, employments, recreations,--the same every thing, except natural scenery. But this does not at all agree with my experience. I have no expectation of that kind,--nor personal expectation of any kind after death; and I have a particularly keen relish of life,--all the keener for being late: yet now, while in daily expectation of death, I certainly feel no dislike or dread of it; nor do I find my pleasant daily life at all overshadowed by the certainty that it is near its end. If this seems strange to people who hold other views than mine, their baseless conclusions,--that I must dread death because I enjoy life,--appear no less strange to me. They surely do not refuse to enjoy any other pleasure because it must come to an end; and why this? And if they feel sad as the end of other pleasures draws near, it is because they anticipate feeling the absence and the blank. Thus, we grieve, and cannot but grieve, at the death of a friend, whose absence will leave a blank in our life: but the laying down our own life, to yield our place to our successors, and simply ceasing to be, seems to me to admit of no fear or regret; except through the corruption introduced by false and superstitious associations. I suppose we must judge, each for ourselves, in such matters: but I cannot but remember that I have gone through the Christian experience in regard to the expectation of death, and feel that I understand it, while Christians have not experienced, and I perceive do not understand, my present view and feeling in the expectation of death. But if they care to have my own statement, they are welcome to it. It is what I have said:--that for ten years I have had as keen a relish of life as I believe my nature to be capable of; and that I feel no reluctance whatever to pass into nothingness, leaving my place in the universe to be filled by another. The very conception of self and other is, in truth, merely human, and when the self ceases to be, the distinction expires.
I remember that when the prospect of health and prolonged life opened
before me, there was a positive drawback, and a serious one, in the dread
of having the whole thing to go over again, some time or other. I had
recourse to desperate comforts under
this apprehension. I hoped I might die by a railway crash, or some other sudden accident; or that I might sink away in mere old age; or I trusted that time might somehow make some change. I little thought how short a time would make so vast a change! I little thought that in ten years I should find myself far more fatally ill, without the slightest reluctance, and with the gayest feeling that really it does not matter whether I feel ill or well,--(short of acute and protracted pain, of which I have still a great dread) if only other people are not made unhappy. All the solemn, doleful feeling about my sufferings, which seemed right and appropriate, if not religious, a dozen years ago, now appears selfish, and low, and a most needless infliction on myself and others. Once become aware of how little consequence it is, and how the universe will go on just the same, whether one dies at fifty or seventy, one looks gaily on the last stage of one's subjection to the great laws of nature,--notes what one can of one's state for the benefit of others, and enjoys the amusement of watching the course of human affairs from one's fresh and airy point of view, above the changes of the elements with which one has no further personal concern. The objective and disinterested contemplation of eternity is, in my apprehension, the sublimest pleasure that human faculties are capable of; and the pleasure is most vivid and real when one's disinterestedness is most necessary and complete,--that is, when our form of its life is about to dissolve, to make way for another.
After spending a month on the shores of Windermere, I went for a long
visit to my dear elder brother's, some of whose children had grown up
from infancy to youth during my illness. He and his wife had attached me to
them more than ever by their recent conduct. Thinking me right in my effort
to recover health, and wronged in much of the treatment I had received,
they upheld me steadily and effectually, while, at the same time, they saw
how the wrong was mainly owing to prejudice and want of the knowledge
pertinent to the case; and they therefore did not find it necessary to
quarrel with any body. I thought then, and I think now, that they were just
and kind all round; and I am sure they were no small assistance to me in
keeping my tem-
per. They took a great interest in the subject of mesmerism, and enjoyed seeing its operation in cases similar to my own, and in many others, in which sufferers, pronounced incurable by the doctors, were restored as I had been. One amusement to us all at that time was the pity with which the doctors regarded me. I could quote several medical men who reasoned that, as my disease was an incurable one, I could not possibly be radically better; that I was then in a state of exhilaration, infatuation, and so forth; and that in six months (or three months or a year, as might be) I should be as ill as ever, and mourning over my having been duped by the mesmerists. Now and then we heard, or saw in the newspapers, that I was as ill as ever, and mourning my infatuation,--though I was walking five or seven miles at a time, and giving every evidence of perfect health. The end of it was that I went off to the East,--into the depths of Nubia, and traversing Arabia on a camel; and then the doctors said I had never been ill! It is very curious,--this difficulty of admitting evidence about any new, or newly revived, fact in nature. I remember Mr. Hallam (the last man open to the charge of credulity) telling me at Tynemouth a story which struck me very much. He told me how he and his friend Mr. Rogers had had the privilege of witnessing that very rare spectacle, "the reception by a great metropolis, of the discovery of a pregnant natural fact." He told me,--and he has so manfully told plenty of other people, that I am betraying no confidence in repeating the story once more,--that Mr. Rogers and he had, many years before, seen some mesmeric facts in Paris which convinced and impressed them for life. When they returned, they told what they had seen, and were met by such insulting ridicule that they were compelled to be silent, or to quarrel with some of their pleasurest friends. One physician in particular he named, who treated them at his own table in a way which prevented their ever again communicating their knowledge to him, if they wished to remain on civil terms with him. By degrees, in course of years, facts became known; higher scientific authorities on the continent declared themselves convinced, or in favour of that genuine inquiry which has always ended in con-
viction; and the tone of London society began to change. The physician referred to ceased to gibe and jeer, and sat silent and embarrassed while the subject was discussed; and at length began to ask questions, and show a desire to learn: "and now," continued Mr. Hallam, "we can say that we are acquainted with nobody who has attended to the subject with any earnestness who does not consider certain facts of mesmerism to be as completely established as any facts whatever in the whole range of science." He added, "this reception of a great truth is a great thing to have seen."--In a note I had from Mr. Hallam before I left Tynemouth, he declared his view to be this. "I have no doubt that mesmerism, and some other things which are not mesmerism properly so-called, are fragmentary parts of some great law of the human frame which we are on the verge of discovering." It appears to be the method of the London doctors now to admit the facts (being unable longer to suppress them) and to account for them, each according to his own favourite physiological view; and thus the truth is near its full admission. When the facts are admitted in London, the medical men in the provinces will not long continue to scoff and perpetrate slander: and when a score of commentators on a single class of facts offer a score of explanations, the true solution is so much needed that it must soon be obtained.
Amidst the happiness of my visit at my brother's, I felt a really
painful longing to see verdure and foliage. On leaving Newcastle, I had
been carried swiftly past a railway embankment covered with broom; and the
dark green of that bank made my heart throb at the time, and bred in me a
desperate longing to see more. I did not think I could have wished so much
for any thing as I did to see foliage. I had not seen a tree for above five
years, except a scrubby little affair which stood above the haven at
Tynemouth, exposed to every wind that blew, and which looked nearly the
same at midsummer and Christmas. It was this kind of destitution which
occasioned some of the graceful acts of kindness which cheered my Tynemouth
sojourn. An old friend sent me charming coloured sketches of old trees in
Sherwood Forest: and an artist who was
an entire stranger to me, Mr. McIan, stayed away from a day's excursion at a friend's house in the country, to paint me a breezy tree. For months the breezy tree was pinned up on the wall before me, sending many a breeze through my mind. But now I wanted to see a real tree in leaf; and I had to wait sadly long for it. The spring of 1846 was the latest I remember, I think,--unless it be the present one (1855). My impatience must have been very apparent, for my sister-in-law "fooled" me, when I came down to breakfast on the 1st of April, with lamentations about "the snow under the acacia." There was no snow there; but the hedges seemed dead for ever; and there was scarcely a tinge of green on them when I left Edgbaston for Nottingham, on the second of May.
There,--at Lenton, near Nottingham,--new pleasures awaited me.
Spring is always charming on the Trent meadows at Nottingham, where the
clear shoaly river runs between wide expanses of meadow, where crocuses
almost hide the grass for a few weeks of the year. It was an unspeakable
pleasure to me to move freely about blossoming gardens; but no one but a
restored invalid can conceive what it was to ramble for miles, to Clifton
woods, or to Woollaton, drinking in the sunshine in the fields, and the
cool shade under the green avenues. Now, at the end of ten years, I do not
find my thirst for foliage fully quenched, after the long absence at
Tynemouth. There were excursions from Nottingham to Newstead and
elsewhere,--all delightful; but I don't know that I had not more
pleasure from the common lawn, with the shadows of the trees flickering
upon it, than from any change of objects. The surprise to my friends, and
also to myself, was that I was so little nervous,--so capable of doing
like other people, as if I had not led a sick and hermit life for so many
years. This exemption from the penalties of long illness I believe I owe to
mesmerism being the means of cure. I had left off all drugs for ten months,
except the opiates, which had been speedily reduced from the outset of the
experiment, and now discontinued for half a year. I had not therefore to
recover from the induced illness and constitutional poisoning caused by
drugs; and my nerves had been well strung by the
mesmerism which I had now discontinued. I certainly felt at first, when at the Lakes and at Edgbaston, by no means sure that I knew how to behave in society; but old associations soon revived, and I fell into the old habit of social intercourse. It was not very long indeed before we proposed,--my friends and I,--to ignore altogether the five years at Tynemouth,--to call me 38 instead of 43, and proceed as if that awful chasm had never opened in my path which now seemed closed up, or invisible as it lay behind. There were things belonging to it, however, which I should have been sorry to forget, or to lose the vivid sense of; and chief among these was the kindness of a host of friends. I have observed, however, at intervals since, that though the sense of that kindness is as vivid as ever, the other incidents and interests of that term of purgatory have so collapsed as to make the period which seemed in experience to be an eternity, like a momentary blank,--a night of uneasy dreams, soon forgotten between the genuine waking interests of two active days.
With this new day of activity arose a strong fresh interest. It was at
Lenton, near Nottingham, that I first saw Mr. Atkinson, whose friendship
has been the great privilege of the concluding period of my life. I have
told above that Mr. and Mrs. Basil Montagu mentioned him to me in the
letter in which they besought me to try mesmerism. I had never heard of him
before, as far as I know. I have often said, as I am ready to say again,
that I owe my recovery mainly to him,--that my ten last happy years
have been his gift to me: hut it is not true, as many people have
supposed and led others to believe, that I was mesmerised by him at
Tynemouth. I am careful in explaining this, because many persons who think
it necessary to assign some marvellous reason for my present philosophical
views, and who are unwilling to admit that I could have arrived at them by
my own means and in my own way, have asserted that Mr. Atkinson was my
mesmeriser, and that he infused into me his own views by the power he thus
gained over my brain. I might explain that I never was
unconscious,--never in the mesmeric sleep,--during the whole
process of recovery; but the simplest and most
incontestible reply is by dates. I was first mesmerised on the 22nd of June, 1844; I was well in the following November: I went forth on my travels in January, 1845, and first saw Mr. Atkinson on the 24th of May of that year. The case was this. Mr. and Mrs. Montagu, earnest that I should try mesmerism, brought about a meeting at their house, in June, 1844, between Mr. Atkinson and an intimate friend of mine who had visited me, and was about to go to me again. They discussed the case: and from that time Mr. Atkinson's instructions were our guidance. He, too, obtained for me the generous services of the widow lady mentioned above, when my maid's operations were no longer sufficient; and we followed his counsel till I was well. As for the share he had in the ultimate form assumed by my speculations, on their becoming opinions,--he himself expressed it in a saying so curiously resembling one uttered by a former guide and instructor that it is worth quoting both. The more ancient guide said, when I was expressing gratitude to him, "O! I only helped you to do in a fortnight what you would have done for yourself in six weeks." Mr. Atkinson said "I found you out of the old ways, and I showed you the shortest way round the corner--that's all." I certainly knew nothing of his philosophical opinions when we met at Lenton; and it was not till the close of 1847, when, on my setting about my book on Egypt, I wrote him an account of my opinions, and how I came by them, and he replied by a somewhat similar confidence, that I had any clear knowledge what his views were. I shall probably have more to say about this hereafter. Meantime, this is the place for explaining away a prevalent mistake as to my recovery having been wrought by the mesmerising of a friend whom I had, in fact, never seen.
I vividly remember the first sight of him, when one of my hostesses and
I having gone out to meet him, and show him the way, saw him turn the
corner into the lane, talking with the gardener who was conveying his
carpet-bag. He also carried a bag over his shoulder. He looked older
than I expected, and than I knew he was. His perfect gentlemanliness is his
most immediately striking and uncontested attribute. We were struck with
this;
and also with a certain dryness in his mode of conversation which showed us at once that he was no sentimentalist; a conviction which was confirmed in proportion as we became acquainted with his habit of thought. We could not exactly call him reserved; for he was willing to converse, and ready to communicate his thoughts; yet we felt it difficult to know him. It was years before I, in particular, learned to know him, certainly and soundly, though we were in constant correspondence, and frequently met: but I consider myself no rule for others in the matter. All my faults, and all my peculiarities, were such as might and did conspire to defer the time when I might understand my friend as he was perfectly willing to be understood. One of the bad consequences of my deafness has been the making me far too much of a talker: and, though friends whom I can trust aver that I am also a good listener, I certainly have never allowed a fair share of time and opportunity to slower and more modest and considerate speakers. I believe that, amidst the stream of talk I poured out upon him, it was impossible for him to suppose or believe how truly and earnestly I really did desire to hear his views and opinions; and as, in spite of this, he did tell me much which I thought over, and talked over when he was gone, it is plain that he was not reserved with me. A yet greater impediment to our mutual understanding was that I, hitherto alone in my pursuit of philosophy, had no sufficient notion of other roads to it than that which I had found open before me; and Mr. Atkinson's method was so wholly different that it took me, prepossessed as I was, a very long time to ascertain his route and ultimate point of view. I had, for half my life, been astray among the metaphysicians, whose schemes I had at my tongue's end, and whose methods I supposed to be the only philosophical ones. I at first took Mr. Atkinson's disregard of them and their methods for ignorance of what they had done, as others who think themselves philosophers have done since. Let it not be supposed that I set this down without due shame. I have much to blush for in this matter, and in worse. I now and then proffered him in those days information from my metaphysical authors, for which he politely thanked me, leaving me to find
out in time how he knew through and through the very matters which the metaphysicians had barely sketched the outside of. In truth, he at his Baconian point of view, and I at my metaphysical, were in our attempts to understand each other something like beings whose reliance is on a different sense,--those who hear well and those who see well,--meeting to communicate. When the blind with their quick ears, and the deaf and dumb with their alert eyes meet, the consequences usually are desperate quarrels. In our case, I was sometimes irritated; and when irritated, always conceited and wrong; but my friend had patience with me, seeing what was the matter, and knowing that there were grand points of agreement between us which would secure a thorough understanding, sooner or later. If, amidst my metaphysical wanderings I had reached those points of agreement, there was every reason to suppose that when I had found the hopelessness of the metaphysical point of view, with its uncertain method and infinite diversity of conclusions,--corresponding with the variety of speculators,--I should find the true exterior point of view, the positive method, and its uniform and reliable conclusions. In this faith, and in wonderful patience, my friend bore with my waywardness and occasional sauciness, till at length we arrived at a complete understanding. When our book,--our "Letters on Man's Nature and Development,"--came out, and was abused in almost every periodical in the kingdom, it amused me to see how very like my old self the metaphysical reviewers were;--how exclusively they fastened on the collateral parts of the book, leaving its method, and all its essential part, wholly untouched. It is a curious fact that, of all the multitude of adverse reviewers of our book that we read, there was not one that took the least notice of its essential part,--its philosophical Method. Scarcely any part of it indeed was touched at all, except the anti-theological portion, which was merely collateral.
Such was my method of criticism of Mr. Atkinson, on the first occasion
of our meeting. As we walked up and down a green alley in the garden, he
astonished and somewhat confounded me by saying how great he thought the
mistake of
thinking so much and so artificially as people are for ever striving to do about death and about living again. Not having yet by any means got out of the atmosphere of selfishness which is the very life of Christian doctrine, and of every theological scheme, I was amazed at his question,--what it could signify whether we, with our individual consciousness, lived again? I asked what could possibly signify so much,--being in a fluctuating state then as to the natural grounds of expectation of a future life, (I had long given up the scriptural) but being still totally blind to the selfish instincts involved in such anxiety as I felt about the matter. I was, however, in a certain degree struck by the nobleness of his larger view, and by the good sense of the doctrine that our present health of mind is all the personal concern that we have with our state and destiny: that our duties lie before our eyes and close to our hands; and that our business is with what we know, and have it in our charge to do, and not at all with a future which is, of its own nature, impenetrable. With grave interest and an uneasy concern, I talked this over afterwards with my hostess. At first she would not credit my account of Mr. Atkinson's view; and then she was exceedingly shocked, and put away the subject. I, for my part, soon became able to separate the uneasiness of contravened associations from that of intellectual opposition. I soon perceived that this outspoken doctrine was in full agreement with the action of my mind for some years past, on the particular subject of a future life; and that, when once Christianity ceases to be entertained as a scheme of salvation, the question of a future life becomes indeed one of which every large-minded and unselfish person may and should say,--"What does it signify?" Amidst many alternations of feeling, I soon began to enjoy breathings of the blessed air of freedom from superstition,--which is the same thing as freedom from personal anxiety and selfishness;--that freedom, under a vivid sense of which my friend and I, contrasting our superstitious youth with our emancipated maturity, agreed that not for the universe would we again have the care of our souls upon our hands.
At length, the last day of May arrived, and my longings for
my Lake lodgings were to be gratified. The mossy walls with their fringes of ferns; the black pines reflected in the waters: the amethyst mountains at sunset, and the groves and white beaches beside the lake had haunted me almost painfully, all spring; and my hosts and hostesses must have thought my inconcealable anticipations somewhat unmannerly. They could make allowance for me, however: and they sent much sympathy with me. It was truly a gay life that was before me now. My intention was not to work at all; an intention which I have never been able to fulfil when in health, and which soon gave way now, before a call of duty which I very grudgingly obeyed. On the day of my arrival at Waterhead, however, I had no idea of working; and the prospect before me was of basking in the summer sunshine, and roving over hill and dale in fine weather, and reading and working beside the window overlooking the lake (Windermere) in rainy hours, when lakes have a beauty of their own. My lodging, taken for six months, was the house which stands precisely at the head of the lake, and whose grass-plat is washed by its waters. The view from the windows of my house was wonderfully beautiful,--one feature being a prominent rock, crowned with firs, which so projected into the lake as to be precisely reflected in the crimson, orange and purple waters when the pine-crest rose black into the crimson, orange and purple sky, at sunset. When the young moon hung over those black pines, the beauty was so great that I could hardly believe my eyes. On the day of my arrival, when I had met my new maid from Dublin (my Tynemouth nurse being unable to leave her mother's neighbourhood,) and when I had been welcomed by a dear old friend or two, I found an intoxicating promise of bliss whichever way I turned. I was speedily instructed in the morality of lakers,--the first principle of which is, (at least, so they told me) never to work except in bad weather. The woods were still full of wild anemones and sorrel, and the blue bells were just coming out. The meadows were emerald green, and the oaks were just exchanging their May-golden hue for light green, when the sycamores, so characteristic of the region, were growing sombre in their massy
foliage. The friends whom I had met during my winter visit were kind in their welcome; and many relations and friends came that summer, to enjoy excursions with me. It was all very gay and charming; and if I found the bustle of society a little too much,--if I felt myself somewhat disappointed in regard to the repose which I had reckoned on, that blessing was, as I knew, only deferred.
As to this matter,--of society. There is a perpetual change going
on in such neighbourhoods in the Lake District as that of Ambleside.
Retired merchants and professional men fall in love with the region, buy or
build a house, are in a transport with what they have done, and, after a
time, go away. In five or six years, six houses of friends or acquaintance
of mine became inhabited by strangers. Sorry as I was, on each occasion, to
lose good friends or pleasant acquaintances, I did not call on their
successors,--nor on any other new-comers: nor did I
choose, from the beginning, to visit generally in Ambleside. When I made up
my mind to live there, I declined the dinner and evening engagements
offered to me, and visited at only three or four houses; and very sparingly
at those. It did not suit me to give parties, otherwise than in the
plainest and most familiar way; and I had some idea of the mischiefs and
dangers of such society as is found promiscuously cast into a small
neighbourhood like this. I had not time to waste in meeting the same
people,--not chosen as in London, but such as chanced to be thrown
together in a very small country town,--night after night: I was
aware how nearly impossible it is to keep out of the gossip and the
quarrels which prevail in such places; and there was no adequate reason for
encountering them. I foresaw that among a High-church squirearchy,
and Low-church evangelicals, and the moderate-church few, who
were timid in proportion to their small numbers, I might be tolerated; and
even courted at first, on account of my reputation, but must sooner or
later give deadly offence by some outbreak of heresy or reforming tendency,
stronger than they could bear. I therefore confined my visiting to three or
four houses, merely exchanging calls with others: and it is well I
did. Of those three or four,
scarcely one could endure my avowal of my opinions in 1851. Even with them, I had before ceased, or did then cease, to exchange hospitalities. As they had sought me, and even urgently pressed themselves upon me, (one family in particular, whose mere name I had never heard when I arrived) they were especially in need of my compassion at the plight they found themselves in,--with goodness of heart enough to remember that our acquaintance was all of their seeking, but with too much narrowness and timidity to keep up intercourse through such opprobrium as my opinions brought on me among their High-church neighhours. They had the shame (which I believe them to be capable of feeling) of being aware, and knowing that I was aware, that they sought me, as they are wont to seek and flatter all celebrities, for my fame, and to gratify their own love of excitement; and that their weakness stood confessed before the trial of my plain avowal of honest opinions. It made no difference that, after a time, when the gossip had blown over, and my neighbours saw that I did not want them, and did not depend on their opinions in any way, they came round, and began to be attentive and kind:--their conduct at a moment of crisis proved to me that I had judged rightly in declining Ambleside visiting from the beginning; and their mutual quarrelling, fierce and wide and deep, certainly confirmed my satisfaction with my independent plan of life. My interests lay among old friends at a distance; and I had as much social intercourse as I at all desired when they came into the district. I was amused and instructed by the words of an ingenuous young friend, who, taking leave of me one winter afternoon at her own gate, said: "Ah! now,--you are going home to a comfortable quiet evening by your own fire! Really, I think it is quite hypocritical in us!--We dross and go out, and seem to be so pleased, when we are longing all the time to be at home! We meet the same people, who have only the same talk; and we get so tired!" It was not long before that family withdrew from the Ambleside visiting which I had always declined. A very few faithful friends, whose regard did not depend on the popular nature of my opinions, remained true
and dear to me; and thus I found that book,--the "Atkinson Letters,"--do me the same good and welcome service in my own valley that it did in the wide world;--it dissolved all false relations, and confirmed all true ones. Finally, now that that business has long been settled, and that all my other affairs are drawing near their close, I may make my declaration that I have always had as much society as I wished for, and sometimes a great deal more. And this leads me to explain why I came to live where I am;--a prodigious puzzle, I am told, to the great majority of my London acquaintance.
When I had been thoroughly and avowedly well for half a year, I found my
family had made up their minds, as I had scarcely a doubt that they would,
that my mother's settlement at Liverpool had better not be disturbed.
She was among three of her children settled there, and she was suited with
a companion better adapted to aid her in her nearly blind condition than
any deaf person could be. It would have been a most serious and injurious
sacrifice to me to live in a provincial town. The choice for me, in regard
to my vocation, was between London and a purely country residence. I was
partly amused and partly shocked at the amazement of some of my really
intimate friends, to whom I supposed my character fully known, at my
choosing the latter. One of these friends wrote to me that she could not at
all fancy me "a real country lady;" and another told Mr.
