Passages of a Working Life during Half a Century
Chapter II
CHAPTER II.
THE first number of the “Windsor and Eton Express” lies before me. It looks to my
mind like some relic of a past era of journalism, in which I have no especial interest, any
more than I have in a fac-simile of a “Times” of the days of Nelson which has
been recently published. I am told that some of the middle-aged inhabitants of my native
town preserve this first newspaper ever issued there, as a curiosity of the time of their
fathers—a piece of dim antiquity like a guinea of George
III. I look anxiously at my “Political Inquirer,” and I do not
blush at my earliest attempts in the vocation of “best public
instructor.”
Why do I not blush at some of these crude efforts of inexperience? Because,
although the things which I then wrote may be something different from my maturer
convictions, they were written under a strong sense of the serious nature of the vocation
of a public writer. I dare say that, in my want of knowledge of the world, I wore my
“Foolscap uniform turn’d up with ink” |
somewhat too grandly. “Anxious” I was, if not “fine and
jealous.” But this sense of my moral responsibility has saved me from a feeling of
shame, as I now look back upon the feeble utterances of the 128 | PASSAGES OF A WORKING LIFE: | [Ch. II. |
time thus
brought before me, something like a dream. These utterances were those of an impulsive
young man; but of one who felt the duty of controlling his inclination to express himself
passionately. I wrote with a motto from Locke always
at the head of my political essay,—“This is a question only of inquirers, not
disputers, who neither affirm, nor deny, but examine.” This motto often held
my hand. I had a notion that rapid composition was a test of ability. I used to task myself
to write a leading article in a given time. The habit has been of value to me in after
life; it is of infinite importance to the journalist. But it is of more importance that
what he writes should not at some future day rise up in judgment against him,
“trumpet-tongued,” and convict him—not of the suppressio veri, for that is incidental to his profession, as it is
to the barrister’s—but of the assertion of opinions which were the exact contrary of
his own convictions. Let me not, however, be held to imply that what is called political
consistency is a virtue in the man of advanced age—that the rash judgments of his youth are
to be preserved in his maturity. The mind that is not open to the teachings of time, and
that chooses to stand upon its own “ancient way,” and not look around to see
“which is the right and true way,” is worth little as a guide for the formation
of opinion.
Amongst the startling contrasts that are presented between the England of
1812 and the England of half a century later, there is perhaps no contrast more remarkable
than that which offers itself to my mind in the difficulties of setting on foot a newspaper
at Windsor, such as I had projected as an easy and profitable employment for my literary
Ch. II.] | THE FIRST EPOCH. | 129 |
ambition. These rush upon my memory as I look upon my old
“folio of four pages,” and think of this my first venture upon a dangerous sea.
The newspaper stamp was then fourpence. The advertisement duty was three
shillings, subsequently raised to three shillings and sixpence. The blank paper was to be
stamped at Somerset House, the payment being in cash, with a discount. It will be seen at
once how these taxes pressed upon the capital to be devoted to such an undertaking. No
article of consumption, with the exception of salt, was so highly taxed as the Newspaper.
The circulation of a country journal was not a simple operation like that of a London
journal, which was, and is, a wholesale transaction between the newspaper proprietor and
the newsmen. The established custom was this: the country proprietor had agencies in the
larger towns, who had their own retail customers; but the greater number of the papers were
delivered, by newsmen specially employed, to the subscribers, whether in the place of
publication or in scattered country districts. These had quarterly accounts, which often
grew into half-yearly or yearly settlements. Thus the return of the capital was very slow.
The demand for the newspaper, and the number of advertisers, being thus
narrowed by the high price consequent upon the tax, the cost of production was to be met by
a comparatively small number of supporters. A cheap newspaper was an impossibility. But
there were expenses at that time which have altogether vanished under a different state of
social organization. The Windsor paper was to be published on a Saturday evening, in time
to be despatched by post to the more distant places. It was
130 | PASSAGES OF A WORKING LIFE: | [Ch. II. |
essential
that it should contain the latest news from the metropolis. The “London Gazette” was then published on a Saturday
afternoon. How was the “Gazette” to be obtained, and
also the late editions of the evening papers? For this object the long-established
“Salisbury Journal” had an
express direct from London to that city. By an arrangement with the London agent of that
journal, its express was to bring our despatch to Staines, from which place we should have
a branch express to Windsor. It would arrive about three quarters of an hour before our
post departed. Then there was to ensue a scurry of editor, compositors, pressmen, to
complete enough papers to fill two bags, which we were allowed to send to the receiving
post-offices at Staines and Maidenhead by the mail-carts from our town. All this could not
be accomplished without the most strenuous exertions and the most perfect division of
labour. It was to be calculated that in the beginning of the undertaking the machinery
would be often out of gear.
This laborious and costly organization was the only method of fighting with
space and time before the days of railway conveyance and the electric telegraph. The London
daily papers, which furnished the staple of news, had the same difficulties, though much
greater in degree, to contend against. The more considerable, especially the “Times,” had not only their special expresses
from the outports, but occasionally had a private packet-boat to pick up news from
homeward-bound ships before they came into port. The sudden arrival of foreign
intelligence, and the lateness of the sittings of Parliament, occasioned the morning papers
sometimes to
Ch. II.] | THE FIRST EPOCH. | 131 |
be delayed in publication till almost noon. If this
occurred on a Saturday, the “Times,” or the
“Post,” or the “Chronicle,” or the “British Press,” not reaching Windsor till
six in the evening, another leader would then have to be written. Sometimes the
“Times,” upon which most reliance could be placed
for the latest news, did not come at all. During the excitement of the great war-time the
demand outran the supply, for it was not till the end of 1814 that the “Times” was printed by steam machinery.