Atkinson that she did not believe I had any genuine love of natural
scenery. Mr. Hallam told me, some years afterwards, that he and others of
my friends had considered my retreat from London, after having known the
delights of its society, "a most doubtful and serious
experiment,--a most doubtful experiment;" but that
they found, by the testimony of mutual friends who had visited me, that it
had "answered completely."--My reasons are easily told. I
was now, when at liberty to form my own plan of life, past the middle of
its course. I had seen the dangers and moral penalties of literary life in
London for women who had become accustomed to its excitements; and I knew
that I could not be happy if I degenerated into "a
hackney-coach and company life." No true woman, married or
single, can be happy
without some sort of domestic life;--without having somebody's happiness dependent on her; and my own ideal of an innocent and happy life was a house of my own among poor improvable neighbours, with young servants whom I might train and attach to myself; with pure air, a garden, leisure, solitude at command, and freedom to work in peace and quietness. When to all this could be added fine natural scenery, the temptations were such as London could not rival. If I had country, I would have the best; and my mind was made up at once,--to live at the Lakes,--as soon as I was sure of my liberty to choose. I began to look about in the neighbourhood at cottages to let or on sale. The most promising was one at Clappersgate, at the head of Wintermere, which was offered me for £20 a year. It had more rooms than I wanted, and an exceedingly pretty porch; and a little garden, in which was a tempting copper-beech. But the ceilings were too low for my bookcases, and the house was old; and it commanded no great beauty, except from the attic windows. A friend who went with me to view it said that £20 was the interest of £500; and that for £500 I could build myself a cottage after my own heart. This was strikingly true: and thus the idea of having at once a house of my own was suggested. By the necessity of the case, the matter was soon settled. A dissenting minister, an opulent man who had built a chapel and school, and bought a field for cottage-building, found life too hard for a dissenter among the orthodox at Ambleside, and especially after he had proposed to supply the want of cottages which is there the screw which the rich put upon the labouring classes; and, after his health had sunk under the treatment he encountered, he was obliged to leave the place to save his life. My house-viewing friend brought me, on the 27th of June, the plan of this minister's field, which was to be sold in lots the next day but one. The time was short; but land was becoming rare in the neighbourhood; and I went to see the field. One of the lots was a rocky knoll, commanding a charming view. I knew no one whom I could ask to go and bid; and I could not feel sure of a due supply of water; not knowing then that wherever there is rock, there is a tolerable certainty of water. The other lots
appeared to me to lie too low for building; and I, in my simplicity, concluded that the pretty knoll would be the first and surest to sell. Next day, I found that that lot, and the one at the foot of the rise remained unsold. I went to the minister for a consultation. His wife satisfied me about the water-supply; and she moreover said that as the other unsold slip, valued at £70, would not sell by itself, if I would buy the Knoll, I should have the other for £20. I agreed on the spot. There was one other three-cornered piece, lying between these and the meadows which were entailed land, certain never to be built on: and this bit had been bought at the sale by an exciseman, to graze his pony when he came his rounds. My friends all agreed in lamenting over that sale, and said the exciseman would soon be running up some hideous structure, to make me pay "through the nose" for his nook. I replied that I must stop somewhere; and that the matter seemed settled by the land having been sold. It makes me grateful now to think what pains my friends took on my behalf. Mrs. Arnold consulted the Wordsworths; and they all came to exhort me to try to get the nook, for the sake of myself and my heirs; and my original adviser found up the exciseman, and came back with the news that no conveyance had yet been made out, and that the man would let me have the land for a bonus of £5. I whipped out my five sovereigns; and the whole was mine. It may seem that I have gone into much detail about a trifle: but I am giving an account of myself; and there have been few things in my life which have had a more genial effect on my mind than the possession of a piece of land. Those who consider what some scenes of my life had been,--my being left with a single shilling at the time of our losses, my plodding through London mud when I could not get my series published, and my five years' confinement at Tynemouth, may conceive what it was to me to go, in the lustrous days of that summer, to meliorate in my field at eventide, and anticipate the heathful and genial life before me. The kind cousin whom I have mentioned as always at my elbow in all time of need, or when a graceful service could be rendered, came with his family to the Lakes at that precise time. Knowing my affairs,--of
which he generously took the management,--he approved my scheme; and he did more. I asked him plainly whether he thought me justified in building a house of the kind I explained, and of which I showed him the builder's estimate. He called on me alone one morning,--on business, as he said; and his "business" was this. He told me that he considered me abundantly justified: he added that there could be no difficulty in obtaining, on such securities as I could offer, whatever additional money would be requisite for finishing the house (the land was already paid for,) but that, to save trouble and speculation, I had better send in the bills to him; and he would, to save me from all sense of obligation, charge me with interest till I had paid off the whole. The transaction, of which this was the graceful beginning, was no less gracefully carried on and ended. The amount was (as always happens in such cases) more than we expected; and I was longer, owing to the failure of one of my plans, in repaying the loan; but my cousin cheered me by his approbation and sympathy; and at last presented me with the final batch of interest, to purchase something for the house to remember him by.
Then came the amusement of planning my house, which I did all myself. It
was the newest of enterprises to me; and seriously did I ponder all the
requisites;--how to plan the bedrooms, so that the beds should not be
in a draught, nor face the window nor the fireplace, &c. I did not then
know the importance of placing beds north and south, in case of illness,
when that position may be of the last consequence to the patient; but it so
happens that all my beds stand, or may stand so. The whole scheme was
fortunate and charming. There is not a single blunder or nuisance in my
pretty house; and now that it is nearly covered with ivy, roses,
passion-flowers, and other climbers, and the porch a bower of
honeysuckles, I find that several of my neighbours, and not a few
strangers, consider my Knoll,--position and house together,--the
prettiest dwelling in the valley;--airy, gay, and "sunny within
and without," as one family are pleased to say. "It is,"
said Wordsworth, "the wisest step in her life; for" ... ... ...
and we supposed he was
going on to speak of the respectability, comfort and charm of such a retreat for an elderly woman; but not so. "It is the wisest step in her life; for the value of the property will be doubled in ten years."
One of those London friends whom I have mentioned as doubting my
discretion in settling here, was paying me a morning visit at my lodgings
when I was planning my house; and while taking a kind interest in looking
over the plan and elevation, she thought it right to make a remonstrance
which she has since recalled with a generous amusement. "Now, my dear
friend," said she, "I take a real interest in all
this:but,--do be persuaded,--sell your field, and stay
where you are, in this nice lodging. Do, now! Why should you not stay
here?"
"First," said I, "because it costs me more to live
here in three rooms than it would in a whole house of my own.
"Second: there is no room here for my book-cases; and
I want my library.
"Third: I am paying for house-room for my furniture
at Tynemouth.
"Fourth: this house stands low, and is apt to be flooded and
damp in winter.
"Fifth: this house was a barn; and the dust lies a quarter
of an inch thick, in some weathers, on every thing in the
sitting-room.
"Sixth: the chimney smokes so that I could not have a fire
without keeping a window open.
"Seventh: Being close on the margin of the lake, the house
is swarming with rats.
"Eighth: ... ... ... ."
"O! stop--stop!" cried my friend, now quite ready to
leave my own affairs in my own hands. She long after spent some days with
me at the Knoll, and pronounced my house and my scheme of life perfect for
me.
into drinking habits, and died of a fever thus brought on,--leaving debts to the amount of £1,000: and I wish it to be clearly understood that I was in no degree connected with his misfortunes.
The first sod was turned on the 1st of October, by Mr. Seymour
Tremenheere, in the presence of my elder brother and myself. There was only
one tree on the summit of the knoll; and that was a fine thorn, which the
builder kindly managed to leave, to cover a corner; and I seldom look at
it, powdered with blossom in May and June, without thinking of the
consideration of the poor fellow who lies in the churchyard, so miserably
cut off in the vigour of his years. The winter of 1845-6 was, (as
the potato-rot makes us all remember) the rainiest in the experience
of our generation: but the new house was not injured by it; and it
was ready for occupation when April arrived. If I am to give an account of
my most deep-felt pleasures, I may well mention that of my sunset
walks, on the few fine days, when I saw from the opposite side of the
valley the progress of my house. One evening I saw the red sunset
glittering on the windows, which I did not know were in. Another day, I saw
the first smoke from the chimney;--the thin blue smoke from a fire the
workmen had lighted, which gave a home-like aspect to the
dwelling.--When the garden was to take form, new pleasures arose. The
grass was entirely destroyed round the base of the knoll by the carts which
brought the stone and wood; and I much wished for some sods. But the summer
had been as dry as the winter and spring were wet; and no sods were to be
had for love or money,--every gardener assured me. In riding over
Loughfigg terrace, I saw where large patches of turf had been cut; and I
asked Mr. Wordsworth whether one might get sods from the mountain. He told
me that the fells were the property of the dalesmen, and that it takes 100
years to replace tuff so cut. So I made up my mind to wait till grass would
grow, and wondered how I was to secure the seed being good. One morning,
the servants told me that there was a great heap of the finest sods lying
under the boundary wall; and that they must have been put over during the
night. It
was even so: and, though we did our best to watch and listen, the same thing happened four times,--the last lead being a very large one, abundantly supplying all our need. A dirty note, wafered, lay under the pile. It pretended to come from two poachers, who professed to be grateful to me for my Game Law Tales, and to have rendered me this service in return for my opinion about wild creatures being fair game. The writing and spelling were like those of an ignorant person; and I supposed that the inditing was really so, at the bidding of some neighbour of higher quality. The Archbishop of Dublin, who was at Fox How at the time, offered me the benefit of his large experience in the sight of anonymous letters: (not the reading of them, for he always burns unread, before the eyes of his servants, all that come to him) and he instantly pronounced that the note was written by an educated person. He judged by the evenness of the lines, saying that persons who scrawl and misspell from ignorance never write straight. Every body I knew declared to me, sooner or later, in a way too sincere to be doubted, that he or she did not know any thing whatever about my sods: and the mystery remains unsolved to this day. It was a very pretty and piquant mystery. Several friends planted a young tree each on my ground. Some of the saplings died and some lived: but the most flourishing is one of the two which Wordsworth planted. We had provided two young oaks: but he objected to them as not remarkable enough for a commemorative occasion. We found that the stone pine suited his idea: and a neighbour kindly sent me two. Wordsworth chose to plant them on the slope under my terrace wall, where, in my humble opinion, they were in the extremest danger from dogs and cats,--which are our local nuisance. I lay awake thinking how to protect them. The barriers I put up were broken down immediately; but I saved one by making a parterre round it: and there it flourishes,--so finely that my successor will have to remove my best peartree ere long, to leave room for the forest tree.
The planting-scene was characteristic. Wordsworth had taken a
kindly interest in the whole affair; and where my study
now is, he had thrown himself down, among the hazel bushes, and talked of the meadows, and of the right aspect and disposition of a house, one summer day when he and his wife and daughter had come to view the site, and give me the benefit of their experience; and long after, when I had begun to farm my two acres, he came to see my first calf. On occasion of the planting of his pine, he dug and planted in a most experienced manner,--then washed his hands in the watering-pot, took my hand in both his, and wished me many happy years in my new abode,--and then, proceeded to give me a piece of friendly advice. He told me I should find visitors a great expense, and that I must promise him,--(and he laid his hand on my arm to enforce what he said) I must promise him to do as he and his sister had done, when, in their early days, they had lived at Grasmere.
"When you have a visitor," said he, "you must do as we
did;--you must say 'if you like to have a cup of tea with us,
you are very welcome: but if you want any meat,--you must pay
for your board.' Now, promise me that you will do this." Of
course, I could promise nothing of the sort. I told him I had rather not
invite my friends unless I could make them comfortable. He insisted:
I declined promising; and changed the subject. The mixture of odd economies
and neighbourly generosity was one of the most striking things in the old
poet. At tea there, one could hardly get a drop of cream with any ease of
mind, while he was giving away all the milk that the household did not want
to neighbouring cottagers, who were perfectly well able to buy it, and
would have been all the better for being allowed to do so.--It was one
of the pleasures of my walks, for the first few years of my residence here,
to meet with Wordsworth, when he happened to be walking, and taking his
time on the road. In winter, he was to be seen in his cloak, his Scotch
bonnet, and green goggles, attended perhaps by half-a-score
of cottagers' children,--the youngest pulling at his cloak, or
holding by his trousers, while he cut ash switches out of the hedge for
them. After his daughter's death, I seldom saw him except in his
phaeton, or when I called. He gave way sadly, (and
inconsiderately as regarded Mrs. Wordsworth) to his grief for his daughter's loss; and I heard that the evenings were very sad. Neither of them could see to read by candle-light; and he was not a man of cheerful temperament, nor of much practical sympathy. Mrs. Wordsworth often asked me to "drop in" in the winter evenings: but I really could not do this. We lived about a mile and a half apart; I had only young girls for servants, and no carriage; and I really could not have done my work but by the aid of my evening reading. I never went but twice; and both times were in the summer. My deafness was a great difficulty too, and especially when his teeth were out, as they were in the evenings, when the family were alone. He began a sentence to me, and then turned his head away to finish it to somebody on the other side: so that I had no chance with him unless we were tête-à-tête, when we got on very well.--Our acquaintance had begun during the visit I paid to the Lakes in January 1845, when he and Mrs. Wordsworth had requested a conversation with me about mesmerism, which they thought might avail in the,case of a daughter-in-law, who was then abroad, mortally ill. After a long consultation, they left much disposed for the experiment: but I supposed at the time that they would not be allowed to try; and I dare say they were not. They invited me to Rydal Mount, to see the terrace where he had meditated his poems; and I went accordingly, one winter noon. On that occasion, I remember, he said many characteristic things, beginning with complaints of Jeffrey and other reviewers, who had prevented his poems bringing him more than £100, for a long course of years,--up to a time so recent indeed that will not set it down, lest there should be some mistake. Knowing that he had no objection to be talked to about his works, I told him that I thought it might interest him to hear which of his poems was Dr. Channing's favourite. I told him that I had not been a day in Dr. Channing's house when he brought me "the Happy Warrior,"--(a choice which I thought very characteristic also.) "Ay," said Wordsworth: "that was not on account of the poetic conditions being best fulfilled in that poem; but because it is" (solemnly) "a chain of extremely valooable thoughts.
--You see,--it does not best fulfil the conditions of poetry; but it is" (solemnly) "a chain of extremely valooable thoughts." I thought this eminently true; and by no means the worse for the description being given by himself.--He was kind enough to be very anxious lest I should overwalk myself. Both he and Mrs. Wordsworth repeatedly bade me take warning by his sister, who had lost first her strength, and then her sanity by extreme imprudence in that way, and its consequences. Mrs. Wordsworth told me what I could not have believed on any less trustworthy authority,--that Miss Wordsworth had--not once, but frequently,--walked forty miles in a day. In vain I assured them that I did not reiterate or perpetrate any such imprudence, and that I valued my recovered health too much to hazard it for any self-indulgence whatever. It was a fixed idea with them that I walked all day long. One afternoon Mr. Atkinson and I met them on the Rydal road. They asked where we had been; and we told them. I think it was over Loughfigg terrace to Grasmere; which was no immoderate walk. "There, there!" said Wordsworth, laying his hand on my companion's arm. "Take care! take care! Don't let her carry you about. She is killing off half the gentlemen in the county!" I could not then, nor can I now, remember any Westmoreland gentleman, except my host on Windermere, having taken a walk with me at all.
There had been a period of a few years, in my youth, when I worshipped
Wordsworth. I pinned up his likeness in my room; and I could repeat his
poetry by the hour. He had been of great service to me at a very important
time of my life. By degrees, and especially for ten or twelve years before
I saw him, I found more disappointment than pleasure when I turned again to
his works,--feeling at once the absence of sound, accurate, weighty
thought, and of genuine poetic inspiration. It is still an increasing
wonder with me that he should ever have been considered a
philosophical poet,--so remarkably as the very basis of
philosophy is absent in him, and so thoroughly self-derived,
self-conscious and subjective is what he himself mistook for
philosophy. As to his poetic genius, it needs but to open
Shelley, Tennyson, or even poor Keats, and any of our best classic English poets, to feel at once that, with all their truth and all their charm, few of Wordsworth's pieces are poems. As eloquence, some of them are very beautiful; and others are didactic or metaphysical meditations or speculations poetically rendered: but, to my mind, this is not enough to constitute a man a poet. A benefactor, to poetry and to society, Wordsworth undoubtedly was. He brought us back out of a wrong track into a right one;--out of a fashion of pedantry, antithesis and bombast, in which thought was sacrificed to sound, and common sense was degraded, where it existed, by being made to pass for something else. He taught us to say what we had to say in a way,--not only the more rational but the more beautiful; and, as we have grown more simple in expression, we have become more unsophisticated and clear-seeing and far-seeing in our observation of the scene of life, if not of life itself. These are vast services to have rendered, if no more can be claimed for the poet. In proportion to our need was the early unpopularity of the reform proposed; and in proportion to our gratitude, when we recognized our benefactor, was the temporary exaggeration of his merits as a poet. His fame seems to have now settled in its proper level. Those who understand mankind are aware that he did not understand them; and those who dwell near his abode especially wonder at his representation of his neighbours. He saw through an imagination, less poetic than metaphysical; and the heart element was in him not strong. He had scarcely any intercourse with other minds, in books or in conversation; and he probably never knew what it was to have any thing to do. His old age suffered from these causes; and it was probably the least happy portion of a life too self-enclosed to be very happy as a whole. In regard to politics, however, and even to religion, he grew more and more liberal in his latter years. It is in that view, and as a neighbour among the cottagers, that he is most genially remembered: and, considering the course of flattery he was subjected to by his blue-stocking and clerical neighbours, who coaxed him into monologue, and then wrote down all he said for future publication, it is wonderful that there is any
thing so genial to record. His admirable wife, who, I believe, never suspected how much she was respected and beloved by all who knew them both, sustained what was genial in him, and ameliorated whatever was not so. Her excellent sense and her womanly devotedness,--(especially when she grew pale and shrunk and dim-eyed under her mute sorrow for the daughter whom he mourned aloud, and without apparent consideration for the heart-sufferer by his side) made her by far the more interesting of the two to me. But, while writing these recollections, the spring sunshine and air which are streaming in through my open window remind me of the advent of the "tourist season," and of the large allowance to be made for a "lake-poet," subject to the perpetual incursions of flatterers of the coarsest order. The modest and well-bred pass by the gates of celebrated people who live in the country for quiet, while the coarse and selfish intrude,--as hundreds of strangers intruded every year on Wordsworth. When I came into the district, I was told that the average of utter strangers who visited Rydal Mount in the season was five hundred! Their visits were not the only penalty inflicted. Some of these gentry occasionally sent letters to the newspapers, containing their opinions of the old man's state of health or of intellect: and then, if a particularly intrusive lion-hunter got a surly reception, and wrote to a newspaper that Wordsworth's intellects were failing, there came letters of inquiry from all the family friends and acquaintances, whose affectionate solicitudes had to be satisfied.
For my part, I refused, from the first, to introduce any of my visitors
at Rydal Mount, because there were far too many already. Mrs. Wordsworth
repeatedly acknowledged my scrupulosity about this: but in time I
found that she rather wished that I would bear my share in what had become
a kind of resource to her husband. I never liked seeing him go the round of
his garden and terraces, relating to persons whose very names he had not
attended to, particulars about his writing and other affairs which each
stranger flattered himself was a confidential communication to himself. One
anecdote will show how the process went forward, and how persons fared who
deserved some-
thing better than this invariable treatment. In the first autumn of my residence,--while I was in lodging,--Mr. Seymour Tremenheere and his comrade in his Educational Commissionership, Mr. Tufnell, asked me to obtain lodgings for them, as they wished to repose from their labours beside Windermere. When they came, I told them that I could not take them to Rydal Mount. They acquiesced, though much wishing to obtain some testimony from the old poet on behalf of popular education. In a week or two, however, I had to call on Mrs. Wordsworth, and I invited the gentlemen to take their chance by going with me. We met Mr. and Mrs. Wordsworth just coming out of their door into the garden. I twice distinctly named both gentlemen; but I saw that he did not attend, and that he received them precisely after his usual manner with strangers. He marched them off to his terraces; and Mrs. Wordsworth and I sat down on a garden seat. I told her the state of the case; and she said she would take care that, when they returned, Mr. Wordsworth should understand who his guests were. This was more easily promised than done, however. When they appeared, Mr. Wordsworth uncovered his grey head as usual, wished the gentlemen improved health and much enjoyment of the lake scenery, and bowed us out. My friends told me (what I could have told them) that Mr. Wordsworth had related many interesting things about his poems, but that they doubted whether he had any idea who they were; and they had no opportunity of introducing the subject of popular education. That evening, when a party of friends and I were at tea, an urgent message came, through three families, from Rydal Mount, to the effect that Mr. Wordsworth understood that Mr. Seymour Tremenheere was in the neighbourhood; and that he was anxious to obtain an interview with Mr. Tremenheere for conversation about popular education!--Mr. Tremenheere arrived at the Mount the next day. He told me on his return that he had, he hoped, gained his point. He hoped for a sonnet at least. He observed, "Mr Wordsworth discoursed to me about Education, trying to impress upon me whatever I have most insisted on in my Reports for seven years past: but I do not expect him to read reports, and I was very happy
to hear what he had to say." The next time I fell in with Mr. Wordsworth, he said "I have to thank you for procuring for me a call from that intelligent gentleman, Mr. Tremenheere. I was glad to have some conversation with him. To be sure, he was bent on enlightening me on principles of popular education which have been published in my poems these forty years: but that is of little consequence. I am very happy to have seen him."
In no aspect did Wordsworth appear to more advantage than in his conduct
to Hartley Coleridge, who lived in his neighbourhood. The
weakness,--the special vice,--of that poor, gentle, hopeless
being is universally known by the publication of his life; and I am
therefore free to say that, as long as there was any chance of good from
remonstrance and rebuke, Wordsworth administered both, sternly and
faithfully: but, when nothing more than pity and help was possible,
Wordsworth treated him as gently as if he had been,--(what indeed he
was in our eyes)--a sick child. I have nothing to tell of poor
Hartley, of my own knowledge. Except meeting him on the road, I knew
nothing of him. I recoiled from acquaintanceship,--seeing how
burdensome it was in the case of persons less busy than myself, and not
having, to say the truth, courage to accept the conditions on which his
wonderfully beautiful conversation might be enjoyed. The simple fact is
that I was in company with him five times; and all those five times he was
drunk. I should think there are few solitary ladies, whose time is
valuable, who would encourage intercourse with him after that. Yet I quite
understood the tenderness and earnestness with which he was tended in his
last illness, and the sorrow with which he was missed by his personal
friends. I witnessed his funeral; and as I saw his grey-headed old
friend Wordsworth bending over his grave, that winter morning, I felt that
the aged mourner might well enjoy such support as could arise from a sense
of duty faithfully performed to the being who was too weak for the
conflicts of life. On his tombstone, which stands near Wordsworth's
own, is the cross wreathed with the thorny crown, and the inscription, so
touching in this case, "By thy Cross and Passion, Good Lord, deliver
me!"
One of my objects during this summer was to become acquainted with the
Lake District, in a complete and orderly manner. It has been a leading
pleasure and satisfaction of mine, since I grew up, to compass some one
department of knowledge at a time, so as to feel a real command of it,
succeeding to a misty ignorance. The first approach to this was perhaps my
acquaintance with the French and Latin languages; and the next my study of
the Metaphysical schools of Mental Philosophy. But these pursuits were
partly ordained for me in my educational course; and they belonged to the
immature period of my mind. Perhaps my first thorough
possession was of the doctrine of Necessity, as I have
explained in its place. Then, there was the orderly comprehension of what I
then took to be the science of Political Economy, as elaborated by the
Economists of our time: but I believe I should not have been greatly
surprised or displeased to have perceived, even then, that the pretended
science is no science at all, strictly speaking; and that so many of its
parts must undergo essential change, that it may be a question whether
future generations will owe much more to it than the benefit (inestimable,
to be sure) of establishing the grand truth that social affairs proceed
according to great general laws, no less than natural phenomena of every
kind. Such as Political Economy was, however, I knew what it meant and what
it comprehended.--Next came my study of the United States
republic: and this study yielded me the satisfaction I am now
referring to in full measure. Before I went, I actually sat down, on the
only spare evening I had, to learn how many States there were in the
American Union.--I am not sure that I knew that there were more than
thirteen: and in three years after, one of the first constitutional
lawyers in America wrote me the spontaneous assurance that there was not a
single mistake in my "Society in America," in regard to the
political constitution of the republic. I really had learned something
thoroughly:--not the people, of course, whom it would take a
lifetime to understand; but the social system under which they were living,
with the geography and the sectional facts of their country.--The next
act of mastery was a somewhat dreary one, but useful in its way.
I understood sickness and the prospect of death, with some completeness, at the end of my five years at Tynemouth.--Now, on my recovery, I set myself to learn the Lake District, which was still a terra incognita, veiled in bright mists before my mind's eye: and by the close of a year from the purchase of my field, I knew every lake (I think) but two, and almost every mountain pass. I have since been complimented with the task of writing a Complete Guide to the Lakes, which was the most satisfactory testimony on the part of my neighbours that they believed I understood their beloved District.--After that, there was the working out for myself of the genealogy of the faiths of the East, as represented in my "Eastern Life." Lastly, there was the history of the last half century of the English nation, as shown in my "History of the Peace," and in my articles for the "Daily News," at the beginning of the present war. I need not say that I feel now, as I have ever felt, hedged in by ignorance on every side: but I know that we must all feel this, if we could live and learn for a thousand years: but it is a privilege, as far as it goes, to make clearings, one at a time, in the wilderness of the unknown, as the settler in the Far West opens out his crofts from the primeval forest. Of these joyous labours, none has been sweeter than that of my first recovered health, when Lakeland became gradually disclosed before my explorations, till it lay before me, map-like, as if seen from a mountain top.
I had not been settled many days in my lodging at Waterhead before I was
appealed to by my landlady and others on behalf of sick neighbours, to know
whether mesmerism would serve them, and whether I would administer it.
After what I owed to mesmerism, I could not refuse to try; and, though my
power has always been very moderate, I found I could do some good.
Sometimes I had seven patients asleep at one time in my
sitting-room; and all on whom I tried my hand were either cured or
sensibly benefitted. One poor youth who was doomed to lose both arms, from
scrofulous disease in the elbows, was brought to me, and settled beside me,
to see what could be done till it could be ascertained whether his lungs
were or were not hopelessly diseased. I mesmerised him twice a day for ten
weeks, giving
up all engagements which could interfere with the work. He obtained sleep, to the extent of thirteen hours in twenty-four. He recovered appetite, strength, and (the decisive circumstance) flesh. In six weeks, his parents hardly knew him, when they came over to see him. He lost his cough, and all his consumptive symptoms; we made him our postman and errand-boy; and he walked many miles in a day. But alas! my house was not built: he could not remain in the lodging when the weather broke up: his return to his father's cottage for the winter was inevitable; and there he fell back: and the damps of February carried him off in rapid decline. None who knew him doubt that his life was lengthened for several months, and that those were months of ease and enjoyment through the mesmeric treatment. The completest case under my hands was one which I always think of with pleasure. My landlady came up one day to ask my good offices on behalf of a young nursemaid in the service of some ladies who were lodging on the ground floor of the house. This girl was always suffering under sick headache, so that her life was a burden to her, and she was quite unfit for her place. I agreed to see her; but her mistress declared that she could not spare her, as she was wanted, ill or well, to carry the baby out. One day, however, she was too ill to raise her head at all; and, as she was compelled to lie down, her mistress allowed her to be brought to my sofa. In seven minutes, she was in the mesmeric trance. She awoke well, and never had a headache again. The ladies were so struck that they begged I would mesmerise her daily. They came, the second day, to see her asleep, and said she looked so different that they should not have known her; and they called her the "little Nell," of Dickens. In a few days she went into the trance in seven seconds: and I could do what I pleased with her, without her being conscious that I sent her all over the house, and made her open windows, make up the fire, &c., &c. She began to grow fast, became completely altered, and was in full health, and presently very pretty. Her parents came many miles to thank me; and their reluctant and hesitating request was that I would not mesmerise her in the presence of any body who would tell the
clergy, on account of the practice of unbelievers of traducing the characters of all who were cured by mesmerism. I was sorry, because Professor Gregory and his lady, and some other friends, were coming for the purpose of pursuing the subject; and this girl would have been valuable to us in the inquiry: but, of course, I could not resist the wish of the parents, which I thought perfectly reasonable.--This reminds me of an incident too curious not to be related. There is at Ambleside a retired surgeon, confined to the sofa by disease. A former patient of his, an elderly woman, went to him that summer, and told him that the doctors so completely despaired of her case that they would give her no more medicine. Mr. C-- was very sorry, of course; but what could be said? The woman lingered and hesitated, wanting his opinion. There was a lady,--she was lodging at Waterhead,--and she did wonderful cures. What did Mr. C-- think of an application to that lady? "Why not?" asked Mr. C--, if the doctors would do nothing more for the patient? He advised the attempt. After more hesitation, the scruple came out. "Why, Sir, they do say that the lady does it through the Old 'Un." The sick woman feared what the clergy would say; and, in spite of Mr. C--'s encouragement, she never came.
My own experience that year was an instructive one. I have mentioned
that, during my recovery, I was never in the mesmeric sleep,--never
unconscious. From the time that I was quite well, however, I fell into the
sleep,--sometimes partially and sometimes wholly; though it took a
long while to convince me that I was ever unconscious. It was only by
finding that I had lost an hour that I could be convinced that I had slept
at all. One day, when mesmerised by two persons, I had begun to speak; and
from that time, whenever I was thus double mesmerised, I discoursed in a
way which those who heard it call very remarkable. I could remember some of
the wonderful things I had seen and thought, if questioned immediately on
my waking; but the impressions were presently gone. A shorthand writer took
down much of what I said; and certainly those fragments are wholly unlike
any thing I have ever said under any other circumstances. I still believe
that some fac-
ulties are thus reached which are not, as far as can be known,
exercised at any other time; and also that the conceptive and imaginative
faculties, as well as those of insight and of memory, are liable to be
excited to very vigorous action. When consciousness is incomplete,--or
rather, when unconsciousness is all but complete,--so that actual
experience is interfused with the dreams of the mesmeric condition, there
is danger of that state of mind which is not uncommon under mesmeric
treatment, and which renders the superintendence of an experienced and
philosophical mesmeriser so desirable as we see it to be--a state of
exaltation almost amounting to delusion, when imaginative patients are
concerned. Nobody would consider me, I think, a particularly imaginative
patient; and nothing could be more common-place and safe than the
practice while I was either wide awake or so completely asleep as to
remember nothing of my dreams afterwards; but, in the intermediate case, I
was subject to a set of impressions so strong that,--having seen
instances of the clarvoyant and prophetic
faculty in others,--it was scarcely possible to avoid the belief that
my constant and highly detailed impressions were of the same character. It
is impossible to be absolutely certain, at this moment, that they were not;
but the strongest probably is that they were of the same nature with the
preachments and oracular statements of a host of mesmeric patients who give
forth their notions about "the spiritual world" and its
inhabitants.* It is observed, in
all accounts of spirit-rappings and mesmeric speculation, that, on
the subject of religion, each speaker gives out his own order of opinions
in the form of testimony from what he sees. We
___________________
have all the sects of Christendom represented in their mesmeriser members,--constituting, to the perplexity of inexperienced observers, as remarkable a Babel in the spiritual world as on our European and American soil; and, when there is no hope of reconciling these incompatible oracles, the timid resort to the supposition of demoniacal agency. There is no marvel in this to persons who, like myself, are aware, from their own experience, of the irresistible strength of the impressions of mesmeric dreaming, when more or less interfused with waking knowledge; nor to philosophical observers who, like my guardian in this stage of my experience, have witnessed the whole range of the phenomena with cool judgment, and under a trained method of investigation. Under different management, and without his discouragements and cool exposure of the discrepancies of dreaming, I might have been one of the victims of the curiosity and half-knowledge of the time; and my own trust in my waking faculties, and, much more, other people's trust in them, might have been lost; and my career of literary action might have prematurely come to an end. Even before I was quite safe, an incident occurred which deeply impressed me.--Margaret Fuller, who had been, in spite of certain mutual repulsions, an intimate acquaintance of mine in America, came to Ambleside while Professor and Mrs. Gregory and other friends were pursuing the investigations I have referred to. I gave her and the excellent friends with whom she was travelling the best welcome I could. My house was full: but I got lodgings for them, made them welcome as guests, and planned excursions for them. Her companions evidently enjoyed themselves; and Margaret Fuller as evidently did not, except when she could harangue the drawing-room party, without the interruption of any other voice within its precincts. There were other persons present, at least as eminent as herself, to whom we wished to listen; but we were willing that all should have their turn: and I am sure I met her with every desire for friendly intercourse. She presently left off convening with me, however; while I, as hostess, had to see that my other guests were entertained, according to their various tastes.
During our excursion in Langdale, she scarecely spoke to any body; and not at all to me; and when we afterwards met in London, when I was setting off for the East, she treated me with the contemptuous benevolence which it was her wont to bestow on common-place people. I was therefore not surprised when I became acquainted, presently after, with her own account of the matter. She told her friends that she had been bitterly disappointed in me. It had been a great object with her to see me, after my recovery by mesmerism, to enjoy the exaltation and spiritual development which she concluded I must have derived from my excursions in the spiritual world: but she had found me in no way altered by it: no one could have discovered that I had been mesmerised at all; and I was so thoroughly common-place that she had no pleasure in intercourse with me.--This was a very welcome confirmation of my hope that I had, under Mr. Atkinson's wise care, come back nearly unharmed from the land of dreams; and this more than compensated for the unpleasantness of disappointing the hopes of one whom I cordially respected for many fine qualities, intellectual and moral, while I could not pretend to find her mind unspoiled and her manners agreeable. She was then unconsciously approaching the hour of that remarkable regeneration which transformed her from the dreaming and haughty pedant into the true woman. In a few months more, she had loved and married; and how interesting and beautiful was the closing period of her life, when husband and child concentrated the powers and affections which had so long run to waste in intellectual and moral eccentricity, the concluding period of her memoirs has shown to us all. Meantime, the most acceptable verdict that she could pronounce upon me in my own function of housekeeper and hostess, while the medical world was hoping to hear of my insanity, was that I was "common-place."
Some members of the medical world were, in that summer at Waterhead
(1845) demonstrating to me what my duty was in regard to poor Jane, at
Tynemouth,--usually called my maid, but not yet so, nor to be so till
the spring of 1846. The sudden
cessation of mesmerism was disastrous to the poor girl.--Her eyes became as bad as ever; and the persecution of the two doctors employed by Dr. Forbes fell upon her alone,--her ignorant and selfish aunt refusing to let her be mesmerised, and permitting her rather to go blind. When she was blind, these two men came to her with a paper which they required her to sign, declaring that she had been guilty of imposture throughout; and they told her that she should be taken to prison if she did not, then and there, sign their paper. She steadily refused, not only to sign, but to answer any of their questions, saying that they had set down false replies for both her aunts; and in this her aunts took courage to support her, in the face of threats from the doctors that they would prevent these poor widows having any more lodgers. An Ambleside friend of mine, calling on Jane at Tynemouth, found her in this plight, and most kindly brought over from South Shields a benevolent druggist, accustomed to mesmerise. The aunt refused him admission to her house; and he therefore went to the bottom of the garden, where Jane was supported to a seat. At the end of the séance, she could see some bright thing on her lap; and she had an appetite, for the first time in some weeks. The aunt could not resist this appeal to her heart and her self-interest at once; and she made the druggist welcome. As soon as I heard all this, I begged my kind aunts to go over from Newcastle, and tell Jane's aunt that if she could restore Jane so far as to undertake the journey to Ambleside, I would thenceforth take charge of her. It was a fearful undertaking, under the circumstances; but I felt that my protection and support were due to the poor girl. The aunt had her mesmerised and well cared for; and in two or three weeks she said she could come. I had, as yet, no house; and there was no room for her in my lodging; so I engaged a cottager near Ambleside to receive the girl, and board her for her services in taking care of the children till my house should be habitable. She was so eager to reach me, that, when she found the Keswick coach full, she walked sixteen miles, rather than wait, and presented herself to me tearful, nervous, in sordid clothes (for her aunt had let the poor girl's wardrobe go to rags while she was
too blind to sew) and her eyes like those of a blind person, looking as if the iris was covered with tissue paper. My heart sank at the sight. I told her that I had not mentioned mesmerism to her hostess, because, after all she had gone through, I thought the choice should be hers whether to speak of it or not. I had simply told the woman that I wished Jane to take a walk to my lodgings, three or four times a week. Jane's instant reply was that she did not wish for any secret about the matter; and that she thought she ought not to mind any ill-treatment while God permitted sick people to get well by a new means, whether the doctors liked it or not. I soon found that she was mesmerising a diseased baby in the cottage, and teaching the mother to do it;--whereby the child lived for months after the medical man declined visiting it any more, because it was dying. I mesmerised Jane three times a week; and in ten days her eyes were as clear as my own. When, henceforth, I saw any doubtful appearance in them, I mesmerised her once or twice; and that set all right. She never had any more trouble with them, except during my long absence in the East. They looked ill when I returned; when again, and finally, a few séances cured them. She lived with me seven years, and then went, with my entire approbation, to Australia. She immediately became cook in the family of the High Sheriff of Melbourne, where she is still. The zeal with which she assisted in furnishing and preparing my new house may be imagined; and how happy she was in those opening spring days when we met at the house early in the mornings, and staid till nine at night, making all ready in the new house which we longed to occupy. The first night (April 7th, 1846) when we made our beds, stirred up the fires, and locked the doors, and had some serious talk, as members of a new household, will never be forgotten, for its sweetness and solemnity, by my maids or myself.
Many persons, before doubtful or adverse, began to take a true view of
this girl and her case when I was in the East. When they saw that, instead
of accepting large sums of money to go about as a
clairvoyante, with lecturers on mesmerism,
she remained at her post in my house, during the long fourteen months
of my absence, they were convinced that she was no notoriety seeker, or trickster, or speculator for money. She practiced the closest economy, and invested her savings carefully, because she doubted her eyes, and wished to provide against accidents; and, when she emigrated, she had money enough for a good outfit, and to spare. But she might have had ten times as much if she had been tempted to itinerate as a clairvoyante. With these facts I close her history. I have given it fully, because it happened repeatedly during the seven years that she lived with me, that reports appeared in the newspapers, or by applications to myself through the post, that I had dismissed her in disgrace. My reply always was that if I had seen reason to doubt her honesty in the matter of the mesmerism, or in any other way, I should have felt myself bound to avow the fact in print, after all that had happened. My final declaration is that I have never known a more truthful person than my Jane; and I am confident that, among all the neighbours to whom she was known for seven years, and among her Tynemouth neighbours, who knew her for the nineteen preceding years of her life, there are none who would dissent from my judgment of her.
My notion of doing no work during the gladsome year 1845 soon gave
way,--not before inclination, (for I was sorely reluctant) but duty.
When the potato famine was impending, and there was alarm for the farming
interest, Mr. Bright's Committee on the Game-laws published
the evidence laid before them; and it appeared that there could not be a
better time for drawing public attention to a system more detrimental to
the farming class, and more injurious to the production of food than any of
the grievances put forth by the complaining "agricultural
interest." I was told that I ought to treat the subject as I had
treated the topics of Political Economy in my Series; and I agreed that I
ought. Mr. Bright supplied me with the evidence; I collected historical
material; and I wrote the three volumes of "Forest and
Game-Law Tales" in the autumn of 1845. Above 2,000 copies of
these have sold; but, at the time; the publication appeared to be a total
failure;--my first failure. The book
came out, as it happened, precisely at the when Sir R. Peel was known to be about to repeal the Corn-laws. It was said at the time that for three weeks no publisher in London sold any thing, with the one exception of Wordsworth's new and last edition of his works, wherein he took his farewell of the public. Nearly 1,000 copies of my book were sold at once; but, reckoning on a very large sale, we had stereotyped it; and this turned out a mistake,--the stereotyping more than cutting off the profits of the sale. From that work I have never received a shilling. On my own account, I have never regretted doing the work,--reluctant as I was to work that happy autumn. I know that many young men, and some of them sure to become members of the legislature, have been impressed by those essentially true stories to a degree which cannot but affect the destination and duration of the Game-laws; and this is enough. That the toil was an encroachment on my fresh pleasures at the time, and has proved gratuitous, is of no consequence now, while it is certain that a few young lords and gentry have had their eyes opened to the cost of their sport, and to their duty in regard to it. If I could but learn that some of the 2,000 copies sold had gone into the hands of the farmers, and had put any strength into their hearts to assert their rights, and resist the wrongs they have too tamely submitted to, I should feel that the result deserved a much greater sacrifice. As it was, I set down the gratuitous labour as my contribution to, or fine upon, the repeal of the Corn-laws.
That repeal was now drawing nigh. It was in the November and December of
that year that Lord John Russell condescended to that struggle for power
with Sir R. Peel which will damage his fame in the eyes of posterity, and
which reflected disgrace at the time on the whole Whig party, as it waned
towards dissolution. During the struggle, and the alternate
"fall" of the two statesmen, much wonder was felt by people
generally, and, it is believed, especially by Sir R. Peel, that the great
middle-class body, including the Anti-corn-law League,
showed so little earnestness in supporting Peel; so that when the matter
was placed in Peel's hands by his restoration to power, it did not
seem to
get on. I had occasion to know where the hitch was; and, as it appeared to me, to act upon that knowledge, in a way quite new to me,--indisposed as I have always been to meddle in matters which did not concern me.--While I was ill at Tynemouth, Colonel Thompson and Mr. Cobden called on me; and we had a long talk on League affairs, and the prospect of a repeal of the Corn Laws. Mr. Cobden told me that he and his comrades were so incessantly occupied in lecturing, and in showing up to multitudes the facts of a past and present time, that they had no leisure or opportunity to study the probable future; and that the opinions or suggestions of a person like myself, lying still, and reading and thinking, might be of use to the leaders of the agitation; and he asked me to write to him if at any time I had any thing to criticise or suggest, in regard to League affairs. had not much idea that I could be of any service; but I made the desired promise.
In the autumn of 1845, when Sir R. Peel retired from the government to
make way for Lord J. Russell, Mr. Cobden made a speech to his Stockport
constituents, in which he spoke in terms of insult of Peel. I saw this with
much regret; and, recalling my promise, I wrote to Mr. Cobden, telling him
that it was as a member of the League, and not as a censor that I wrote to
him. It was no business of mine to criticise his temper or taste in
addressing his constituents; but I reminded him that his Stockport speech
was read all over the kingdom; and I asked him whether he thought the
object of the League would be furthered by his having insulted a fallen
Minister;--whether, indeed, any thing had ever been gained, since
society began, by any man having insulted any other man. Before my letter
reached Mr. Cobden, he had spoken in yet more outrageous terms of Peel, at
a crowded meeting in Covent Garden theatre, leaving himself without the
excuse that, in addressing his constituents, he had lost sight of the
consideration of the general publicity of his speech. Mr. Cobden's
reply was all good-humour and candour as regarded myself; but it
disclosed the depth of the sore in his mind in regard to his relations with
Sir R. Peel. There is no occasion to tell at length the sad story of what
had passed between them
in February 1843, when Peel charged Cobden with being answerable for assassination, and Cobden, losing his presence of mind, let the occasion turn against him. It was the worst act of Peel's public life, no doubt; and the moment was one of such anguish to Cobden that he could never recall it without agitation. He referred to it, in his reply to me, in extenuation of his recent outbreak,--while declining to justify himself. I wrote again, allowing that Peers conduct admitted of no justification; but showing that there were extenuating circumstances in his case too. Of these circumstances I happened to know more than the public did; and I now laid them before my correspondent,--again saying that I did not see why the cause should suffer for such individual griefs. In the course of two or three weeks, plenty of evidence reached me that the great manufacturing classes were holding back on account of this unsettled reckoning between Peel and their leader; and also that Cobden had suffered much and magnanimously, for a course of years, from the remonstrances and instigations of liberal members, who urged his seeking personal satisfaction from his enemy. Mr. Cobden had steadily refused, because he was in parliament as the representative of the bread-eaters, and had no right, as he thought, to consume the time and attention of parliament with his private grievances. It struck me that it was highly important that Sir R. Peel should know all this, as he was otherwise not master of his own position. I therefore wrote to a neutral friend of his and mine, laying the case before him. He was a Conservative M.P., wholly opposed to the repeal of the Corn-laws; but I did not see that that was necessarily an obstacle. I told him that he must see that the Corn-laws must be repealed, and that them would be no peace and quiet till the thing was done; and I had little doubt that he would be glad of the opportunity of bringing two earnest men to a better understanding with each other. My friend did not answer my letter for three weeks; and when he did, he could send me nothing but fierce vituperation of his abjured leader. Time was now pressing; and I had not felt it right to wait. The whole move would have failed but for the accident that Mr. Cobden had sat in a draught, and suffered
from an abscess in the ear which kept him from the House for three weeks or so. What I did was this.
As I sat at breakfast on New Year's day, (1846) thinking over this
matter, it struck me that no harm could be done by my writing myself to Sir
R. Peel. He would probably think me meddlesome, and be vexed at the
womanish folly of supposing that, while the laws of honour which are so
sacred in men's eyes remain, he could make any move towards a man who
had insulted him as Mr. Cobden had recently done. But it was nothing to me
what Sir R. Peel thought of the act. He was a stranger to me; and his
opinion could not weigh for an instant against the remotest chance of
abridging the suspense about the Corn-laws. I frankly told him this,
in the letter which I wrote him after breakfast. I laid the case before
him; and, when I came to the duelling considerations, I told him what a
woman's belief is in such a case,--that a devoted man can rise
above arbitrary social rules; and that I believed him to be the man who
could do it. I believed him to be capable of doing the impossible in social
morals, as he was proving himself to be in politics. I told him that my
sole object was to put him in possession of a case which I suspected he did
not understand; and that I therefore desired no answer, nor any notice
whatever of my letter, which was written without any body's
knowledge, and would be posted by my own hand. By return of post came a
long letter from Sir R. Peel which moved me deeply. Nothing could be more
frank, more cordial, or more satisfactory. It was as I suspected. He had
not had the remotest idea that what he had said in the House by way of
amende, the next (Monday) evening after the
insult, had not been considered satisfactory. He wrote strongly about the
hardship of being thus kept in the dark for years,--neither Mr. Cobden
nor any other member on either side of the House having hinted to him that
the matter was not entirely settled.--Now that it was clear that Sir
R. Peel would act on his new knowledge in one way or another, the question
occurred to me,--what was to be done with Mr. Cobden, whose want of
presence of mind had aggravated the original mischief. The same
deficiencies might spoil the whole business now.--I had
told Sir R. Peel, whilst praising Mr. Cobden, that of course he knew nothing of what I was doing. I now wrote to Mr. Cobden, the most artful letter I ever penned. It really was difficult to manage this, my first intrigue, all alone. I told Mr. Cobden that the more I pondered the existing state of the Corn-law affair, the more sure I felt that Sir R. Peel must become aware of the cause of the backwardness of the Manchester interest; and also, that my view of certain unconspicuous features of the Minister's character led me to expect some magnanimous offer of an amende; and I ventured to observe what a pity it would be if Mr. Cobden should be so taken by surprise as to let such an occasion of reconciliation be lost. I also wrote to Sir R. Peel, telling him that, however it might appear to him, Mr. Cobden was of a relenting nature, likely to go more than half way to meet an adversary; and that, though he knew nothing of my interference, I had a confident hope that he would not be found wanting, if an occasion should present itself for him finally to merge his private grief in the great public cause of the day.
The next morning but one, the post brought me a newspaper directed by
Sir R. Peel, and autographed by him; and, as usual, the
"Times." There was also a note from Mr. Cobden which prepared
me for something interesting in the report of the Debates. His note was
scrawled in evident feebleness, and expressive of the deepest emotion. He
dated at 3 A.M., and said he had just returned from the House, and that he
could not lay his head on his pillow till he had sent me the blessing on
the peacemaker. He declared that his mind was eased of a load which had
burdened it for long and miserable years; and now he should be a new man.
The "Times" told me how immediately Sir R. Peel had acted on
his new information, and that that union of effort was now obtained under
which the immediate repeal of the Corn-laws was certain. How well
the hostile statesmen acted together thenceforth, every body knows. But
scarcely any body knows (unless Sir R. Peel thought proper to tell) how
they came to an understanding. Mr. Cobden has told his friends that it was
somehow my doing; but he never heard a word of it from or through
me.--He wrote, after some time, to
beg me to burn any letters of his which contained his former opinion of Sir R. Peel. I had already done so. I wished to preserve only what all the parties implicated would enjoy seeing twenty years later: and I should not have related the story here if I had not considered it honourable to every body concerned.
I little dreamed during that winter how I should pass the next. The
months slipped away rapidly, amidst the visits of family and friends,
writing, study, house-building, and intercourse with the few
neighbours whom I knew. A young nephew and niece came late in the autumn,
and others in the spring; and we went little journeys on foot among the
mountains, carrying knapsack or basket, and making acquaintance among the
small country inns. In the spring, there was the pleasure of bringing home
basketsful of the beautiful ferns and mosses of the district, and now and
then a cartful of heather, to cover my rocks; and primroses and foxgloves
and daffodils and periwinkle for the garden; and wood-sorrel for the
copses, where the blue-bells presently eclipsed the grass. A friend
in London, who knew my desire for a sundial, and heard that I could not
obtain the old one which had told me so important a story in my childhood,
presented me with one, to stand on the grass under my terrace wall, and
above the quarry which was already beginning to fill with shrubs and
wild-flowers. The design of the dial is beautiful,--being a
copy of an ancient font; and in grey granite, to accord with the
grey-stone house above it. The motto was an important affair. A
neighbour had one so perfect in its way as to eclipse a whole
class;--the class of bible sayings about the shortness of life and the
flight of time. "The night cometh." In asking my friends for
suggestions, I told them of this; and they agreed that we could not
approach this motto, in the same direction. Some good Latin ones, to which
I inclined, were put aside because I was besought, for what I considered
good reasons, to have nothing but English. It has always been my way to ask
advice very rarely, and then to follow it. But on this occasion, I
preferred a motto of my own to all that were offered in English; and
Wordsworth gave it his emphatic approbation. "Come, Light! visit
me!" stands em-
blazoned on my dial: and it has been, I believe, as frequent and impressive a monitor to me as ever was any dial which bore warning of the fugacious nature of life and time.
Summer brought a succession of visitors,--very agreeable, but
rather too many for my strength and repose. I began to find what are the
liabilities of Lake residents in regard to tourists. There is quite wear
and tear enough in receiving those whom one wishes to see; one's
invited guests, or those introduced by one's invited friends. But
these are fewer than the unscrupulous strangers who intrude themselves with
compliments, requests for autographs, or without any pretence whatever.
Every summer they come and stare in at the windows while we are at dinner,
hide behind shrubs or the corner of the house, plant themselves in the
yards behind or the field before; are staring up at one's window when
one gets up in the morning, gather handfuls of flowers in the garden, stop
or follow us in the road, and report us to the newspapers. I soon found
that I must pay a serious tax for living in my paradise: I must, like
many of my neighbours, go away in "the tourist season." My
practice has since been to let my house for the months of July, August and
September,--or for the two latter at least, and go to the sea, or some
country place where I could be quiet.
I do not know that a better idea of the place could be given than by the
following paragraphs from a palpable description of our little town (under
the name of Haukside,--a compound of Hawkshead and Ambleside) which
appeared some time since in "Chambers's Journal."
"The constitution of our town suffers six months of the year from
fever, and the other six from collapse. In the summertime, our inns are
filled to bursting; our private houses broken into by parties desperate
after lodgings; the prices of every thing are quadrupled; our best meat,
our thickest cream, our freshest fish, are reserved for strangers; our
letters, delivered three hours after time, have been opened and read by
banditti assuming our own title; ladies of quality, loaded with tracts,
fusillade us; savage and bearded foreigners harass us with brazen wind
instruments; coaches run frantically towards us
from every point of the compass; a great steam-monster ploughs our lake, and disgorges multitudes upon the pier; the excursion-trains bring thousands of curious vulgar, who mistake us for the authoress next door, and compel us to forge her autograph; the donkeys in our streets increase and multiply a hundredfold, tottering under the weight of enormous females visiting our waterfalls from morn to eve; our hills are darkened by swarms of tourists; we are ruthlessly eyed by painters, and brought into foregrounds and backgrounds, as 'warm tints' or 'bits of repose;' our lawns are picknicked upon by twenty at a time, and our trees branded with initial letters; creatures with introductions come to us, and can't be got away; we have to lionise poor, stupid, and ill-looking people for weeks, without past, present, or future recompense; Sunday is a day of rest least of all, and strange clergymen preach charity-sermons every week with a perfect kaleidoscope of religious views.
"The fever lasts from May until October.
"When it is over, horses are turned out to grass, and
inn-servants are disbanded; houses seem all too big for us; the
hissing fiend is 'laid' upon the lake; the coaches and cars are
on their backs in outhouses, with their wheels upward; the trees get bare,
the rain begins to fall, grass grows in the streets, and Haukside
collapses.
"Our collapse generally lasts from November to May. During this
interval, we residents venture to call upon each other. Barouches and
chariots we have none, but chiefly shandrydans and buggies; we are stately
and solemn in our hospitalities, and retain fashions amongst us that are
far from new; we have evening-parties very often, and at every
party--whist! Not that it is our sole profession: not that it is
our only amusement: it is simply an eternal and unalterable
custom--whist! We have no clubs to force it into vigour; the
production is indigenous and natural to the place. It is the attainment of
all who have reached years of maturity; the dignity of the aged, and the
ambition of the young; a little whirling in the dance, a little leaning
over the piano, a little attachment to the supper-table, a little
flirting on both sides--all this is at Haukside as elsewhere; but
the end, the bourn to which male and female alike tend at last after experiencing the vanity of all things else, and from which none ever returns, is--the whist-table."
The autumn of 1846 had been fixed on for a series of visits to some of
my family, and to London; and I let my house to a young couple of my
acquaintance for their honeymoon, and went to Liverpool, to my younger
sister's, on the last day of August, little dreaming how long it
would be before I came back again. I should have gone away even more sad
than I was, if I had known.
wait for more "Playfellows,"--sending the money at once, to make my outfit easy; and my neighbours at Ambleside promised to look after my house and servant, and let the house if possible. Tenants were in it for a part of the time, and Jane was well taken care of for the rest; so that nothing could turn out better than the whole scheme. We were joined en route by Mr. J. C. Ewart, the present representative of Liverpool; and he remained with us till we reached Malta on our return. He thence wrote to his sister about our parting,--he to go to Constantinople, and we homewards; saying that our experience was, he feared, a very rare one;--that of a travelling party who had been in the constant and close companionship imposed by Nile and Desert travelling, for eight months, and who, instead of quarrelling and parting, like most such groups, had travelled in harmony, were separating with regret, and should be more glad to meet in future than we were before we set out. It is worth mentioning this, because I heard, a year or so afterwards, that a report was abroad that our party had quarrelled immediately,--in France,--and that I had prosecuted my Eastern journey alone. My book, however, must have demolished that fiction, one would think: but such fictions are tenacious of life. In my preface to that book, I related the kindness of my companions in listening to my journal, and in authorising me to say that they bore testimony to the correctness of my facts, to the best of their judgment, while disclaiming all connexion with the resulting opinions. I have a letter from Mr. Yates, in acknowledgment of his copy of the book, in which he bears the same testimony, with the same reservation, and adds an expression of gratification, on Mrs. Yates's part and his own, at the manner in which they are spoken of throughout the work. Some idle reports about this matter, injurious to those excellent friends of mine, are probably extinct already: and if not, this statement will extinguish them.
My travelling companions and I met in London in October, after I had
secured my outfit there, and run down into Norfolk to see old Norwich
again. We had had hopes that Mr. Atkinson could go with us; and the plan
had been nearly arranged; but he was prevented at the last, and could
accompany us no
further than Boulogne. We traversed France to Marseilles, resting for two days at Paris, where, strange to say, I had never been before. We were quite late enough at best; but the evil chance which sent us on board the mail-packet Volcano caused a most vexatious delay. We were detained, at the outset, for the mails. The captain started with a short supply of coal, because it was dear at Marseilles, and soon found that he had been "penny wise and pound foolish." The engines of the vessel were too weak for her work; and the wind was dead against us. The captain forsook the usual route, and took the northerly one, for I forget what reason; and thus we were out of the way of succour. The vessel swarmed with cockroaches; two ill-mannered women shared the cabin with Mrs. Yates and me; the captain was so happy flirting with one of them as to seem provokingly complacent under our delays. It was really vexatious to see him and the widow sitting hand-in-hand, and giggling on the sofa, while our stomachs turned at the sea-pie to which we were reduced, and our precious autumn days were slipping away, during which we ought to have been at Cairo, preparing for our ascent of the Nile. It was worse with others on board,--gentlemen on their way to India, whose clothes and money were now sure to have left Malta before they could arrive there. One of these gentlemen was to meet at Malta a sister from Naples, whom he had not seen for twenty years, and who must either be in agony about his fate, or have given up the rendezvous as a failure. This gentleman, whose good manners and cheerfulness in company never failed, told me on deck, when no one was within hearing, that the trial was as much as he could bear. Some passengers were ill,--some angry,--some alarmed; and the occasion was a touch-stone of temper and manners. All our coal was consumed, except enough for six hours,--that quantity being reserved to carry us into port. Every morning, the captain let us sail about a little, to make believe that we were on our way; but every evening we found ourselves again off Pantellaria, which seemed as much an enchanted island to us as if we had seen Calypso on its cliffs. Now and then, Sicily came provokingly into view,
and the captain told us he was bound not to touch there or any where till we were in extremity; and we should not be in extremity till he had burned the cabin wainscot and furniture, and the stairs and berths, and there was nothing whatever left to eat. We now had cheese and the materials for plum-pudding. Every thing else on table began to be too disgusting for even sea-appetites. A young lieutenant offered us a receipt for a dish which he said we should find palatable enough when we could get nothing better,--broiled boot leather, well seasoned.--As for me, I was an old sailor; and, when the sickness was once over, I kept on deck and did very well. The weather was dreary,--the ship sticky and dirty in every part,--and our prospects singularly obscure; but there was clearly nothing to be done but to wait as good-humouredly as we could.
One afternoon, just before dinner, the fellow-passenger who pined
for his sister, hastily called the captain, who, looking towards the
southern horizon, was in earnest for once. A thread of smoke was visible
where all had been blank for so many days; and it was astonishing to me
that the wise as well as the foolish on board jumped to the conclusion that
it was a steamer sent from Malta in search of us. They were right; and in
another hour we were in tow of our deliverer. There had been time for only
two or three questions before we were on our course. I left the
dinner-table as soon as I could, and went to the bows, to see how
her Majesty's mail-steamer looked in tow. The officers of the
two vessels wanted to converse; but the wind was too high. "Try your
trumpet," was written on a black board in the other vessel.
"Have not got one," was our Lieutenant's reply; to which
the black board soon rejoined, "Why, that lady has got it."
They actually took my special trumpet for that of the ship. When in sight
of Malta, we burned our remnant of coal; and at midnight a gun in Valetta
barbour told the inhabitants that the Volcano was safe in port. Our party
remained on board till the morning; but the brother and sister met that
night; and we saw them on the ramparts next day, arm-in-arm,
looking as happy as could be. I was made uneasy about my own family by
hearing that Valetta
newspapers had gone to England the day before, notifying the non-arrival of the Volcano, and the general belief that she was gone to the bottom, with the addition that I was on board. My first business was to close and dispatch the journal-letter which I had amused myself with writing on board. Before it arrived, some of my relatives had been rendered as uneasy as I feared by the inconsiderate paragraph in the Valetta paper.
At Malta I began to feel (rather than see) the first evidences of the
rivalry then existing between the English and French at the Egyptian Court.
I could not conceive why Captain Glasscock, whose ship was then in the
port, made so much of me; but his homage was so exaggerated that I
suspected some reason of policy. He came daily, bringing his lady, and all
his officers in parties; he loaded me with compliments, and seized every
occasion of enforcing certain views of his own, which I was glad to hear in
the way of guidance in a new scene; and his most emphatic enforcement of
all was in regard to the merits of a certain Englishman who was waiting, he
intimated, to worship us on our landing at Alexandria. Captain Glasscock
insisted on sending my party in his man-of-war's boat
to the Ariel, in which we were to proceed to Egypt. We saw his friend at
Alexandria, and received the promised homage, and, really, some agreeable
hospitality, but not the impressions of the gentleman's abilities of
which we had been assured. By degrees it became apparent to me that what
was wanted was that I should write a book on Egypt, like Mrs. Romer, who
had preceded me by a year or two; and that, like Mrs. Romer, I should be
flattered into advocating the Egyptian Railway scheme by which the English
in Egypt hoped to gain an advantage over the French, and for which the
Alexandrian gentleman had already imported the rails. There they lay,
absorbing his capital in a very inconvenient manner; and he seized every
chance of getting his scheme advocated. With Mrs. Romer he succeeded, but
not with me. At Cairo I had the means of knowing that much more was
involved in the scheme,--much difficulty with the Bedoueens and others
besides the French,--than I had been told at Alexandria. I knew what
would be the consequences
of my treatment of the matter in my book; and I learned them in an amusing way. An acquaintance of mine in London told me, a day or two after publication, that the brother of the Alexandrian gentleman, and part-owner of the rails, had got a copy of the book already. "And he does not like it," said I: "he tells you it is damned humbug." My friend burst into a fit of laughter, shouting out, "Why, that is exactly what he did say."
The greater was my reluctance to go this journey under my new and happy
domestic circumstances, the stronger is the evidence of my estimate of its
advantages. I should not have gone but for the entire conviction that it
would prove an inestimable privilege. Yet, I had little idea what the
privilege would turn out to be, nor how the convictions and the action of
the remnant of my life would be shaped and determined by what I saw and
thought during those all-important months that I spent in the East.
I need say nothing here of the charms of the scenery, and the atmosphere,
and the novelty, and the associations with hallowed regions of the earth.
The book I wrote on my return gives a freshest impression of all that
enjoyment than any thing I could write now: but there were effects
produced on my own character of mind which it would have been impertinent
to offer there, even if the lapse of years had not been necessary to make
them clear to myself. I never before had better opportunity for quiet
meditation. My travelling companions, and especially the one with whom I
was the most inseparably associated, Mrs. Yates, had that invaluable
travelling qualification,--the tact to leave me perfectly free. We
were silent when we chose, without fear of being supposed unmannerly; and I
could not have believed beforehand that so incessant and prolonged a
companionship could have entailed so little restraint. My deafness which
would, in the opposite case, have imposed a most disabling fatigue, was
thus rather an advantage. While we had abundance of cheerful conversation
at meals and in the evenings, and whenever we were disposed for it, there
were many hours of every day when I was virtually as much alone as I could
have been in my own house; and, of the many
benefits and kindnesses that I received from my companions, none excited my lasting gratitude more than this. During the ten weeks that we were on the Nile, I could sit on deck and think for hours of every morning; and while we were in the desert, or traversing the varied scenery of Palestine, or winding about in the passes of the Lebanon, I rode alone,--in advance or in the rear of the caravan, or of our own group, without a word spoken, when it was once understood that it was troublesome and difficult to me to listen from the ridge of my camel, or even from my horse. I cannot attempt to give an idea what I learned during those quiet seasons. All the historical hints I had gained from my school days onward now rose up amidst a wholly new light. It is impossible for even erudite home-stayers to conceive what is gained by seeing for one's self the scenes of history, after any considerable preparation of philosophical thought. When, after my return, the Chevalier Bunsen told me that he would not go to Egypt, if he had the leisure, because he already knew every thing that could be learned about it, I could not but feel that this was a matter which could be judged of nowhere but on the spot; and that no use of the eyes and mind of Lepsius could avail him so well as the employment of his own. Step by step as we proceeded, evidence arose of the true character of the faiths which ruled the world; and my observations issued in a view of their genealogy and its results which I certainly did not carry out with me, or invent by the way side. It was not till we had long left the Nile, and were leaving the desert, that the plan of my book occurred to me. The book itself had been determined on from the time when I found the influx of impressions growing painful, for want of expression; and various were the forms which I imagined for what I had to say; but none of them satisfied me till that in which it afterwards appeared struck me, and instantly approved itself to me. It happened amidst the dreariest part of the desert, between Petra and Hebron,--not far from the boundary of Judea. I was ill, and in pain that day, from the face-ache which troubled me in the dryest weather, amidst the hottest part of the desert; and one of our party rode beside me, to amuse
me with conversation. I told him that I had just been inspired with the main idea of my book about the East. "That is," said he, "you think it the best scheme till you prefer another." "No," I replied; "there can be but one perfect one; and this completely answers to my view. My book will illustrate the genealogy, as it appears to me, of the old faiths,--the Egyptian, the Hebrew, the Christian and the Mohammedan." After my life-long study of the Hebrew and Christian, our travels in Palestine brought a rich accession of material for thought; and the Syrian part of the journey was the more profitable for what had gone before. The result of the whole, when reconsidered in the quiet of my study, was that I obtained clearness as to the historical nature and moral value of all theology whatever, and attained that view of it which has been set forth in some of my subsequent works. It was evident to me, in a way which it could never have been if I had not wandered amidst the old monuments and scenes of the various faiths, that a passage through these latter faiths is as natural to men, and was as necessary in those former periods of human progress, as fetishism is to the infant nations and individuals, without the notion being more true in the one case than in the other. Every child, and every childish tribe of people, transfers its own consciousness, by a supposition so necessary as to be an instinct, to all external objects, so as to conclude them all to be alive like itself; and passes through this stage of belief to a more reasonable view: and, in like manner, more advanced nations and individuals suppose a whole pantheon of Gods first,--and then a trinity, and then a single deity;--all the divine beings being exaggerated men, regarding the universe from the human point of view, and under the influences of human notions and affections. In proportion as this stage is passed through, the conceptions of deity and divine government become abstract and indefinite, till the indistinguishable line is reached which is supposed, and not seen, to separate the highest order of Christian philosopher from the philosophical atheist. A future point of my narrative will be the proper one for disclosing how I reached the other point of view for which I was now exchanging the theological and
metaphysical. What I have said will indicate the view under which I set about relating what I had seen and thought in the birthplaces of the old family of faiths.
I have said thus much, partly to show how I came by the views which I
have been absurdly supposed to derive, in some necromantic way, from Mr.
Atkinson. The fact is, our intercourse on these subjects had as yet hardly
amounted to any thing. It may be dated, I think, from a letter which I
wrote him in November 1847, and his reply. I had returned from the East in
June 1847, after an absence of eight months: I had then paid the
visits which had been intercepted by my eastern travel, and had returned
home early in October. After settling myself, and considering the plan and
materials of my book, I consulted Mr. Atkinson as to whether honesty
required that I should avow the total extent of my dissent from the
world's theologies. I thought not, as my subject was the
mutual relation of those theologies, and not their relation to science and
philosophy. I had no desire to conceal, as my subsequent writings have
shown, my total relinquishment of theology; but it did not seem to me that
this book was the natural or proper ground for that kind of discussion. The
birthplaces of the four faiths had been my study; and the four faiths were
my specific subject; and it seemed to me that it would spoil the book to
intrude any other. Thus it was settled; and the consideration of the point
led to my writing the following letter to Mr. Atkinson. I give it here that
it may be seen how my passage from theology to a more effectual philosophy
was, in its early stages, entirely independent of Mr. Atkinson's
influence. It is true, these letters exhibit a very early stage of
conviction,--before I had attained firmness and clearness, and while a
large leaven of the old anxiety and obscurity remained. I was, as Mr.
Atkinson said, out of the old ways; and he was about to show me the
shortest way round the corner.
"Sunday evening, Nov. 7th, 1847.
"MY DEAR
FRIEND,--I seem to have much to say; but I waited to hear from you,
because, when people's letters once cross, as ours did last time,
they generally continue to do so. How I pity you for your yellow fog! Here
it is grey mist, hanging or driving about
the mountain ridges. In the early morning I love to see it rising from the lake. I always go out before it is quite light; and in the fine mornings I go up the hill behind the church,--the Kirkstone road,--where I reach a great height, and see from half way along Windermere to Rydal. When the little shred of moon that is left, and the morning star, hang over Wansfell, among the amber clouds of the approaching sunrise, it is delicious. On the positively rainy mornings, my walk is to Pelter Bridge and back. Sometimes it is round the south end of the valley. These early walks (I sit down to breakfast at half-past seven) are good, among other things, in preparing me in mind for my work. It is very serious work. I feel it so, more and more. The more I read (and I am reading a good deal) and the more I am struck with the diversity of men's views, and the weakness, in some point or other, of all, in the midst of great learning, the more presumptuous it appears in me to speak at all. And yet, how are we to learn, if those who have travelled to the birthplaces of the old world do not tell what they think, in consequence of what they have seen? I have felt a good deal depressed,--or rather, say oppressed,--today about this. Tomorrow morning I begin upon my (necessary) sketch of the history of Egypt; and in preparation, I have been today reading again Heeren and Warburton. While I value and admire their accumulation of facts, I cannot but dissent from their inferences; that is, some of the most important of them. For instance, Warburton declares that rulers have ever strenuously taught the people the doctrines of a future life, and reward and punishment, without believing them; admits that some of the Egyptian priests believed in the Unity of God, and that Moses knew their opinions; and then argues that it is a proof that Moses' legation was divine that he did not teach a future life, but a protracted temporal reward and punishment, extending to future generations. The existence, on the temple walls, of representations of judgment scenes, from the earliest times, and the presumption that the Egyptian priests believed in One (national) god,--Moses being in their confidence,--are inestimable facts to me; but my inference from the silence of Moses about a future life is that he was too honest to teach what he did not know to be true. But no more of this.
"The depressing
feeling is from the conflict of opinions among people far wiser than myself
about points which I do not believe at all; points which they believe, but
in different ways. I am pretty confident that I am right in seeing the
progression of ideas through thousands of years,--a progression
advanced by every new form of
faith (of the four great forms)--every one of these faiths being beset by the same corruptions. But I do not know of any one who has regarded the matter thus: and it is an awful thing to stand alone in;--for a half-learned person at least. But I cannot decline speaking about it. We cannot understand the old Egyptians and Arabians through any other channel of study. I must speak as diffidently as I truly feel, and as simply as possible. One thing (which I am to work out tomorrow) I cannot be wrong in;--in claiming for the old heathens the same rule we claim to be judged by. If we refuse to have our faith judged by our state of society, we must not conclude on theirs by their state of society. If we estimate our moral ideas by the minds of our best thinkers, we must estimate theirs by their philosophers, and not by the commonalty. Insisting on this, I think I can show that we have no right to despise either their faith or their best men. I must try, in short, to show that Men's faculties exist complete, and pretty much alike, in all ages; and that the diversity of the objects on which they are exercised is of far less consequence than the exercise itself.--Do you not feel strangely alone in your views of the highest subjects? I do. I really know of no one but you to whom I can speak freely about mine. To a great degree, I always did feel this. I used to long to be a catholic, though I deeply suspected that no reliance on authority would give me peace of mind. Now, all such longings are out of the question; for I feel that I never could believe on any ground of reasoning what I once took for granted in prejudice. But I do feel sadly lonely, for this reason,--that I could not, if I tried, communicate to any one the feeling that I have that the theological belief of almost every body in the civilized world is baseless. The very statement between you and me looks startling in its presumption. And if I could, I dare not, till I have more assurance than I have now that my faith is enough for my own self- government and support. I know, as well as I ever knew any thing, that for support I really need nothing else than a steady desire to learn the truth and abide by it; and, for self-government, that it is enough to revere my own best nature and capabilities: but it will require a long process of proof before I can be sure that these convictions will avail me, under daily pressure, instead of those by which I have lived all my life. At my age, when the season of moral resolution, and of permanent fervour from the reception of new ideas is pretty well over, one's goodness must be, I fear, more the result of habit than of new inspiration.--And yet there is hope that some youthfulness is left in me, too. I trust so from my interest in the
subjects I am now writing about: and I have lately fairly broken the only two bad habits that ever had much power over me ... ...
"I
quite enjoy your letter. I am always pleased to have your thoughts on your
present subjects of study,--as I show by sending you mine. I agree
emphatically with you about philosophers inventing methods instead of
learning from nature how to teach.
"My house is so pretty, now
it is finished! I hope Emerson is coming. Would you like to come and meet
him or not? I don't know whether he interests you. ... ... ... ...
."
Mr. Atkinson's reply was delightful to me at the time; and it is
so now, in remembrance of that time,--the beginning of my free
communication to him of my views and studies. It is no fair specimen of his
letters when I rose to a more equal reciprocity of intercourse, and when
the comfort and satisfaction which I derived from standing firm on a higher
standpoint than I had at this time reached rendered unnecessary the kind of
encouragement which I derived from the following letter.
"18, Upper Gloucester Place, November 13, 1847.
"MY
DEAR FRIEND,--Your letter has interested me
extremely.--Most certainly we must judge the tree by its
fruit, and the doctrine by its influence; calculating, of course, the whole
circumstances and material in which that doctrine has to operate: and
it would appear that all opinions with regard to a God and a future life
had much the same fruits and sustaining influence, though producing results
in proportion to the grossness and immorality of the times. But we must
consider each view as a stage in the progress of knowledge and reason, and
so, perhaps, essential to the circumstances of the times in which it
existed. I would strongly urge a full consideration of this view; that Man
cannot interfere with truth or nature; but that himself and his opinions
are evolved in due course,--not in a perceptible direct line, but
necessarily so, as regards the whole; so that in a wide view of the
question, whatever is, is right, in its general and ultimate bearing, and
ever must be so. That legislators have ever given forth certain views from
motives of policy, and not from conviction of their truth, seems to me a
most unwarrantable assertion, and certainly not agreeing with facts of the
present times which we are able to recognise; though doubtless it was and
is often so. You will do a great and good thing if you can trace the origin
and progress of opinion in Eqypt. I had designed to do this in a general
and
philosophical sense in the Introduction to my contemplated work, and to wage war, tooth and nail, as they say, against the assumptions of natural theology. Philosophers, with hardly an exception, cling to the idea of a God creator: Bacon at the head of them, saying that he would rather believe in all things most gross and absurd, than that creation was without a mind. How unphilosophical--I had almost said contemptible!* I recognised a godhead long after I rejected a revelation; but I can now perceive no tittle of evidence, in the mind or out of the mind, so to speak,--for such a belief, but that all evidence, reason and analogy are against it; and that the origin of the idea is traceable to the errors (and necessary errors) of the mind striving in ignorance.
"I delight in the
tone of mind in which you enter on the inquiry with regard to Egypt's
Faith. That noble feeling--faith, how sadly is it cramped and
misapplied,--though never to be considered sad in its position in the
chain of progress, any more than pain or death is sad, as essential to the
progress of life, and the fulfilment of the law. It is well that men feel
loneliness in advancing in truth, for it holds them back to instruct and
bring others forward, and gives them a mission to perform, to save their
fellows from that to which they cannot return. For knowledge, to the
truthful and earnest, is a mistress to whom you are wedded for life:
and in confidence and constancy must you seek your self-respect and
happiness, whatever may be the peril and disaffection of the world.
'I place a sword in the world,' said Christ, 'and set
brother against brother.'--'But
blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness' sake.'
I see no pleasure in martyrdom: but I feel it necessary to die if it
must be, in maintaining what I believe--earnestly, and in reason and
faith believe,--to be true: to sacrifice friendship and every
other thing to maintain this predominating impulse and want. You feel,
nevertheless, a sense of loneliness now; and so do I; and have done more
than I do now. But this is passing away, and one friend in truth is a host
against the world assembled. The time may come when you, and perhaps I, may
be pointed at and despised by thousands. Pshaw! what matter? I have more
fear of an east wind or a November fog, than of all the hubbub they can
make. But we may reasonably hope that it will not be so. There are too many
believing as we believe on vital questions, and many more who are
indifferent; and others may be convinced. Yet, still, the sense of
loneliness will accompany you more
___________________
or less through much of your social intercourse; and friends may grow cold, and you may be misrepresented and misunderstood. But out of this sense of loneliness shall grow your strength, as the oak, standing alone, grows and strengthens with the storm; whilst the ivy, clinging for protection to the old temple wall, has no power of self-support. Be sure that you will find sufficient, if you hold to the truth, and are true to yourself. How well does the great philosopher speak of the pleasure of standing fortified in truth watching the wandering up and down of other minds, and in pity and charity bending over their weakness! Strong in the faith and knowledge of good intentions, we must endeavour to fix the good, true, and noble impulses, and obliterate the evil ones. Thus we shall be strong in resignation and gratitude, enjoying all things that we may; indifferent as to the end, seeing that it is of no more consequence that we should live again, than that the pebble-stones should rise and become living beings. The difficulty is not in the condition of self-reliance, but in the want of sympathy under the pressure of adverse opinion, the mass of our prejudices which still encumber the brains action, and the soil where better thoughts and habits should have been early sown. Lesser minds will hereafter float easily and merrily down the stream where you find impediments; but the necessity of self-support will give you strength, and pleasures which they shall not feel; and so the balance and opportunity are more even than would at first appear. A noble path lies before you, and stern necessity bids you accept unmoved what was 'designed '--for you from all time,--that link of being in which you exist and act. Not alone are we, but bound in the eternal laws of the whole. Let us unindividualize ourselves;--merge our personality in the infinite;--raise the ideal in our mind;--see each as but a part of that ideal;--and we lose the sense of imperfection--the sense of individual opinions and character, and rise into a new life of god-like conceptions--active, practical, and earnest; but above the accidents of life: not altogether separate from, but superior to them; enjoying all the harmonious action of mind and body; loving with all our heart and in spirit, all that is good and noble and most beautiful;--casting out and destroying every wrong action of the mind, as we would the pains and ills of the body:--warming with affection and interest for every human being; untouched except by pity for their ill thoughts of us:--such are aspirations which may live in the breast which has rejected its Man-God, and lost all faith in consciousness revived in the same shape and being from the grave. At least we lose the fear, (if we have not the
hope,) and the curse of a cruel uncertainty, and are left free to enjoy the present in seeking our best and highest happiness and exaltation. The highest minds will still impress the world with the sense of what is right; and the religion of morals and philosophy will advance, until theology is in the grave, and man will be free to think, and, morally expanded, will be more free to act than perhaps has yet entered into many brains to conceive; because men, in their fears and ignorance, look into the darkness and not into the light, and cannot measure beyond their knowledge. But this is too much of a preachment,--so I say stop!
"I should like,
indeed, very much to see Emerson if it could be, you may be sure. I think
you have a very high opinion of him. I fear I have filled up my letter with
nothing, when I have so much in my thoughts to say that has engaged my
attention.
"Well, well,--all in time. I am glad to hear
Mr. -- -- is talking over such important questions with you. I
hope you will find him free and wise. Pray remember me to them, will you?
and to that cheerful, dear woman, Mrs. --. You have not told me what
is to be the motto of your dial. Never mind but you should differ from the
world; and, with that wise doubt of self which you express, you need not
fear; for that will lead you to dwell on evidence, and on the cause of your
opponent's errors, and how you should be satisfied if your
convictions be indeed the truth.
"Adieu, &c.,
&c.,
"H. G. ATKINSON."
"P.S.--A
friend just writes to me that he cannot understand the consciousness of
doing wrong, if we have no free will, and are not accountable. This is at
the root of the errors of philosophers, who take a particular state of
feeling for the simple and essential condition of an innate sense. They
argue a God from a similar error. Conscience arises from a sense of right,
with the desire that the right should be done. But what is felt to be right
depends much on the state of opinion and society. The sense of sinning is a
mere condition and habit of thinking, arising from a belief in free
will--a deifying of the mind.
"Much of the manner that has
been thought pride in me, has arisen from a sense of loneliness and
non-sympathy with the opinions of others, and that they would
dislike my opinions if they fully knew them. But I am passing over this
barrier, in losing the care and thought of sympathy, in a livelier interest
and care for the happiness
of all, and in the thought of the ultimate glory and triumph of all truth--when the wrong shall prove right, and the right shall become wrong."
My reply will close, for the present, the subject of my
anti-theological views, at the beginning of my intimate
correspondence with Mr. Atkinson,
"Ambleside November 21, 1847.
"MY DEAR
FRIEND,--It was very kind of you to write that last letter to me. I
agree in, and like, almost every word of it: but I was especially
pleased to see your distinct recognition of the good of the old
superstitions in their day. As a necessarian, you are of course bound to
recognize this: but the way in which you point it out pleases me,
because it is the great idea I have before me in my book. I have found the
good of those old superstitions in my day. How it might have been with me
(how much better) if I had had parents of your way of thinking, there is no
saying. As it was, I was very religious (far beyond the knowledge and
intentions of my parents) till I was quite grown up. I don't know
what I should have done without my faith; for I was an unhealthy and most
unhappy child, and had no other resource. Yet it used to strike me often,
and most painfully that, whatever relief and comfort my religion gave to my
feelings, it did not help me much against my faults. Certainly, my belief
in a future life never was either check or stimulus to me in the matter of
self-government. Five-and-twenty years ago I became a
thoroughly grounded necessarian. I have never wavered for an hour on that
point since; and nothing ever gave me so much comfort. Of course this paved
the way for the cessation of prayer, I left off praying however, less from
seeing the absurdity, (though I did see it) of petitioning about things
already ordained, than from a keen sense of the impiety of prayer. First, I
could not pray for daily bread, or for any outward good, because I really
did not wish to ask for them,--not knowing whether they would be good
for me or not. So, for some years, I prayed only for good states of mind
for myself and others. Of course, the feeling grew on me that true piety
required resignation about spiritual matters as much as others. So I left
off express prayer: and without remorse. As for Christ's
example and need of prayer,--I felt that he did not mean what we mean
by prayer; and I think so still. I think he wold condemn our prayers as
much as he did those of the Pharisees of his time: and that with him
prayer was contem-
plation and aspiration chiefly.--Next, I saw very painfully, (I mean with the pain of disgust) how much lower a thing it is to lead even the loftiest life from a regard to the will or mind of any other being, than from a natural working out of our own powers. I felt this first as to resignation under suffering, and soon after as to moral action. Now, I do know something of this matter of resignation. I know it to the very bottom. I have been a very great sufferer,--subject to keen miseries almost all my life till quite lately; and never, I am pretty confident, did any one acquiesce in God's will with a more permanent enthusiasm than I did;--because this suited the bent of my nature. But I became ashamed of this;--ashamed of that kind of support when I felt I had a much higher ground of patience in myself. (Only think how shocked the orthodox would be at this, and how they would talk of the depravity of our nature, and of my awful presumption! I saw a sort of scared smile on Mrs. --'s face the other day, when, in talking about education, I said we had yet to see what could be done by a direct appeal to our noble human nature. She, liberal as she is, thinks we have such active bad tendencies, such interior corruption, that we can do nothing without--not effort, or toil, but--Help. Yet she, and Mrs. -- too, devours my Household Education papers, as if she had never met with any thing true before on that subject. She says I most certainly have been a mother in a pre-existent state: and yet if she knew that these papers were founded on 'infidel' and phrenological principles, she would mourn over me with deep grief.)--Well but,--you see now, how long a preparation I have had; and how gradual, for my present freedom.--As to what my present views are, when clearly brought to the point of expression, they are just these. I feel a most reverential sense of something wholly beyond our apprehension. Here we are, in the universe! this is all we know: and while we feel ourselves in this isolated position, with obscurity before and behind, we must feel that there is something above and beyond us. If that something were God, (as people mean by that word, and I am confident it is not) he would consider those of us the noblest who must have evidence in order to belief;--who can wait to learn, rather than rush into supposition. As for the whole series of Faiths, my present studies Would have been enough, if I had not been prepared before, to convince me that all the forms of the higher religions contain, (in their best aspect) the same great and noble ideas, which arise naturally out of our own minds, and grow with the growth of the general mind; but that there is really no evidence whatever of any
sort of revelation, at any point in the history. The idea of a future life,
too, I take to be a necessary one, (I mean necessary for support) in its
proper place, but likely to die out when men better understand their nature
and the summum bonum which it incloses. At
the same time, so ignorant as I am of what is possible in nature, I do not
deny the possibility of a life after death: and if I believed the
desire for it to be as universal as I once thought it, I should look upon
so universal a tendency as some presumption in fayour of a continuous life.
But I doubt the desire and belief being so general as they are said to
be: and then, the evidence in fayour of it is nothing;--except
some unaccountable mesmeric stories.--is for your
correspondent's very young question, about why we should do
right,--how such remarks show that we neglect our own nature while
running after the supposed pleasure of another! I am sure I never felt more
desirous of the right than I do now, or more discomposed when it flashes
across me that I have done wrong. But I need not write about this to you,
of all people.--What a long confession of faith I have written you!
Yes, it is faith, is it not?--and not infidelity, as
ninety-nine hundredths of the world would call it.--As for the
loneliness I spoke of, I don't generally mind it: and there is
abundant ground of sympathy between me and my best friends, as long as
occasion does not require that I should give names to my opinions. I have
not yet had any struggle with my natural openness or indiscretion. I never
could conceal any opinion I hold, and I am sure I never would: and I
know therefore that I am at the mercy (in regard to reputation and some of
my friendships) of accident, which may at any hour render an avowal
necessary. But I do not fear this. I have run so many inferior risks, and
suffered so little in peace by divers avowals and heresies, that I am not
likely to tremble now. What does give me a qualm sometimes, is thinking
what such friends as -- and as -- will suffer, whenever they come
to know that I think their "Christian hope" baseless. They are
widows, and they live by their expectation of a future
life.* I seriously believe that
-- would go mad or die, if this hope was shaken in her: and my
opinions are more to her than any others since her husband's death.
But I say to myself as you would say,--that these matters must take
care of themselves. If the truth comes to me, I must believe it.--Yes,
I should not wonder if there is a prodigious clamour
___________________
against me, some day, as you say;--perhaps after this book comes out. But I don't think I should care for that, about a matter of opinion. I should (or might) about a matter of conduct; for I am sadly weak in my love of approbation: but about a matter of opinion, I can't and don't believe what I once did; and there's an end. It is a thing which settles itself;--for there is no going back to discarded beliefs. It is a great comfort to me to have you to speak to, and to look to for sympathy. It is a delightful indulgence and refreshment: but if you were to die, or to be engrossed by other interests and occupations, so as to diverge from me, I think I could do without sympathy, in a matter so certain as my inability to believe as I once did.--But enough and too much. There will surely never be occasion to write you such a letter again. But I have written, not so much about my mind, as about a mind, which you, as a philosopher, may like to see into, as well as to sympathise with as a friend ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... I walk every morning, never stopping for weather. I shall have the young moon now for ten days. Emerson is engaged (lecturing) deep at present, but hopes to come by and by. He is free, if any man is. So I hope you can come when he does.--The motto of the dial is, "Come, light! Visit me!" Old Wordsworth likes this much.
"O! your letter was
very pleasant to me. We rarely agree as completely as I do in
that.
"Good night!--it is late. Ever yours
truly,
"H. MARTINEAU."
Mr. Emerson did come. He spent a few days in February with me; and,
unfavourable as the season was for seeing the district,--the fells and
meadows being in their dunnest haycolour instead of green,--he saw in
rides with a neighbour and myself some of the most striking features in the
nearer scenery. I remember bringing him, one early morning, the first green
spray of the wild currant, from a warm nook. We met soon after in London,
where Mr. Atkinson made acquaintance with him. It was a great pleasure to
me to have for my guest one of the most honoured of my American hosts, and
to find him as full as ever of the sincerity and serenity which had
inspired me with so cordial a reverence twelve years before.
The mention of "Household Education" in the letter just
quoted reminds me of some work that I was busy about when
invited to go to the East. "The People's Journal" was then in the hands of Mr. Saunders, who has since shown more of his quality than he had scope for in that periodical, but who engaged my respect by the spirit in which he carried on his enterprise. He was a perfect stranger to me before; but we soon became friends on the ground of that enterprise of his; and I wrote a good deal for him;--a set of papers called "Surveys from the Mountain," and many on desultory subjects: I forget when it was that he suggested the subject of "Household Education" to me, as one which required different treatment from any that it had hitherto met with: but it was certainly after my return from the East, and after his discontinuance of the "People's Journal," that I planned the volume,--the first chapters of which had been written at his request. When I was entirely independent of him, and had nothing to consider but the best use to make of my opportunity, I resolved to write the book for the Secularist order of parents. It had been conveyed to me, before this time, that there was a great want of juvenile literature for the Secularists, who could obtain few story-books for their children which were not stuffed with what was in their eyes pernicious superstition. People of all beliefs can see the hardship of this; and I was forcibly struck by it. If the age of fiction-writing had not been over with me, so that I felt that I could not write good stories, I should have responded to the appeal by writing more children's tales. The next best thing that I could do was to write for the Secularists a familiar book on "Household Education." Two surprises awaited me, on the appearance of that volume:--the bulk of the Secularist body, and the cordial reception of the book by Christian parents. After the publication of the "Atkinson Letters," I had reason to know how very different was the state of opinion in England from an thing that I had supposed when I had felt lonely in my views. I then found that I was, as far as I can discover, actually on the bide of the majority of sensible and thoughtful persons; and that the Christians, who are apt to look on a seceder as, in some sort, a fallen person, are in fact in a minority, under that mode of reckoning, The reception of my book, when its qualities
came to be understood, prepared me for the welcome discovery of the actual condition of the Secularists, and their daily extending prospects; while it proved that there are a good many Christian parents who can accept suggestion and aid from one who will not pronounce their Shibboleth; and that they can enter into moral sympathy with one who finds aspiration to be wholly unconnected with notions of inherent human corruption, free will, and the immortality of the soul. The book was published in 1848; and it must be published again; for it has been for some time out of print.
The winter of 1847-8 passed delightfully in the preparation of my
book. I doubt whether there is any higher pleasure, in which intellectual
and moral enjoyment are commingled, than in writing a book from the
heart;--a book of one's own conception and wrought out all
alone: and I doubt whether any author could feel more satisfaction,
(in proportion to individual capacity for pleasure, of course) in the
production of a book than I did in regard to "Eastern Life." I
wrote on in entire security about its publication; for I had made an
agreement with Mr. Murray in the autumn. His father had wished to publish
for me, and had made more than one overture; and I wished to try whether
there was advantage, in point of circulation, in being published by Murray.
After the failure of the "Game Law Tales," I considered myself
fully authorised to do the best I could for my next work; and especially
for one so considerable as "Eastern Life." I had every desire
that Mr. Murray should know precisely what he was undertaking; and I
explained to him, in the presence of a witness, as distinctly as possible,
and even with reiteration, what the plan and agreement of the book were
designed to be. He seemed so entirely satisfied, and offered his terms
afterwards with so much good will, that I never dreamed of difficulty, and
sent him the M.S. of the two first volumes when finished. After a note of
acknowledgment and compliment, the M.S. was immediately returned, with a
curt note which afforded no explanation. Mr. Murray could not publish the
book; and that was all. The story goes that Mr. Murray was alarmed by being
told,--what he then gave forth as his
plea for breach of contract,--that the book was a "conspiracy against Moses." Without crediting this joke in full, we may suppose that his clerical clients interfered to compel him to resign the publication; and I understood, on good authority, long after, when the success of the book was secure, that he heartily regretted the mischance. I wrote by the same day's post to Mr. Moxon, to tell him the facts of the case, and to offer him the publication, which he accepted by return of post,--on the usual terms; viz., that Mr. Moxon should take the risk, and give me two-thirds of the profits. The first year's proceeds made my house and its contents my own. I declined all interest in the second edition, desiring that my share of the proceeds should go to the cheapening of the book. I had got all I wanted from it, in the way of money, and I had an earnest desire that it should circulate widely among the less opulent class who were most likely to sympathise with its contents. I do not know why I should not relate an incident, in connexion with this matter, which it gratifies me to recall. One day in the desert, when some hostile Arabs waylaid our party, my camel-leader trotted me away, against my will, from the spectacle of the fight which was to ensue. The same thing happened to Mr. and Mrs. Yates; and we three found ourselves near a clump of acacias where we were to await the event of the feud, and the rest of our caravan. We alighted, and sat down in the scanty shade. Mr. Yates served that this encounter would be a picturesque incident for my book: and this led us to talk of whether there should be a book or not. I told Mr. Yates that this was a good opportunity for mentioning my chief scruple about writing the book at all. I knew he and Mrs. Yates would not sympathise in it; but yet it was best to utter it frankly. I scrupled about making money by a journey which was his gift. The surprise expressed in his countenance was really amusing. "O, dear!" said he: "I am sure Mrs. Yates and I shall be very happy indeed if you should be able so soon to make your house completely your own. It will be, indeed, another pleasant consequence of this journey, that we had not thought of." It gave me hearty satisfaction, after this, to write to them that, through this book, their kind wish was fulfilled.
(appendix)
It was a curious sight--visible till recently, though now all are
gone--the chatting of three ladies on the same sofa--the two Miss
Berrys and their intimate friend, Lady Charlotte Lindsay. Lady Charlotte
Lindsay was the daughter of Lord North; and the Miss Berrys had both
received, as was never any secret, the offer of the hand of Horace Walpole.
It is true he was old, and knew himself to be declining, and made this
offer as an act of friendship and gratitude; but still, the fact remains
that she, who died last Saturday
night, might have been the wife of him who had the poet Gray for his tutor. These ladies brought into our time a good deal of the manners, the conversation and the dress of the last century; but not at all in a way to cast any restraint on the youngest of their visitors, or to check the inclination to inquire into the thoughts and ways of men long dead, and the influence of modes long passed away. It was said that Miss Berry's parties were rather blue; and perhaps they were so; but she was not aware of it: and all thought of contemporary pedantry dissolved under her stories of how she once found on the table, on her return from a ball, a volume of "Plays on the Passions," and how she kneeled on a chair at the table to see what the book was like, and was found there--feathers and satin shoes and all--by the servant who came to let in the winter morning light; or of how the world of literature was perplexed and distressed--as a swarm of bees that have lost their queen--when Dr. Johnson died; or of how Charles Fox used to wonder that people could make such a fuss about that dullest of new books--Adam Smith's "Wealth of Nations." He was an Eton boy, just promised a trip to Paris by his father, when Miss Berry was born; and Pitt was a child in the nursery, probably applauded by his maid for success in learning to speak plain. Burns was then toddling in and out, over the threshold of his father's cottage. Just when she was entering on the novel-reading age, Evelina came out; and Fanny Burney's series of novels were to that generation of young people what Scott's were to the next but one. If the youths and maidens of that time had bad fiction, they had good history; for the learned Mr. Gibbon gave them volume after volume which made them proud of their age. They talked about their poets, and, no doubt, each had an idol in that day as in our's and every body's. The earnestness, sense, feeling and point of Cowper delighted some; and they reverently told of the sorrows of his secluded life, as glimpses were caught of him in his walks with Mrs. Unwin. Others stood on tiptoe to peep into Dr. Darwin's "chaise" as he went his professional round, writing and polishing his verses as he went; and his admirers insisted that nothing so brilliant had ever been written before. Miss Berry must have well remembered the first exhibition of this brilliancy before the careless eyes of the world; and she must have remembered the strangeness of the impression when Crabbe tried the contrast of his homely pathos, encouraged to do so by Burke. And then came something which it is scarcely credible that the world should have received during the period of Johnson's old age, and the maturity of
Gibbon, and Sir William Jones, and Burns--the wretched rhyming of the Batheaston set of sentimental pedants. In rebuke of them, the now mature woman saw the theory of Wordsworth rise; and in rebuke of him, she saw the young and confident Jeffrey and his comrades arise; and in rebuke of them, saw the "Quarterly Review" arise, when she was beginning to be elderly. She saw Joanna Baillie's great frame rise and decline, without either the rise or decline changing in the least the countenance or the mood of the happy being whose sunshine came from quite another luminary than fame. She saw the rise of Wordsworth's fame, growing as it did out of the reaction against the pomps and vanities of the Johnsonian and Darwinian schools; and she lived to see its decline when the great purpose was fulfilled, of inducing poets to say what they mean, in words which will answer that purpose. She saw the beginning and the end of Moore's popularity; and the rise and establishment of Campbell's, The short career of Byron passed before her eyes like a summer storm: and that of Scott constituted a great interest of her life for many years. What an experience--to have studied the period of horrors--represented by Monk Lewis--of conventionalism in Fanny Burhey--of metaphysical fiction in Godwin--of historical romance in Scott--and of a new order of fiction in Dickens, which it is yet too soon to characterise by a phrase.
We might go on for hours, and not exhaust the history of what she saw on
the side of literature alone. If we attempted to number the scientific men
who have crossed her threshold--the foreigners who found within her
doors the best of London and the cream of society, we should never have
done. And what a series of political changes she saw--the continental
wars, the establishment of American independence--the long series of
French revolutions--the career of Washington, of Napoleon, of Nelson,
of Wellington, with that of all the statesmen from Lord Chatham to
Peel--from Franklin to Webster! But it is too much. It is bewildering
to us, though it never overpowered her. She seemed to forget nothings and
to notice every thing, and to be able to bear so long a life in such times;
but she might well be glad to sink to sleep, as she did last Saturday night
after so long-drawn a pageant of the world's pomps and
vanities, and transient idolatries and eternal passions.
Reviewing the spectacle, it appears to us, as it probably did to her,
that there is no prevalent taste, at least in literature, without a
counteraction on the spot, preparing society for a reaction. Miss Berry
used to say that she published the later volumes of Walpole's
correspondence to prove that the world was wrong in thinking him
heart-
less; she believing the appearance of heartlessness in him to be ascribable to the influence of his time. She did not succeed in changing the world's judgment of her friend; and this was partly because the influences of the time did not prevent other men from showing heart. Charles James Fox had a heart; and so had Burke and a good many more. While Johnson and then Darwin were corrupting men's taste in diction, Cowper was keeping it pure enough to enjoy the three rising poets, alike only in their plainness of speech--Crabbe, Burns, and Wordsworth. Before Miss Burney had exhausted our patience, the practical Maria Edgeworth was growing up. While Godwin would have engaged us wholly with the interior scenery of man's nature, Scott was fitting up his theatre for his mighty procession of costumes, with men in them to set them moving; and Jane Austen, whose name and works will outlive many that were supposed immortal, was stealthily putting forth her unmatched delineations of domestic life in the middle classes of our aristocratic England. And against the somewhat feeble elegance of Sir William Jones's learning there was the safeguard of Gibbon's marvelous combination of strength and richness in his erudition. The vigor of Camphell's lyrics was a set-off against the prettiness of Moore's. The subtlety of Coleridge meets its match, and a good deal more, in the development of science; and the morose complainings of Byron are less and less echoed now that the peace has opened the world to gentry whose energies would be self-corroding if they were under blockade at home, through an universal continental war. Byron is read at sea now, on the way to the North Pole, or to California, or to Borneo; and in that way his woes can do no harm. To every thing there is a season; and to every fashion of a season there is an antagonism preparing. Thus all things have their turn; all human faculties have their stimulus, sooner or later, supposing them to be put in the way of the influences of social life.
It was eminently so in the case of the aged lady who is gone from us;
and well did her mind respond to the discipline offered by her long and
favorable life of ninety years. One would like to know how she herself
summed up such an experience as hers,--the spectacle of so many
everlasting things dissolved--so many engrossing things
forgotten--so many settled things set afloat again, and floated out of
sight. Perhaps those true words wandered once more into her mind as her
eyes were closing:--
"We
are such stuff
As dreams are made of; and
our
little life
Is rounded with a sleep."
(appendix)
"Univesalists believe in a God, which I do not; but believe
that their God, with all his moral attributes, (aside from nature itself)
is nothing more than a chimera of their own imagination."
Your petitioners have learned, by an examination of the record and
documents in the case, made by one of their number, that the conviction of
said Kneeland proceeded on the ground above stated. For though the
indictment originally included two other publications, one of a highly
irrverent, and the other of a grossly indecent character; yet it appears by
the Report, that, at the trial, the prosecuting officer mainly relied on
the sentence above quoted, and that the Judge who tried the case confined
his charge wholly to stating the legal construction of its terms, and the
law applicable to it.
In these circumstances, the undersigned respectfully pray, that your
Excellency will grant to the said Kneeland an unconditional pardon, for the
offence of which he has been adjudged guilty. And they ask this, not from
any sympathy with the convicted individual, who is personally unknown to
most or all of them; nor from any approbation of the doctrines professed by
him, which are believed by your petitioners to be as pernicious and
degrading as they are false; but
Because the punishment proposed to be inflicted is believed to be
at variance with the spirit of our institutions and our age, and with the soundest expositions of those civil and religious rights which are at once founded in our nature, and guarantied by the constitutions of the United States and this Commonwealth;
Because the freedom of speech and the press is the chief instrument of
the progress of truth and of social improvements, and is never to be
restrained by legislation, except when it invades the rights of others, or
instigates to specific crimes;
Because, if opinion is to be subjected to penalties, it is impossible to
determine where punishment shall stop; there being few or no opinions, in
which an adverse party may not see threatenings of to the state;
Because truths essential to the existence of society must be so palpable
as to need no protection from the magistrate;
Because the assumption by government of a right to prescribe or repress
opinions has been the ground of the grossest depravations of religion, and
of the most grinding despotisms;
Because religion needs no support from penal law, and is grossly
dishonoured by interpositions for its defense, which imply that it cannot
be trusted to its own strength and to the weapons of reason and persuasion
in the hands of its friends;
Because, by punishing infidel opinions, we shake one of the strongest
foundations of faith, namely, the evidence which arises to religion from
the fact, that it stands firm and gathers strength amidst the severest and
most unfettered investigations of its claims;
Because error of opinion is never so dangerous as when goaded into
fanaticism by persecution, or driven by threatenings to the use of secret
arts;
Because it is well known that the most licentious opinions have, by a
natural reaction, sprung up in countries where the laws have imposed
severest restraint on thought and discussion;
Because the influence of hurtful doctrines is often propagated by the
sympathy which legal severities awaken towards their supporters;
Because we are unwilling that a man, whose unhappy course has drawn on
him general disapprobation, should, by a sentence of the law, be exalted
into a martyr, or become identified with the sacred cause of freedom; and
lastly,
Because we regard with filial jealousy the honour of this Commonwealth,
and are unwilling that it should be exposed to reproach, as clinging
obstinately to illiberal principles, which the most enlightened minds have
exploded.
Boston Massachusetts, 1839.
(appendix)
Some weeks before the sailing of the packet, I went on board, as she lay
alongside the wharf on the East River, New York, to select my
state-room. I engaged one for myself and Miss Saunders, who was one
of the party with whom I had arranged to cross the ocean. I bore in mind
the exhortation I had received from an experienced sailor, to secure a
berth on the starboard side of the ladies' cabin; for the sake, among
other reasons, of being out of the way of the scents and sounds of the
steward's pantry, The state-room I secured was on the
starboard side. The captain wrote my name and Miss Saunder's on slips
of paper, which he pinned to the curtains of the berths. He then introduced
me to the stewardess, Margaret, a bonny, obliging Scotch girl, whose
countenance and manner pleased me exceedingly.
The ship, which I shall call the Eurydice, was not so new, so clean, or
so convenient, as most on the line; but there were considerations in favour
of our going by her which overbalanced these objections. The high character
of the captain, and his being a personal friend of some of our party, were
the chief inducements to us to go by the Eurydice. She stayed too on the
first of August, which was the season at which we wished to cross.
The day before we were to sail, I was informed that Miss Lamine, a
passenger, had been to the ship, and had removed Miss Saunders's
ticket from the curtain of the berth, and substituted her own, on the
ground of Miss Saunders's passage having been only conditionally
engaged. This was true; but it was no excuse for the lady's
ill-manners. As anything is better than squabbling anywhere, and
particularly on board ship, where people cannot get out of each
other's
way, I gave up the point, surrendering my berth to Miss Saunders, who was an invalid, and taking up with a state-room on the larboard side, which I had to share with a young orphan girl, Kate, who, being left destitute by the recent death of both her parents, was allowed by the captain's kindness to work her way over to her friends in Wales, by assisting the stewardess.
My things were packed so as to occasion the least possible trouble to
myself and the people on board. Some passengers are not so considerate as
they should be about this. The ladies' cabin is small enough at best;
and it should never be crowded with trunks and bandboxes, for people to
tumble over in rough weather. Such encumbrances are unsightly, too; and in
a situation like that of being on board ship, every care should be taken to
avoid offence to eye or mind. The ladies' cabin should be as neat as
any parlour in a private house. A carpet-bag and bandbox, such as
the state-room will easily hold, may be made to contain all that is
necessary for a month's voyage; with the addition of a few good
books, in which the owner's name should be written, and which should
not be too fine to be willingly lent.
I carried no stores. Everything requisite for good eating and drinking
is so abundantly provided on board these packets, that it is useless to
burden oneself with anything more. Some of the ladies found comfort in
ginger lozenges, and each should have a vinaigrette. I do not remember that
anything else was in request. Warm clothing is essential to comfort. While
basking in a July sun on shore, it is difficult to believe how bitter the
cold will be a few miles out at sea; but no amount of cloaks, furs, and
woollen over-shoes can be too great for comfort during the first and
last days of a voyage, usually the coldest of the term. There is much
comfort in having two cloaks; one to wear, and another to wrap round the
feet on cold days, and in a high wind.
The 1st of August was an intensely hot day: I looked with
amazement at my boa, fur tippet, warm cloak and gown, and wondered whether
it was possible that I should in a few hours be shivering, in spite of them
all. About eleven o'clock, the passengers assembled on board a
steam-boat which was to convey them to their ship. Some, of whom I
was one, were attended by friends who meant to accompany them as far as
Sandy Hook, the southern point of New York bay. It was a dismal morning,
sad with the sorrows of parting. We tried to amuse ourselves after we had
stepped on board by showing the ship to the children who were to return. I
was rather dismayed to see the
range of water-casks on deck, looking like a very ugly encumbrance. In the more modern packets they are out of sight.
We were towed out of the harbour by a steamer; and the motion was so
smooth, the shores so bright, and the luncheon in the cabin so good, that
the children evidently thought a voyage must be an extremely pleasant
affair. They little knew how heavy were the hearts of their parents and
friends round the table, with the parting glass at their lips, and parting
emotions struggling in their hearts.
A certain square box of mine contained some papers of value; and this
circumstance was mentioned to the captain by a mutual friend, without my
knowledge. The captain said the box should not go down into the hold with
the rest, but should stand under the table in the gentlemen's cabin,
where it would be in nobody's way, and would be kept dry. It will be
seen what grew out of this small circumstance.
The characters of the passengers will appear in the course of the
narrative. At present they may be thus indicated. My own party consisted of
Professor Ely and his lady; Miss Saunders; Mr. Tracy, a youth just from
college, and going to travel in Europe with the professor and his lady; and
Lieutenant Browning, of the American navy. With Miss Lamine was an old
Dutch lady, Mrs. Happen. A very stout widow lady, with her two daughters,
Irish, and strangers to us all, and Miss Taylor, the captain's
invalid sister, made up the number of ladies. An elderly Scotch gentleman,
Mr. Bruce, appeared after two days, having been laid up in his berth with a
bruised leg. Some young men from New Orleans and Mobile; Dr. Sharp, Mr.
Simpson, Mr. Larkin, and Mr. Mann, were the only others that I now
remember.
By four o'clock we were off Sandy Hook, and it was necessary for
our New York friends to return. I promised to send them a minute journal of
the events of our voyage. With a few suppressions and amplifications, the
following is what I sent them:--
August 3.--Already I feel or believe myself able to write; if you
can but manage to read an unsteady scrawl on damp paper. Fortified by
chicken broth, red with cayenne pepper, I begin my
journal:--
Before we had quite lost sight of your steamer the pilot began to be in
a hurry off. "Haul away, boys, and no humbugging!" cried he.
Soon after, he told the captain to "sail due east, and keep the white
buoy on his weather bow," and departed--too soon--before we
were over the bar; and the captain was too anxious to go down to dinner.
Mrs. Ely was too much of something else, and so sat still
in the round-house (the sort of summer-house on deck, built round the head of the stairs leading down into the cabin.) Miss Saunders went down with me, still declaring that no Saunders was ever yet sea-sick since the world began. Presently, however, she said at table, "Shall I pass you?" and glad enough she was to get into the air. The motion of the ship now became unpleasant, and I was not sorry when the ladies left their dessert to repair to the deck.
I found that Mrs. Ely did not present a model of colouring for a
portrait-painter; her eyes and lips being yellow, and her cheeks
ash-colour. I tried to read the Boston newspapers I had received in
the morning, but was too heavy at heart, and found them strangely
uninteresting. Just before I went down for the night, at seven
o'clock, I was cheered by a single charm in Miss Saunders--a
precious look and gesture of fun in the midst of distress. O the worth of
good-humour at sea! What a contrast was here to Miss Lamine, who
made a noise all evening and night, such as was never heard in these upper
regions before, I should think. She was evidently anxious that every one on
board should know the extent of her sufferings. The captain told me in the
morning that he had been explaining to his sister that "noise does no
good, and is not fair."
When in the morning with much toil I got myself on deck (the only lady,)
the captain congratulated me on our rough sea and rapid progress:
"very good for the sea-sick." These favourable
circumstances, however, sent me down before noon, to re-appear no
more till evening. The captain is as kind as a brother, and as handy as a
lady's maid. In the midst of our distresses, Margaret's
innocent face and kind voice are a comfort to see and hear. To set against
these solaces, the flies are almost intolerable, notwithstanding my
state-room (which it was thought would not be wanted) being
luxuriously hung with cobwebs. These flies must be of American extraction,
to judge by the pertinacity of their disposition. Only two or three showed
the breeding of English flies in keeping away after a certain number of
rebuffs. What can be the reason of the difference between your flies and
ours in pertinacity? If Margaret was driven at last to throw her apron over
her face, what must have been the annoyance to us invalids? I lay on the
sofa. I wish you had seen the august captain approach, pepper-box in
hand, and followed by a cup of hot chicken-broth. I felt seasoned
for half a century, and took to the 'Life of Mackintosh,' of
which I read half a volume before laying the book down. Then I thought of
three particularly pleasant things, which you said to me on Sunday and
Monday. Can you remember
or imagine what they were? I will only say that they were nothing personal. Then I toiled up on deck to see the sun set; admired him the minute before; and then forgot all about him till he had disappeared. Lieutenant Browning offered me the astronomical comfort of assuring me that I had really seen the last of the sun, and that it was only the refraction that I had missed. This was about as effectual as consolation usually is.
Thinking that the captain looked grave about his poor flock of ladies,
and knowing that nothing is more dispiriting to the captain than the
absence of passengers from the table, I plunged down into the cabin to tea,
and staid an hour, beguiled by seine pleasant conversation.
Some remarkable events have happened to-day. Mrs. Happen's
cat has caught a mouse. This opens a prospect of some unlooked-for
provisions, in case of our voyage being three months long, and our stock
failing. Professor Ely has donned his sea-dress, popping his head up
the stairs in a cap, which must have been a grenadier's. We dubbed
him Captain Ely. Dr. Sharp is disconsolate for want of "two small
buttons" for the straps of his pantaloons. He implored the steward to
furnish him with some,--in vain. The under-steward,in vain
also. The captain. The captain was brought down into the cabin, to hear
this petition; and offered that "two small buttons" should be
cut off his own pantaloons for Dr. Sharp's use;--which Dr. Sharp
accepted! Miss Saunders saw a Portuguese-man-of-war
before I did, which makes me jealous. Do you know why this little fish is
thus called? I have endeavoured in vain to learn. Some wag says that it is
because, as soon as a gale rises, it fills and goes down; but this must be
said out of some special grudge against the Portuguese navy. I have seen
these beautiful little mariners of the deep of various hues and sizes, some
as large as my fist, some as small as my grandmother's teacups. I
have seen them of a rich violet, of a pale lilac, and of a dingy pink;
their hue evidently not depending wholly on the sunshine or shade in which
they may be gliding. Before I became acquainted with them, I fancied that
they floated only in sunshine, and on a calm sea; but I have seen them in
almost all weathers. They are most beautiful when shining on the surface of
a deep blue sea; but they allow themselves to be tossed about on the crests
of troubled waves, and turned over and over in rough weather, before
"they fill and go down." I never handled one. The sailors are
unwilling to catch them; and when they do, are careful to fetch them up in
bowls or nets, and to avoid touching the fish; as, on being
touched, it discharges a fluid which raises a large blister on the skin, and is very painful. The part of the fish which answers to the shell of the nautilus is soft,--a mere membrane; but its form is that of a nautilus shell, and it floats like a tiny but substantial boat, the fibrous parts of the little fish depending and moving as it changes its direction. Except the dolphin, I think the Portuguese-man-of-war the prettiest of the inhabitants of the deep which come to the surface to delight the eye of the passenger.
I saw to-day two Mother Carey's chickens. We shall have
them now sporting about our ship all the way. I wish we could change our
swarms of flies into these pretty creatures.
Mrs. Happen's quick eye saw my box under the table in the
gentlemen's cabin. She says "If some people's boxes are
taken care of, so shall other people's be;" and she has
actually ordered the steward to bring up her trunks from between decks, and
put them in the same place. Her jealousy being once roused, there will be
no more peace in her mind all the voyage. She quarrelled with the captain
at the dinner-table, for letting the lamp in the ladies' cabin
blow out at two in the morning. He answered by sending us the binnacle
lamp, which cannot blow out. He is much too good to her. She is on bad
terms with several of the passengers already.
The captain has been making war against the flies, sweeping thousands of
them out of the skylight to the birds; so that they will be changed into
Mother Carey's chickens in a different way from what I meant. He
brought me down a chick of Mother Carey's brood. Pretty creature!
with its long legs and yellow web-feet, and curious hooked beak! It
stumbled and fluttered about the deck, and then we let it get away. I never
could conceive before how these birds walked on the water, which I saw they
certainly did. They never leave us, flitting about, apparently without
rest, from the time we are out of sight of land, till we come near it
again. They are in flocks of from two or three to thirty or forty. They
feed on the refuse food thrown from the ship.
The captain lashed up a stool on the rail, to serve for the back of a
chair. Here I sat in the breeze, enjoying some feelings of health again,
and proceeding rapidly with "Mackintosh's Life," which is
very interesting.
Mrs. Ely is on deck to-day, dizzy but better. The other ladies
are still disconsolate, and show no disposition to be sociable.
4th.--A heavenly day: the perfection of sailing. It is
unreasonable to expect more than one such a day in a month's voyage.
The
wind was fair, mild, and balmy; the sea radiant in all directions. The captain gave orders to "square the yards" (a delightful sound always), and we cut steadily through the waves all day,--perceiving only in the cabin that we were on the sighing bosom of the deep. Our sails being all set, the captain and crew seemed quite at leisure. I saw no less than six Portuguese-men-of-war, wetting their lilac sails in the purple sea. I could not leave such a sight, even for the amusement of hauling over the letter-bags. Mr. Ely put on his spectacles; Mrs. Ely drew a chair; others lay along on deck to examine the superscriptions of the letters from Irish emigrants to their friends. It is wonderful how some of these epistles reach their destination; the following, for instance, begun at the top left-hand corner, and elaborately prolonged to the bottom right one:--"Mrs. A.B. ile of man douglas wits sped England." The letter-bags are opened for the purpose of sorting out those which are for delivery in port from the rest. A fine day is always chosen, generally towards the end of the voyage, when amusements become scarce, and the passengers are growing weary. It is pleasant to sit on the rail, and see the passengers gathered round the heap of letters, and to hear the shouts of merriment when any exceedingly original superscription comes under notice. Though the ladies seem by this time all well, some of them show no disposition to render themselves agreeable; and the captain was thus tempted to an early development of all his resources of amusement.
Mrs. Happen presently came up, and indulged in a passion of tears. Her
cat is missing, and she is sure some cruel person has thrown it overboard,
because somebody wrung her Poll-parrot's neck on her first
voyage. We suggested that it was more probable that pussy, feeling
frightened, had hidden herself, and would re-appear. But the weeping
lady was sure that all was over with pussy. At dinner, her eyes were much
swollen, but she was disposed for some turkey, and sent her plate to Mr.
Ely for some, begging that it might be without bone. He sent her a plump
wing, which she returned with an order to him to take the bones out. In the
evening there was a bustle on deck: all the stewards were running
with hot water and cold, and the ladies with
"eau-de-Cologne." Mrs. Happen was
hysterical,--fainting, from the news having been too suddenly imparted
to her that her cat had re-appeared in the cabin. Mrs.
Happen's negro-maid, Sally, has orders to keep her
mistress's state-room so shut up (in August) as that pussy may
not hide herself again.
The two Miss O'Briens appeared today on deck, speaking to
nobody, sitting on the same seats, with their feet on the same letterbag, reading two volumes of the same book, and dressed alike, even to the yellow spectacles, which are so far unbecoming as that they make good grey eyes look grass-green. Their mother has not yet appeared at table, and keeps her pillows about her; but I twice saw her during dinner steal to the steward's pantry, and come forth with a replenished plate, in addition to the lobster-salad we sent her. There is fear that she will not shrink materially, though she assures Mrs. Ely that "a spare diet is the only thing at sea." In this opinion I do not agree with her. I have reason to think a full and generous diet necessary to health at sea,--and particularly during the season of sickness. The reason, I believe, why some do not think so, is that they feel ill and miserable after eating; but they should remember how ill and miserable they felt before eating; and how much more so they might have been without eating. Disagreeable as is the effort to eat during sea-sickness, I am persuaded that, where it can be made, it obviates much suffering.
We began to be uneasy about knowing nothing of the steerage passengers.
To be in the same bottom, on the wide ocean, and to be strangers, cannot be
right. If some of the ladies prefer alienation, so be it: but we mean
to give the rest of the people the means of acquaintanceship with us, if we
can do it without intrusion. What can these worthy folks, amidst their real
privations, think of the story of Mrs. Happen's troubles, if the tale
should reach their end of the ship?
The stars came out softly in our wide sky; and the sun set amidst
indications of continued fair winds. Mr. Browning shows me our place on the
chart every noon. We are about 400 miles from New York;--going further
from you, the more we exult in our fair breeze. We meant to have had a
rubber to-night, but found the cabin too warm. Every body is on
deck, except some gentlemen who are at cards. I am going to see how the dim
ocean looks under the stars.
I found less dimness than light upon deck. The captain never knew so
sultry a night in this latitude. The sea was luminous; the exquisite light
spreading in a flood from every breaking wave. There were explosions of
lightning from the cloudy west. We dashed through the sea, and made great
progress during the night, having accomplished one-fifth of our
voyage by morning.
What a loss has there been of this glorious day to such as were stormy
within while all was bright around!
August 5th.--A day as disagreeable as yesterday was the contrary.
Damp, stifling, with much rain, and rolling, which threw us back upon our
patience. Miss Saunders is gentle and merry. Every body begins to praise
her. The ship is very inferior to the one I came out in;--in stewards,
and in all manner of arrangements; but I can scarcely regret this, as it is
the means of displaying the captain's virtues. We are in constant
admiration of his patience, ingenuity, and consideration of everybody. Mrs.
Happen's insults only make him more generous.
Before breakfast, for two. dreary hours, Mrs. Ely beguiled us with
capital sketches of character;--oddities. She does this very
well: a little coarsely, perhaps, and not absolutely simply; but with
much power. I read the first half of her book in the proofs.
... ... ... ... ... ... ...
Mr. Simpson began talking to me to-day about some mutual
acquaintance. He can tell me every thing about Mexico, where he has been
living. He has a true understanding of the Texan cause. He says the
Mexicans hate all foreigners, and call them all English. It is too bad to
mix us up with the Texans; though, as I am sorry to say, there have been
English in the Texan ranks.
An hour before dinner, the clouds parted, and the wind became fresher
and drier. I fell asleep on the rail, while looking for sea-sights,
and woke refreshed.
In the afternoon, Miss Saunders and I had a long talk on the rail on the
difference between religion, spontaneous and artificial: natural and
arbitrary; professionally and unconsciously administered; with
examples: all this arising out of some lines she brought me about
gradual and sudden death. I amazed her by telling her of the incessant
conflict in --'s mind, between her free and joyous nature, and
the separate, arbitrary religion which she has had imposed upon her; but
which will not for ever prevent her discovering that religion has a natural
affinity with whatever is free, pure, lofty and exhilarating. She is one
who would certainly break loose, or grow hypocritical in time, if she could
not get liberty for her devotional spirit.
Then followed, our own party having assembled, not a few tales of
travel, I furnishing an account of my Michigan trip. In the evening, the
Elys, Mr. Tracy and I played a rubber. They are slow and young players, but
pleasant partners and adversaries. Tracy will play well--On deck, to
see that there was nothing to be seen this moonless night. So uncomfortable
with the damp heat of the day as to be unwilling to go down; but it is
against my conscience to keep the
girls up; and they will not go to rest till we do. I slept pretty well after all.
6th.--I really cannot write down all Mrs. Happen's freaks.
The captain is now busy with hammer and nails, trying to please her. She is
jealous of a bandbox of Kate's, standing in the entire
state-room, which her negro maid is allowed to have. She cannot
possibly spare the curtains from the berth in her state-room, that
she does not sleep in; and so forth.
I like Mr. Browning. He has been telling me some anecdotes of greatness,
all full of the richest moral beauty. When he was at Marseilles, he went
about hunting for the house where Guyon died. Nobody knew anything about
Guyon!
At breakfast, five or six of us had a long talk about
dressing-boxes, of all things. This led to the display of our
respective ones, which was very amusing. Mrs. Ely's was the most nice
and complete; and Lieutenant Browning's perhaps the most
commodious,--being nothing else than a stocking! He thinks us worthy
to hear the whole truth about our voyage; and so tells us that
to-day we are going slowly, four points out of our course; that we
got too far south at the outset; that we shall not cross "the
Banks," and shall therefore see neither icebergs nor
cod-boats; that we have got into a region of calms and light winds,
and shall probably have a long voyage. My heart sank for a moment,--I
had so long counted the days which had home at the end of them; but I
esteem it a sin to let one's countenance fall on board ship; and we
all joked upon the matter.
Found on deck Mr. Bruce, who has been in his berth nursing a wounded
leg, ever since we came on board. He is Scotch, acquainted with divers
literary folk in London; droll, and pretty sensible:--an
acquisition, particularly to the captain, as he has promised to turn his
novelty to good account with Mrs. Happen, who has quarrelled with every
body else. He is going to lay himself out to amuse her. He has written some
things for "Hood's Comic Annual." He will get some fine
new material here.
Dr. Sharp asks the captain to-day if rain is quite fresh at
sea.
Mr. Happen owns she had a prejudice against Mr. Tracy from the moment
she saw him.--She supposes Mrs. Ely and I enjoy the voyage from
knowing that we shall never be in such society again.--She begs Mr.
Browning to inform her rightly about our course; for she never saw such
mates in her life. Miss Lamine is very nearly as bad. She
complains of everything, and has nicknamed every body. The captain told her
not to feel uneasy at being of the same party
with Mrs. Happen, as no one supposed Miss Lamine to have anything to do with the old lady's behaviour. Miss Lamine went directly, and told Mrs. Happen every word that the captain had said.
(scene)
Miss Lamine writing on the sofa; Margaret and Sally
Marg.
"Where's the cat
now?"
Sally.
"In
Missus's
state-room."
Marg.
"She
'll get away, as sure as she's alive."
(A groan from Sally.)
Marg.
"Why
don't you tie her
up?"
Sally.
"I vow I will, if
I can get a bit 'o
cord."
Marg.
"Only, perhaps,
your mistress will tie you up, if the cat happens not to like
it."
Sally.
"Perhaps she
will: only then she must get a pretty strong cord; that I can tell
her."
Mr. Mann, and the Mate.
Mate.
"I'll
tell you what, sir--we've got this head-wind, all because
you will keep catching Mother Carey's chickens. If you go on catching
them, we shall have a gale ahead."
Mr.
Mann.
"In that case, I should advise your throwing the
cat overboard."
Mate.
"Then we
shall have a gale within ship that will last us all the way to
Liverpool."
11th.--Found it
calm: chickens "tripping a
ballet," as Mrs. Ely says; and Lieutenant Browning predicting a fair
wind,--which has this moment arrived.--The weather has been
deplorable, and we have been rolled about, in the midst of one of those
pelting rains which make every body busy in keeping dry without being
stifled. Mr. Ely was wholly and happily absorbed in Southey's
"Cowper." The rest of us talked and laughed in the
round-house till poor Mrs. O'Brien (who begins to show herself
a second Mrs. Happen) abruptly left the company, and burst into the cabin,
exclaiming that we were all the lowest and most ignorant society she ever
was in. For my part, I thought some of the conversation, particularly the
captain's, Mr. Browning's, and Miss Saunders's, very
clever and entertaining. After a while, the weather conquered most of us.
In vain the captain sent round his champagne, and his jokes, and kind
sayings. Poor man! when the stars showed themselves, and the long tempest
seemed over, and he was going to bed, after two days and a night of toil, the weather changed, and he could not leave the deck for hours. What a life it is!
Mr. Browning put on his sea-coat and went out into the storm, and
came back, the rain streaming from his hat and chin, to praise the ship. He
knew few that would stand such a wind under so much sail. I was glad to
hear this, for certainly her inside is not to be praised. How strange it is
to see music and lyres stuck up all over her, old and dirty as she is! and
to see black coal buckets, with "Eurydice" painted on them!
Miss Lamine lays down the law that "each passenger ought to have a
whole state-room, twice the size of ours; but the people try to make
money instead of accommodating the passengers." The question is,
whether she would like to pay accordingly. She never uses her berth, after
all, but sleeps on the sofa.
Mrs. Happen could not perceive that there was any particular motion
to-day. On the instant over went her rocking-chair on one
side, throwing her into Miss O'Brien's lap.
12th.--We do long for a little cheery weather. The captain is
somewhat serious about it. He never knew so much damp, changeable weather
at this season. We are past the Banks without having seen anything. Only
one porpoise has shown himself. Only one ship has been hailed, and she did
not answer; all which sounds very dull. I have been reading Southey's
"Cowper," which has not mended the matter much. It is as
interesting as possible, but most dismal.
I feel very small in the presence of the sailors. How they must look
down upon us, fleeing in from every drop of rain; getting under the awning
as soon as the sun shines, and going to bed comfortably every night,
whatever the weather may be! I feel myself truly contemptible.
The captain and I had a full hour's talk in the evening, when he
was tired, after forty-eight hours of toil. He told me a great deal
about his wife and children, and all about the loss of his brother last
winter. The death of this brother has made a deep impression upon him. He
asked me much about the degree of faith which it is possible to have in a
future life, and gave me his own conceptions of it. I was heartily sorry
when the tea-bell rang. The simplicity of this man, with all his
other qualities, is beautiful. So serious, so funny (he has now been
peeping down upon us through the skylight, with his round face in a
lady's long deck-bonnet;) so brave and cheerful, so amiable
with his cross passengers, and his inefficient
crew! Mrs. Ely says he is just as gentle with his crew in the midst of a stormy night, as with Mrs. Happen at table. Her room is where she can hear all that passes on deck. One miserable day, he looked himself to the making of the pea-soup, ordering the ham-bone in; then he mended the lock on Mrs. Ely's room-door; then he came and talked of this life and other with me.
Mr. Browning is not in very good spirits. He says he has had more
experience of bad company than ever before; and he now associates only with
us. Poor Mrs. Happen sits all alone on deck. People speak kindly to her,
but she makes no sort of answer. I am glad to see she reads a good
deal.
The box of books, sent on board for the steerage by a benevolent
gentleman, was brought up a few days ago, and immediately emptied. It is a
fine resource for the idle men, and I like to see them perched on casks and
chests absorbed in their books. We cannot succeed in making acquaintance
with these people. Perhaps they have found out that our end of the ship is
squally.
Yesterday the captain shouted, for the first time, "Splice the
main-brace" (Give out grog.) Mrs. Ely and I had previously
done it in a small private way, without having so earned the comfort. The
captain is now heard giving orders to kill the finest pig tonight. I think
I shall ask him to shave and soap its tail first, and set the passengers to
catch it. It might unite them in a common object, and restore
good-humour. The cow was not milked on our two roughest days, at
which the complainers profess to be very angry, and threaten to report the
captain for it. If I were he, I would set them to try what milking cows in
a rolling sea is like. Miss Saunders's geranium pines, and will be as
yellow as the mast before we land.
The captain told me this evening, what he does not wish the other ladies
to know till we are within sight of port, lest they should be alarmed, that
the mate behaved so ill as to be necessarily sent back with the pilot. The
second mate was made first, and the carpenter second mate; and neither of
them knows much of his business; so the captain has hard work to do. He
says, "There is Lieutenant Browning to command, if anything should
happen to me."
Mr. Bruce gave me a dreadful account today of his sufferings from
tic-douloureux, and of his cure, which he ascribes to his having
taken nightly a pill consisting of three grains of mercury and one of
stramonium. He is well now and very kind and agreeable.
15th.--Better news. For some hours we had a fair wind and delicious
weather. We have been becalmed for days, between two
winds, catching all the bad consequences of each, and none of the good. But these are the times for feeling that one stands between two worlds; looking forward and back upon the divisions of human society, and able to survey them without prejudice, and to philosophize upon them without interruption. These are the times for feeling as if one could do something for one's race by toiling for it, and by keeping aloof from the storms of its passions and its selfish interests; humbly, not proudly, aloof. Such thoughts arise in the isolation of a voyage, as if they came up from the caverns of the deep. On the centre of the ocean one is as in another state of existence, with all one's humanity about one.
Everybody's ailments are gone, and all but the two unhappy old
ladies look cheery this morning. I saw a whale yesterday. Mr. Bruce
pronounced it "no orator, because it did not spout well;" but I
was quite satisfied with its performances,--heaving its black carcase,
and wallowing and plunging in the dirty-looking boiling sea. How
different was everything the next morning. The sapphire sea, with its fleet
of Portuguese-men-of-war; a single land-bird
flitting and fluttering, from Newtfoundland no doubt. Pity it had not faith
to come on board, for I fear it will never get back.
I saw three flying fish--very pretty--leaping from the crest
of one wave into another: but nothing was to me so beautiful as the
transparent ripple, seen above the surface when the sun got low. After
reading --'s capital sermon, I read no more, but sat with Miss
Saunders on the rail all day, having much talk, with long intervals of
silence. Mrs. Ely wrote all the morning; but I could not bear to lose a
breath of balmy air, or a hue of the sweet sea. In the afternoon, we
repeated poetry and sang, and promised each other scientific lectures on
deck daily this next week. Do not laugh at us. You would have promised
anything whatever on such an afternoon.
In the evening, five of us had a long conversation on European politics
and American democracy, till the captain came to take me, first to the
bows, to see the full sails swelling against the star-lit sky, and
then to the stern, to see how bright a train of light we left behind us, as
we dashed through at the rate of ten knots an hour. Professor Ely gave us a
little history of the improvements in astronomy and navigation, the
elements of these sciences being furnished by observation in the bright
regions of the East to the foggy and scientific West. When these
improvements are carried back to the starlit East, what may not the science
become?
The captain brought me today a book, about the size of the palm
of my hand, that I might look at a short poem,--rather pretty. He was very mysterious: the book was not published; was written by some one on board. We all guessed Mr. Bruce. But no; everybody had been told in a whisper, before two hours were over, that it was by Mr. Kitton, the artist and poet. Mr. Kitton was a poor sick gentleman, who had been in his berth ever since we sailed, and who now began to creep out into the sunshine. Dr. Sharp attended him professionally, and he had a friend to nurse him. We saw nothing of him except when he sat on deck in the middle of the day. He looked wretchedly, but I believe his complaints were not alarming.
Mrs. Happen treated the captain cruelly to-day. He looks grave,
though he owns he ought not to mind her. The ship we saw on Thursday kept
dallying about us for three days, and would not speak when hailed. I wish
Mrs. Happen could have been put on board of her; they would suit
exactly.
There is one thing interesting about the Miss O'Briens. They are
very attentive and affectionate to their mother; which, considering how she
sometimes treats them, speaks well for their tempers. She may well
pronounce them "very steady girls." But their conversation is
of that kind which, however often one may hear it, one can scarcely credit
on recollection. I set down one specimen, as a fair example. Dr. Sharp was
called yesterday to-one of the crew who was ill. As he returned,
looking rather thoughtful, Mr. Mann observed to the O'Brien family
that the doctor was quite a man of consequence to-day. Thereupon
ensued,--
First Miss O. "La! Doctor, how consequential you look!"
Second Miss O. "Well! Doctor, how consequential you
look!"
Mrs. O. "Why, the Doctor does look consequential
indeed!"
First Miss O. (to Mr. Mann.) "La! Sir, how consequential the
Doctor does look!"
Second Miss O. "Now does n't the Doctor look quite
consequential?"--And so on, for above ten minutes.
The captain has just been unpacking a hundred towels; a goodly sight for
those who rehearse drowning every morning (in salt water,) as I do. I am
certain that no practice is so beneficial to health at sea as plenty of
bathing, with friction afterwards. A large foot-bath, or small tub,
may easily be procured; and the steward will draw up a bucket or two of
sea-water every morning. A sea-faring friend told me this
before I sailed; and I have often been thankful for the advice.
Our cargo is partly turpentine. The vessel leaks and so do the
turpentine casks; and what comes up by the pumps is so nauseous as to cause much complaint among the passengers. There was no time at New York to get the copper bottom mended; and the crew are hard worked with the pumping. The captain says if the leak increases, he shall employ the steerage passengers at the pumps. Mr. Browning shows me the chart. We are rather more than half way. He considers it two-thirds, as the best is all to come. "All down hill now," he says.
August 17th.--Going on most prosperously. We have never slackened
on our course since I made my last entry. Kind-hearted Margaret came
to my bed-side early this morning, to tell me that at four
o'clock we were going twelve knots, right on our course. If we hold
on till noon, we are pretty sure of being carried straight in by this
blessed wind. All are well, and in better temper, unless it be Mrs. Happen.
Yesterday, while all was bright and gleesome, she was "low."
She did not know that we should ever arrive! Betting is the order of the
day with the idle young men. As the weather is not wet, and they cannot
therefore bet upon the raindrops running down the cabin windows, they are
obliged to find or make other subjects for bets. Yesterday at dinner they
betted about whether they could roll up bits of bread so tight as not to
break when thrown down on deck! Also whether they could swallow a pill of
bread so rolled up, the size of the end of the thumb. They were so
impatient they could not wait till the cloth was removed, but missed their
dessert for the sake of this thumbed bread. They bet at cards, and one of
them declared he had lost sixteen dollars,--£4. After having
talked very loud over their cards, till just midnight, last night Dr. Sharp
got his flute, and played execrably, till requested to be quiet till
morning. It did not occur to him that he was disturbing anybody.
The captain is very grave, while all looks so prosperous. His sister
says,with tears, that "it is a hard voyage to him;" but we tell
her it will not matter a month hence, when his unamiable passengers will
have dispersed to the four winds. He discovered yesterday that the stewards
have been leaving the ice-house door open, so that the ice is nearly
all gone; and he fears he shall lose some of his best joints of beef. Upon
this he good-humouredly said, "Sea-captains are not
intended to be good-tempered. It should not be looked for. At the
top of a heap of little vexations, comes a gale; and then they should not
be expected not to shout pretty sharply to their crews." We do not
believe he ever does. He showed good manners yesterday to a ship that we
hailed. In the early morning, when the fog drew up,
there was an ethereal vision of a ship on our horizon. We overtook her just at noon. (We overtake every thing.) She looked so beautiful all the morning, that we did nothing but watch her. As we approached we went to leeward, the captain explaining, in answer to our questions, that it is worth losing a little time to be civil. She was the St. Vincent of Bristol, thirty-three days from Jamaica. I pitied the poor ladies on board, of whom we saw many on deck. The captains each asked the other to report him, in case of arriving first. Our young men laughed at the idea of our being reported by a ship thirty-three days from Jamaica; but our captain looked grave, and said it looked presumptuous to make sure of our having no accident; and uncivil to assure the St. Vincent that she could not, by possibility, be of any service to us. She could have spared us some limes; but it would have used up too much time to send a boat for them; so we dashed on, and she was out of sight westward before the afternoon. I never saw a greater press of sail than she carried; but her bows were like a breakwater, so square and clumsy.
In the afternoon I read "Much Ado about Nothing," and
watched a shoal of porpoises. They are welcome visitors in any weather; but
they seem extremely lively in a rough sea, chasing one another, and
shooting through the midst of a rising billow. They are sometimes caught
and killed, to be eaten more as a curiosity than a delicacy. I am told that
the meat resembles coarse and tough beef. The mate wounded one
to-day; and its companions crowded on it to eat it up. Some Jaques
on board asked me if this was not the way of the world; to which I
indignantly answered, No!
18th--Still dashing on. Mr. Browning expects that we shall get in
on Tuesday of next week: the captain says Thursday or Friday. I
listen to neither, knowing how little such calculations are to be depended
upon.
21st, Sunday.--We have been rolling about so that it has been
impossible to write. We have had a fine run for eight days now.
Yesterday's observation gave 220 miles for the twenty-four
hours. The captain says we are pretty sure of running straight up to
Liverpool. By to-morrow morning, we may see land. I dreamed last
night that I saw it first;--a lovely Irish hill. It is almost too cold
now to be on deck, with any amount of cloakage: a sign of being near
land. The joke since we passed half-way, has been to annoy me by
ascribing all evils whatever to the foggy English climate. Mr. Browning
began; the captain carries it on; and the ingenuity with which they keep it
up is surprising. Something of the sort drops
from the captain's lips, like a grave passing observation, many times a day. I shall have no respite now; for every one will be too cold till we land.
We had a prodigious run last night. While we were at our rubber, the
news spread (as news does on board ship) that the captain was on deck,
taking in sail, ordering in the dead-lights (the shutters which
block up the cabin-windows in the stern,) and "expecting a
blow." Under the idea that it was raining, I was, for once, about to
retire to my room without running up on deck; but the captain came for me,
thinking I should like to see what was doing: and indeed he was
right. Though he had taken in the studding-sails, mainsail, and
royals, we were flying through at the rate of twelve knots. The clouds were
blown down the eastern sky,--and the stars so bright they looked as if
they were coming down. But below us, what a sight! The dazzling spray was
dashed half a mile off, in a level surface which looked like a white marble
floor, gemmed with stars. The captain says, people talk of the monotony of
the sea; but the land is to him monotonous in comparison with the variety
in which he revels in his night-watches. It is evidently a perpetual
excitement and delight to him. But, truly, the contrast between the deck
and the cabin is wonderful. When I came down at midnight, I thought it
possible that some of the ladies might be alarmed; and I therefore told
Margaret, in a voice loud enough to be heard by any who might be trembling
in their berths, that the captain said it would be a fine night, and that
the stars were already bright. Half an hour after, when I was asleep, Miss
Saunders came down, and the following took place:-
A trembling voice from somewhere cried, "Miss Saunders! Miss
Saunders!"
Miss Saunders peers into all the ladies' rooms, and finds it is
Miss O'Brien who calls.
Miss O. "Miss Saunders, is the storm very
bad?--is there much danger?"
Miss S. "There is no storm, m'am: only a brisk, fair
wind. I heard nothing of any danger."
When Miss Saunders is falling asleep, she is roused by another call. She
puts on a cloak, and goes to Miss O'Brien's room.
Miss O. "O, Miss Saunders! have n't we shipped a
sea?"
Miss S. looks round the cabin. "No, ma'am: I do not
see any sea."
Before she is quite asleep, she hears Miss Lamine's voice from the
sofa, to which the captain has kindly lashed chairs, to prevent her falling off; as she persists in sleeping there, though retaining her berth.
Miss Lamine. "O, Mrs. Happen! Mrs. Happen!"
Mrs. H. "Well! what do you want?"
Miss L. "We are sinking, ma'am. I feel the ship
sinking!"
Miss Saunders wakes up to assure the ladies that the ship is on the
surface. Mrs. Happen grumbles at her first sleep being broken. She slept no
more; and of course is out of humour with the whole universe to-day.
Nothing is on her lips but that Miss Lamine broke her first and only
sleep.
I have had a talk, prodigious for its breadth, length, depth, and
earnestness, with Mr. Browning, about the duty of republicans exercising
the suffrage; brought on by his saying that he had never voted but once in
his life. I believe we said an octavo volume between us,--I hope to
some purpose. He is a good man, with a warm simple heart, a full sense of
what he owes to his excellent wife, and a head which only wants to be put a
little in order. He is full of knowledge, and fond of thinking.
Mrs. O'Brien has, we suppose, kept her temper in check as long as
she can; for now it is coming out worse than Mrs. Happen's, if that
be possible. At dinner, the other day, she began to scold her daughters, in
the presence of passengers and servants: but the captain warded it
off by saying that he would not have the young ladies found fault with, for
that I had been telling him that I thought them very attentive and
affectionate daughters. She looked gratified and complacent; but not for
long. In the evening, she complained to Mrs. Ely, who was on the sofa, very
unwell, of her own sensibilities; and confessed she felt very hysterical.
The confession from her lips is always a signal for the cabin being
cleared; every one dreading a scene. It was so now; and there were no
hysterics. This morning, however, the sensibilities thus repressed have
broken out; and a most unsanctified scene has disgraced our Sunday. The
lady was cold in the night. Margaret was sorry: would have been happy
to supply her with as many blankets as she pleased, if she had but asked
for them. The lady would perish rather than ask Margaret for anything. She
would have no breakfast. Margaret entreated: the daughters implored,
with many tears. The lady compelled them to go to the
breakfast-table with their swollen eyes; but no breakfast would she
have. Margaret, in the kindness of her heart, prepared a delicate
breakfast,--strong tea, hot buttered roll and sliced tongue. The
woman actually threw the breakfast at the girl's head! Margaret was fluttered, and said she did not know whether to laugh or cry. I advised her to do neither, if she could help it. At breakfast, the captain, knowing nothing of this scene, called--"Margaret, why don't you carry Mrs. O'Brien some breakfast?" "I did, sir," replied the girl in a whisper; "and she hove the bread at me." "O ho!" said the captain. Presently, he strode down the room, and into the ladies' cabin, both doors of which he shut. He soon came forth, looking his gravest. The lady was very "hysterical" all day. Every heart ached for her weeping daughters.
We have been asking Mr. Browning to propose the captain's health,
with an expression of thanks and friendship on the part of the passengers,
the day before we land. This is the usual practice, we believe, when the
captain has done his duty. Mr. Browning heartily consents, saying that it
is only the captain's temper which has kept any order at all. We hope
that Mrs. Happen may be so overawed as not to dare to move an
amendment.
Afternoon--Mr. Browning says he fears we must give the matter up.
The young men have been abusing the captain so grossly over their
wine,--particularly for not having the cow milked these two days, and
for letting Mr. Tracy have a room to himself, that something disagreable
would certainly arise out of any attempt to gratify our good friend. Our
acknowledgments must be made individually. Mr. Bruce drew up a very good
letter of thanks; but any formal proceeding from which one-third of
the passengers would probably choose to exclude themselves, would give the
captain as much pain in one way as pleasure in another.
We took our seats at the bottom of the table at the outset, to avoid any
contention about precedence. It is well we did; for the captain's
immediate presence is required to keep the conversation from being really
offensive: it's being very silly, even the captain cannot
prevent. Here is a specimen or two.
Mr. Mann. "Mr. A. has so many bales of cotton for sale this
year."
Mr. Larkin. "I am sure I have not got that number of bales of
cotton."
Dr. Sharp. "No; because you are a bale of cotton yourself."
(Roars of laughter.)
Dr. Sharp. "Somebody always says to me at tea-time,
'Sir, will you have black tea or green tea?' I expect somebody
will say to me some day, 'Sir will you have red tea or yellow
tea?'" (Roars of laughter.)
Since I came on board, I seem to have gained a new sense of the value of
knowledge, of an active, reasonable mind, as well as of a disciplined and
benevolent temper. Notwithstanding the occasional mirth of these people,
and their ostentatious party merriment, I think I never saw persons so
unhappy. No suffering from poverty or sickness ever struck me so mournfully
as the misery of these ship-mates, from vacuity of mind; from
selfishness, with all its little affectations; from jealousy, with its
intolerable torments. How they get on in their homes I have no means of
knowing; but the contrast at sea between them and such of their
fellow-passengers as are peaceable, active, employed, and mutually
accommodating is one of the most striking and instructive spectacles I ever
witnessed. The mischief has not stopped with their immediate suffering from
ennui and ill-humour: some have
been led to plot crime, which it is no merit of their own that they do not
execute. I cannot enter here upon this part of their disgusting
history: suffice it that the captain's vigilance and authority
are too strong for them.
The wind blew us on gloriously all day; and there was every expectation
at bed-time that we might see land at daybreak. In the evening, we
sketched out European tours, by the map, for such of our party as were
going to travel; and we were all in fine spirits. The young men at the
upper end of the table had an argument as to whether Sunday was over, so
that they might go to cards. They appealed to Miss Lamine whether Sunday
was not over when the sun set. She decided in the negative; so Dr. Sharp
began doling forth a Report of a Charity, in the most melancholy voice
imaginable; and the whole coterie moved off very early to bed.
22nd.--The young men are making up for last evening's
abstinence. They are busy at cards, almost before breakfast is cleared
away. What can they suppose religion is?
I have seen some Irish earth. On sounding, we find sixty fathoms and
some sand came up on the lead. Mr. Browning thinks it not so clean and neat
as American sand. A calm fell at five o'clock; and we are moving very
slowly. There is fog at a distance; but we have seen a faint,
brief line of coast. I do hope the sun will come out, and the wind freshen
at noon. Meantime, the sea has lost its deep blue beauty, and we have not
arrived at the beauty of the land; so I think it an excellent time for
writing.
You should see how faded and even rotten our dresses look, from head to
foot. To-morrow or Wednesday we hope to have the pleasure of
dressing so as not to be ashamed of ourselves and one another.
But it is a piece of extravagance, which none but silly people are guilty of, to dress well at sea, where the incessant damp and salt ruin all fabrics and all colors. Silks fade; and cottons cannot be washed; stuffs shrink and curl. Dark prints perhaps look neat the longest. Mrs. Ely's drawn bonnet, of gingham, looks the handsomest article of dress now on board; unless it be Miss Taylor's neat black-print gown.
23rd.--The rest of yesterday was very interesting. On going up,
before noon, I found Ringan Head visible at forty-five miles off;
and three other points of high land. At one, a favourable breeze sprang up,
and lasted till evening, when it died away. We drew nearer and nearer to
land, till we were within twelve miles. This was off the Point of Kinsale,
where we were when the calm fell. The captain called me up after dinner, to
show me where the Albion was lost; the packet commanded by Captain
Williams, which was lost, with all the crew and passengers but two or
three, I think, some ten or twelve years ago. I could see the spot
distinctly; a bay between two high points of land. The captain ran into
this bay in thick weather, and was unable to get out again. If the Albion
had struck a few reds further on, she would have gone on a sloping
sand-beach, and the passengers might have got out, almost without
wetting their feet. As it was, she struck against a perpendicular wall of
rock.
The captain stayed talking with me all the afternoon, and we watched for
the kindling of the light on the high Point of Kinsale, 400 feet above the
sea. It looked so beautiful and so friendly that we could attend to nothing
else. The last light I saw was the Fort Gratiot light, on the wild evening
when I left lake Huron in a thunder-storm. How familiar did the
Kinsale light look in comparison! The captain's heart was quite
opened by it. "I shall stand here," he had declared,
"till I see that light. It is of no consequence to me; I know where I
am, and how to steer, but it is pleasant to me to see those lights. They
ought to have kindled it by this time. I wonder we don't see it.
There! there it is! You can't see it well yet. It will be deep red
presently. So many pleasant thoughts belong to such a light--so many
lives saved--so many feelings made comfortable!" I
felt it like the first welcome home. The dim outline of land in the morning
was pleasant but mute: here were human hands at work for us. It was,
to all intents and purposes, a signal; and I could not turn my eyes from
it.
We saw, this afternoon, a fishing-boat with its dark brown sails.
Through the glass, I discerned two men in her, and cried out that I had
seen two Irishmen. Everybody laughed at me. To be sure, we
have more than that on board; and you may meet 100 per hour in New York; but that is not like seeing them in their own boat, fishing in their own sea. Sail hovered about us all day. Mrs. O'Brien is busy in the cabin among her bandboxes, quilling and trimming. I shall not take out any of my land-clothes yet, to get mildewed, when we may still be some time in reaching port. I am afraid of growing restless if I prepare for shore too soon. One would shun the heart-sickness of hope deferred when one can. Pouring rain to-night; so we sit down to our rubber as if we had not seen the land. This is chiefly (as it has been throughout) for Mr. Ely's sake. He is very poorly, and reads quite enough by daylight. He seems to enjoy his rubber in the evening.
This morning the weather is not favourable. The wind has been round to
every point of the compass during the night, and is now blowing from the
north-east, "right a-head." I do not feel very
impatient at present. Miss Saunders is rather glad of the delay. She dreads
landing among strangers, though she knows they are already friends.
Mrs. Ely has been very bold this morning with Mrs. O'Brien (as the
lady had no buttered roll by her) about the fees to the stewardess. The
stewardess depends solely upon the fees paid by the lady passengers; and
the service is so important, and so extremely fatiguing, that it ought to
be well paid. The stewardess has to attend upon the ladies, night and day,
in their sea-sickness; to keep their state-rooms; to wait at
meals in the large cabin; to be up before all the ladies, and go to rest
after them. Among such a company of ladies, there are usually some who rise
early, and always some who go to rest very late; and commonly a few who
cannot be easily pleased, and who keep their attendant on the foot at all
hours, without any consideration. When all this is considered, and it is
remembered how helpless and uncomfortable the ladies would be without such
a servant, it is clear that the stewardess should be handsomely paid. The
captain interested us particularly for Margaret, by telling us that she was
extremely poor, as she sent every shilling she could spare from her
absolute wants to her old father and mother in Scotland. Judging by what we
knew to have been done in similar cases, we agreed that Margaret should
have a sovereign from each of us. Miss Lamine, and Miss Taylor, and the
ladies of our party paid this; but Mrs. O'Brien declared she would
pay nothing, as Margaret had shown her no attention at all! It will be too
bad if, in addition to the many crying fits this woman has occasioned to
the poor girl, and all the toil
she and her daughters have imposed upon her, night and day, she defrauds her of the money she has fairly earned. Mrs. O'Brien became so "hysterical" that Mrs. Ely had to desist for this time; but she does not mean to let the matter stop here. As for Mrs. Happen, she not only refused to give anything, but, in her passion at being asked, sent the plate down the whole length of the table. There is something really terrifying in such tempers. Mrs. Ely changed colour as if she had been in the wrong, instead of the right. Mr. Browning says there are occasions on which people show their real selves,--in the treatment of their servants. I own that I was as much surprised as I was indignant, to find that people of good property, as these ladies both are, could stoop to accept the hard service of a very poor girl, with the knowledge all the time that they meant to defraud her of her wages. They might at least have given her warning, that she might know that she was conferring charity upon them in serving them. I trust they will think better of the matter, and repair their injustice to her at last.
We are now between Cork and Milford Haven, out of sight of land.
25th.--Now, did you not expect that the next entry would be of our
arrival? Far from it. There is much to be said first. I was obliged to quit
my writing, last time, by the rolling of the ship; and for the rest of the
day, we were treated with a gale, far more stormy than any we had during
the voyage. It blew tremendously from the north-east. With the tide
in our favour, and every sail snug, we were driven in the direction of the
Devonshire coast; and thankful we were that we had plenty of
sea-room. Mrs. Ely and others were as sick as ever; and at dinner
there was the well-remembered scene of every thing solid slipping
about the dishes, and every thing liquid being spilled: though the
frames were on,--the wooden frames, made to fit the tables, with holes
for the bottles and glasses. It was a truly uncomfortable day, though there
was nothing to occasion fear in any but the most timid persons.
Yesterday morning we had the alternative of being sick below, or
half-sick and half-frozen on deck. We preferred the latter,
and were ere long repaid. We were going over the ground lost the day
before, standing in for the Irish coast. There were large flocks of
Neptune's sheep (waves breaking into foam;) and the sky was so clear,
that Mr. Browning, with his malicious eye-glass, could not discern a
streak of English fog all day.
About noon, the outline of the Dungarvon Mountains appeared,
and the bay of Tramore, with three white towers at one extremity, and one at the other, and the town of Tramore, at the bottom of the bay. We saw, too, the high lighthouse at the extremity of Waterford Bay, and a steam-boat in the entrance. Seven other sail were about us, and we felt in the midst of society once more. Before we tacked we came near enough to see the recesses in the sharp-cut rocks or cliffs on the shore, and the green downs sloping up from their summits. With the glass I could distinguish the windows of three large houses in Tramore. The outline of the mountains behind was very fine, and the lights and shadows on them delicious to behold. We tacked all day, and amused ourselves with watching the points of the shore, advancing and receding; with speaking the ship "Georgia of Boston," bound to New York, which we hope will report us to you; and with admiring the clear setting sun, and the rising moon, almost at the full. She never looked finer since she was first set spinning.
There was some sad nonsense among us, even on this important and
pleasurable day. Mrs. O'Brien looked cold, as she sat on the rail, in
the breeze, and Mr. Simpson caused his warm broad-cloth cloak to be
brought for her. Mrs. Happen, who was sitting on deck, sheltered and in the
sun, growled out, "You never offered me your cloak."
Immediately after dinner, when the gentlemen were at their wine, she sent
Sally down for Mr. Simpson's cloak, and wore it all the
afternoon.
The captain promised us the quietest night we had had since we left New
York; and I accordingly went to sleep, nothing doubting, though the last
thing I was aware of was that there was a prodigious tramping upon deck,
which I concluded was from the crew shifting the sails. I slept till
daylight, and thus missed a scene, partly dreadful, partly ridiculous. This
tramping excited the attention of the ladies; and Mrs. Ely next heard a cry
of distress from the deck, and then another, a sort of scream. The
gentlemen rushed from their rooms, and up on deck; the ladies screamed, and
said it was fire, the ship sinking, running foul of another ship, and much
besides. Miss Taylor (still very delicate) heard every voice calling
"Captain! Captain!" and naturally supposing that something had
happened to her brother, fainted away in her berth, where she was found
some time after still insensible. One gentleman brought out his pistol, and
Mrs. Happen entreated that she might not be shot. Mrs. Ely and Miss
Saunders remained in their rooms, and were presently told that there was no
danger, that it was all over. The captain put forth his authority, and
ordered every body to bed. How much the passengers
really knew of the cause of this bustle I cannot say; but the affair was this. The captain had a bad crew. Yesterday, at the instigation of a mischievous fellow among them, there was a sort of mutiny about their beef; a silly complaint, particularly foolish when preferred almost within sight of port. Mr. Browning knew that the captain meant to shut up the ringleader in the ice-house (now as warm as any part of the ship) at midnight, when the passengers should be asleep. The man resisted, making so much noise over the passengers' heads, that the captain sent him into confinement in the forepart of the ship: but it was too late for secrecy. The captain is much annoyed at the confusion created; and I do not think he is aware that any of us know the cause.
All is quiet enough this morning. It is bright and cold. We are off
Tusca lighthouse, the extreme south-east point of Ireland; and the
little wind there is fair. This mutiny is a good hint. If we grow dull, I
shall propose a mutiny about the handles of the milk pitchers, which were
broken off in the gale; the pitchers being thus rendered inconvenient to
hold.
At this moment, Mr. Tracy brings news that the captain expects to be off
Holyhead this evening; so I jump up, and run to unpack and arrange for
landing, that I may have the last few hours free. O, with what pleasure I
took out gown, shawl, bonnet and gloves for to-morrow! packing up
books; putting away everything sea-spoiled, and being completely at
liberty by dinner-time!
In the afternoon, the captain found a dry seat on the binnacle for Miss
Saunders and me; and then went and stood by himself, too much excited for
conversation. Mr. Browning told us we could not understand the emotions of
the captain of a ship on concluding his voyage. We talked of our homes on
either side of the water; and looked out through the fog and rain, dimly
discerning a ship which we supposed to be the packet of the
24th.--After tea we played, for Mr. Ely's sake, our final
rubber: but we could not attend to our cards, and were glad to throw
them away. At half-past ten o'clock, we ran up to see the
Holyhead light. As we passed in the dark, there could be no telegraphic
communication to Liverpool of our approach, and we must give up the hope of
seeing our friends on the pier.
26th.--At six, Miss Saunders came to my room, dressed, and talked
for an hour, the cabin being in great confusion with the preparations of
the ladies. We sent Margaret to learn where we were. About thirty miles
from Liverpool; but the tide would not allow us to get
to port before eleven. Every body was assembled early on deck, dressed for landing; and each, as he appeared, more spruce than the last. The cook could not be prevailed upon to let us have a slovenly breakfast early, that we might be wholly at leisure at the last. By a little after nine, however, the steams of breakfast ascended; and before that time I saw, through the glass, the church steeples of Liverpool. The Welsh mountains looked lovely through the thin haze, which Mr. Browning chose to call a fog.
Mr. Bruce gratified me by a piece of truly kind consideration. He said
that, from the absence of notice of our approach from Holyhead, my friends
would not probably be awaiting me. He was alone, with time to spare. If I
would give him a line to my friends, he would be the first to step ashore,
and would bring them to me. I promised to accept his good offices, if,
after reasonable waiting, no familiar faces appeared on the pier.
Soon after breakfast we saw the floating lights and the castle at the
mouth of the Mersey; then New Brighton, with its white houses, trim gardens
and plantations; and then some golden harvest-fields. The
post-office boat was soon seen coming towards us--a sign we
were expected. Then came the custom-house boat, to deposit an
officer on board. We pointed out to Miss Saunders the gable of a house
covered with ivy;--a plant which she had read of, since she could read
at all, but never seen, as it does not grow in America. She was surprised
at the narrowness of the Mersey; Mr. Bruce apologized for it;--a bad
habit which he had learned in America, we told him.
As we hove alongside the pier groups began to assemble; chiefly
work-people from about the docks. All had their hands in their
pockets; and Miss Saunders asked me, laughing, whether she was to conclude
that all Englishmen carried their hands there. In a few minutes breathless
gentlemen came running down the Parade. Among them I found the face I was
looking for. A watchman had given notice, from the top of the Exchange,
that the Eurydice was coming up the river, and in an incredibly short time
the news spread over the town. With eager kindness the captain fixed the
plank, and handed me on shore.
I am sure this gentleman must by this time have more of your esteem and
regard than ever. We, his passengers, feel that we are more deeply indebted
to him than he knows of; not only for his professional qualities and
hospitality, but for a lesson on the value of good temper, and the dignity
of greatness of mind.
As for the rest, they kept up their characters to the end. Miss
Lamine's last act on board was ordering the steward to throw
overboard Miss Saunders's geranium, brought from Dr. Channing's
garden in Rhode Island, and kept alive through the voyage by great care.
Wherever these ladies may have gone (and we have heard nothing of them
since,) they carry with them our sincerest pity. Others of the company of
shipmates have since repeatedly met, and enjoyed, as shipmates do, the
retrospect of the brighter days of their Month at Sea.
(appendix)
(letter)
PUTNEY PARK, Sunday, 27th December,
1840.
DEAR MISS MARTINEAU,--I have often regretted that Lord Grey's
intention had been so strenuously resisted by you, and that he had not
remained in power long enough to afford time for you to reconsider your
first impulse.
I write now to say that although I have only spoken to one
person on the subject, we were both strongly of opinion that it
ought to be a gratification to Lord Melbourne to do what Lord
Grey would have done; and I only wish to know that, if such a step were
taken, it would not be resisted by you.
I do not wish to give you the trouble of writing to me on this subject.
Your silence will be quite sufficient; and I trust you know me well enough
to confide in the discretion of
Dear Miss Martineau, Yours very faithfully,
R.HUTTON.
(letter)
TYNEMOUTH, December 29, 1840.
MY DEAR MR. HUTTON,--Our friend has given me your letter. She would
not keep back for a day what she knew would be so sure a gratification to
me. You would not easily believe the delight your note has afforded me, as
a fresh instance of your faithful and generous friendship.
It is a pleasure to me to answer your note: but, if it were not, I
should write, on account of the interpretation which my silence would bear.
My objections to Literary pensions, conferred otherwise than immediately by
Parliament, remain in full force. I owe it to your kindness to state the
grounds of my objections to this mode of vision: but I own to you,
that (apart from all scruples of pride) my
feelings against receiving a pension are full as strong as my reason, and would, I believe, induce me to give my present answer, if I had no reasons to offer.
The first of these reasons is that I think money conferred as a reward
for public service should be given by the public served,--such service
having been altogether irrespective of Government. If such pensions were
conferred by the representatives of the people, instead of by the
ministers, (whom I cannot look upon as true exponents of the popular desire
in this instance) I might perhaps thankfully accept what under present
arrangements I must decline.--Again I am certain that I should lose
more or less of my freedom of speech, if not of thought. I am aware how
generously it is desired that the recipients of pensions should divest
themselves of this feeling. But with me this would be impossible. I could
never again deny to myself that I was under a personal obligation to the
Premier and others; and I need not specify to you what restrictions would
follow of course.
Again, I am sure that my personal influence, and that which I exercise
through the press would suffer much--not with all, but with many. If I
were fully satisfied as to the act being unexceptionable, I should probably
disregard any misinterpretation that might be put upon it. But, feeling as
I do, I should suffer from any consequent decline of my influence, without
having a fight to complain; accompanied as such decline would be by a loss
on my own part of self-respect. I have a strong suspicion that if I
accepted a pension, I should never again address the public with freedom
and satisfaction.
You will not, I am sure, suspect me of blaming any who take the sort of
pension which I feel myself compelled to decline. If they think and feel
differently, they are right in acting differently. I speak only for
myself.
Let me assure you that I do not feel the need of this assistance. My
wants are small, and thus far I have supplied them. I am still able to
work. If I lose this power, I have a little in store to meet what will then
probably be but a short exigency. If I continue able to work, I hope to
remain as free from anxiety about the means of subsistence as I am at
present.
I do not say that I, in common with other authors, have not a claim for
aid; just cause to complain of my poverty: but the claim is one which
cannot be met by royal or ministerial bounty. If literary property had been
protected by law as all other property is, I should
now have been enjoying more than a competence, together with advantages of another kind, which I value far more. In this direction, my dear friend, you may be able to benefit, not me, perhaps,--it may be too late for that, but many authors in a future time, who may be happier in the protection of the laws than literary labourers of this generation. To ministers who will see to the carrying out of laws already passed for our protection, and to Members of Parliament who will urge the passing of others, I promise gratitude as strong as if I owed them a situation of pecuniary ease for life.
I shall feel henceforth that fresh strength has been added to the
respect and regard with which I have ever been
Yours most truly,
H. MARTINEAU.
(letter)
INDIA BOARD, Wednesday,August 18th,
1841.
DEAR MISS MARTINEAU--Lord Melbourne having heard of your present
illness, as well as of the inconvenience to which you are subjected by the
mode in which your money is settled, has desired me as a friend of yours to
inquire whether you would accept a pension of £150 per annum on the
Civil List. It is out of his power to offer you more in the present state
of things: but I hope you will not refuse him the opportunity of
giving this proof of his respect for your writings and character,
inadequate as the amount proposed may be.
If you will accept this offer, have the goodness to write me word to
that effect; and let me have the answer by return of post, as Lord
Melbourne is desirous of completing the arrangement before he goes out of
office.
I cannot tell you how grieved I have been by recent accounts of your
sufferings: and how rejoiced I shall be if the offer which I have now
the pleasure of communicating to you shall have the effect of contributing
in any degree to your comfort.
Believe me, Dear Miss Martineau, Yours very truly,
CHARLES BULLER, Junr.
(letter)
12, FRONT STREET, TYNEMOUTH, August 19th,
1841.
SIR,--I am requested by my sister, Miss Harriet Martineau, to
acknowledge the receipt of your kind communication of yesterday's
date. She is too unwell, I regret to have to state, to write tonight, She commissions me therefore to give from her her answer to the most considerate proposal with which she has been honoured by Lord Melbourne. Her answer is that she cannot accept it. She hopes in a few posts to send explanations which will show that her decision arises neither from disrespect nor insensibility to the kindness: least of all from any regard to the amount.
I have the honour to remain, Sir, Yours with much respect,
ROBERT MARTINEAU.
(letter)
Charles Buller, Esq., M.P., &c., &c.
Tynemouth, August 21st, 1841.
DEAR MR. BULLER,--I am far from wishing to trouble Lord Melbourne
or you with my views on Literary Pensions; but the great consideration and
kindness shown in Lord Melbourne's remembrance of me at this untoward
time require from me something more than the very abrupt reply I was
compelled to send by Friday morning's post.
I should like Lord Melbourne to understand that my decision is no hasty
one;--that it rests on no passing feeling or prejudice, but on a real
opinion that I should be doing wrong in accepting a pension. My opinion has
been held through some changes of persons as the proposed givers,--and
through some vicissitudes in the circumstances of myself as the proposed
receiver, of such a pension. The first mention of a provision of this kind
was made to me in November 1832, when I was informed that I was to have a
pension of the amount now specified on the conclusion of my work on the
Poor Laws. I should doubtless then have taken it, if it had been actually
offered. On reflection I changed my mind: and when I found that Lord
Grey had still a wish that the thing should be done, I wrote to Lord
Durham, (then in Russia) to request that nothing more' should be said
about it, as I could not conscientiously accept a provision from this
source. I have since had occasion to make the same reply to two inquiries
from different quarters whether I would agree to such an arrangement for my
benefit.
Lord Melbourne will not, I think, wonder at my feeling of repugnance to
touch the proceeds (except as salary for public service) of a system of
taxation so unjust as I have in print, for long and at large, declared it
my opinion that ours is. It matters not how generously
the gift may be intended, how considerately it may be bestowed,--how specifically it is designed to benefit such a case as mine. These considerations affect, most agreeably, my personal feelings towards those who would aid me; but they cannot reconcile me to live upon money (not salary) levied affectively upon those, among others, whom I have made it my business to befriend, (however humbly)--the working classes. Such services as I may have rendered to them are unconsciously received by them; and I cannot accept reward at any expense to them. If this provision be not designed as recompense, but as aid,--as a pure gift,--I cannot take it, as they who provide the means have no voice in the appropriation of it to me personally. About the principles of taxation, a surprising agreement has grown up on our side of late. Whenever we obtain a just system of taxation, the time may perhaps follow when, among other minor considerations, some plan may be discovered by which the people's representatives may exercise the power of encouraging and rewarding merit and services working through the press; and then even the most scrupulous, with no better view of their own claims than I have, may be happy to receive, in their time of need, aid from the public purse. Meanwhile I seriously and truly feel that I had rather, if need were, (to put an extreme case) receive aid from the parish, and in the work-house, where I could clearly read my claim, than in the very agreeable manner proposed, where I can see no excuse for my indulgence.--If it be true that in the case of gifts, we do not nicely measure the grounds of claim,--surely there is an exception in the one case of gifts from the public purse.
Some of my friends would persuade me that my great losses from the
defective protection afforded to literary property in this country entitle
me to compensation in whatever form I can obtain it. But I see the matter
differently. Taking compensation from those who have not injured me,
leaving inequitable profits in the hands of those who have, seems to me
only making a bad matter worse.
But this pension is offered with another view than this. It is offered
in remedy of a case such as the fund is expressly provided to meet. Be it
so: but while I know that the members of a government are (as they
ought to be) otherwise employed than in looking into the retreats of
suffering, to discover for themselves what poverty and sickness it is most
just to aid from the public purse,--while I know that such gifts from
the hand of the most discriminating and
the most kind of ministers must be but a set of chances as to their gradations of justice,--I should be for ever mistrusting my own happy chance. On the one hand, I should see public benefactors, before whom I am nothing, pining in privation from which my pension would relieve them: and, on the other, I should be haunted by images of thousands and hundreds of thousands of poor tax-payers,--toiling men who cannot, with all their toil, keep their children in health of body,--to say nothing of their minds. "Mighty visions about a small matter," you may perhaps think: but, small or great, the moment I had acted on it, this matter would become no less than all-important to my peace of mind. Indeed, I would rather, in the present circumstances of the country, put my hand into the fire than into the public purse.
Let me assure you that I do not need this pension as my friends suppose.
They know my means well enough, but they overrate my wants. This very sum
which you speak of apologetically would quite meet my wants in the way I
live here. I have no permanent uneasiness about income. If I should ever be
well enough to work again (from which I am now, at last, driven) I trust I
shall find, as hitherto, that my head and hands will keep my life. If my
enforced illness should continue very long, I hope to keep my expenditure
within my actual means.
I beg you to assure Lord Melbourne that my feelings of respectful
gratitude to him are exactly the same as if I could have accepted the
proposed gift. My refusal arises from causes which are out of any
one's control. Of the comfort I should have derived from this annual
income no one can be so sensible as myself; and I consider myself his
debtor for what it would have been.
One of my pleasures, this summer, has been the Liskeard
election.* How hearty it was!
My friends are too anxious about my "state of suffering."
There is little enough of good prospect about the case; but by excellent
medical management, the suffering is reduced to something very
inconsiderable. The repose of such retreat is delightful.
(letter)
INDIA BOARD, August 26th.
MY DEAR MISS MARTINEAU,--I am very sorry that you have not thought
it right to accept the pension which has been offered to you: but I
cannot but respect most highly the conscientious feelings which induced you
to decline it. And I am most glad to find that you so justly and kindly
appreciate Lord Melbourne's conduct in making the offer. He regrets
that it has been unavailing: but let me assure you that he is very
sensible of the kind terms in which you expressed yourself about him, and
of the high motives by which you have been actuated in your refusal.
I would fain hope from the language of your letter, and from seeing that
you have of late been publishing new works, that you do not suffer much, or
rather, so much as I had been led to believe. I trust that you are not
doomed to the long inaction which you yourself apprehend: and that
you may, if not soon, at any rate at some time be restored to your former
vigour and enjoyment of life.
... ... ... ... ... ... ...
Yours very truly,
CHARLES BULLER, Junr.
(letter)
HOWICK, Monday, October 31st, 1842.
MY DEAR MISS MARTINEAU,--I am very sorry that the publication of
our correspondence should have caused you a moment's uneasiness. I
did not first see it in the "Chronicle:" and the paper in
which I did see it (I think it was the "Times") did give a
letter from -- showing that the publication took place without your
sanction. This was all that was requisite to satisfy me, for the
correspondence itself is most honourable to you, very much so to Lord
Melbourne, and even a little so to me. I cannot regret that the world
should know it: nor can he.
I should have written to him to give the little explanation necessary to
set every thing right with him, had I not been prevented by hearing of his
illness. It is, I am sorry to hear from too good authority far more serious
than the papers like to represent it: for it was a paralytic stroke,
which deprived him for a while of the use of one side: and though he
has already partly recovered this, they say he will probably never again be
able to take an active part in public life. When I return to town, which
will be before the end of the week, I will explain the matter to him, if I
hear that he is well enough to entertain the subject.
I am much nearer you than you imagined; and did hope to be able to go to
see you in my way to London. But I fear that I shall be obliged to hurry
back in great haste.
... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...
I wish you had given me better tidings of your health. I did hear a
better account of it: but I fear from what you say that you have no
immediate prospect of returning strength.
Believe me, dear Miss Martineau, Very truly yours,
CHARLES BULLER, Junr.
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