Our journal being once safely at press, there would come the arrangements for
its distribution through the rural districts, in addition to the small number which had
been sent off by post. The hamlets and scattered farm-houses and gentlemen’s seats
could not be reached by the post, at a time when not one village in twenty had a
post-office—when letters and newspapers remained with the postmaster of the market-town
till they were called for by the inhabitants of the surrounding district. Many a populous
parish was thus left to chance for the receipt of its private or its public intelligence.
Our new paper would have to meet this difficulty by our own express-carts, which were to
travel long distances, and by pedestrians, who would have many a weary mile to trudge over
unfrequented roads. These deliverers would seldom receive payment from the subscribers. The
debts would accumulate, requiring to be collected at periodical visits. Remittances in many
cases could not easily be made; in some cases they would be impossible, for the system of
postal money-orders was a quarter of a century later.
The price of a country newspaper was, in almost
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every
case, sevenpence. The wages of mechanical labour were high, keeping pace with the price of
wheat, which in 1812 was 150s. a quarter. Paper was extremely dear,
the duty being threepence a pound, and the cheapening by the paper machine, now so
efficient, being then one of the visions of the projector. In the absence, besides, of all
the modern appliances of civilization such as I have recited—which have so lessened the
cost of a provincial journal, and have increased the demand in a far greater ratio than the
doubling of the population—the number of country newspapers was comparatively small.
Throughout England there were less than a hundred. There were not a great many of them
which ventured upon original writing; but the leading article had become a feature with
those of the higher class, such as the “Leeds
Mercury,” after the beginning of the century. To express strong opinions
upon gross abuses was, however, a service of danger which most editors avoided in the days
of ex officio informations.
It was a perilous time for the newspaper press, for the people were
discontented, and the authorities were sensitive. They were especially sensitive in this
war-time as to any strictures which were supposed to have a tendency to weaken the
allegiance of the army, or render soldiers less satisfied under the severe discipline by
which alone obedience was held to be capable of enforcement. Military flogging was one of
the forbidden subjects for editorial comment. In the year 1812, William Cobbett was in Newgate, having been sentenced in 1810 to two
years’ imprisonment and a fine of a thousand pounds for a virulent effusion upon a
punishment which had taken
Ch. II.] | THE FIRST EPOCH. | 133 |
place in the local militia of Ely. In the
“Stamford News,” a paper most
ably conducted by Mr. John Scott (afterwards editor
of the “Champion”), an article
appeared at the same period, in which flogging was described as “a species of
torture at least as exquisite as any that was ever devised by the infernal ingenuity of
the Inquisition.” This article was copied into the “Examiner,” and Sir Vicary
Gibbs, the Attorney-General, filed informations against both papers. The
trial of John and Leigh Hunt came on the first, before Lord
Ellenborough, who laboured hard for a conviction. They were defended by
Mr. Brougham, and the Middlesex jury acquitted
them. The subsequent trial of Mr. Drakard, the
proprietor of the “Stamford News,” resulted in his
conviction, although the same advocate defended him. He was sentenced to eighteen
months’ imprisonment. Such a notable example of the uncertainty of trial by jury in
matters of political libel could give a public writer no great confidence that incautious
words, without evil intentions, might not be visited with punishment, such as is earned by
atrocious crimes. There was another subject upon which the law-officers of the Crown were
equally determined to war against public opinion. In proportion as the Prince Regent was becoming unpopular, the Attorney-General
resented any reflections upon his coxcombry and his frivolous tastes. Moore ran great risks when he dubbed the Prince
“the Mæcenas of Tailors.” But it was “most tolerable and
not to be endured” by the Dogberries who guarded the honour of Carlton House,
when a newspaper writer, who was not a pet of fashion, dared to say of his Royal
Highness—in ridicule of a fulsome article in the “Morning Post” in 134 | PASSAGES OF A WORKING LIFE: | [Ch. II. |
which he was
called “an Adonis in loveliness”—that this Adonis was “a corpulent gentleman of fifty.” The
ex-officio information against John and Leigh Hunt, for
a libel in the “Examiner“ of March 24th, 1812,
resulted in a fine of a thousand pounds and the imprisonment of each for two years in
separate prisons. Mr. Brougham had again defended the brothers, and
had the satisfaction to be told by Lord Ellenborough that he had
imbibed the spirit of his client, and seemed to have inoculated himself with all the poison
and mischief which this libel was calculated to effect. It was undoubtedly strong language
for the “Examiner” to designate the Prince as
“a violator of his word, a libertine over head and ears in debt and disgrace,
a despiser of domestic ties, the companion of gamblers and demireps, a man who has just
closed half a century without one single claim on the gratitude of his country or the
respect of posterity.” Posterity has not given such an answer as would put to
shame this daring appeal to its judgment. But the dispassionate lookers-on of that period
could not think it seemly that such harsh truths should be told of him who stood in the
place of a king—who, as chief magistrate, ought to claim from the people all respect and
reverence.
But it was not only the dread of indictment for political libel that hung
over the head of the newspaper proprietor in 1812. Any statement of fact, or any comment
upon occurrences that might be supposed to affect private character, were constantly made
the subject of actions, got up by rapacious attorneys, speculating upon that love of
litigation which was then especially characteristic of the English. It was
Ch. II.] | THE FIRST EPOCH. | 135 |
not till thirty years after 1812 that Lord
Campbell’s Act gave to the journalist the power to plead, in any
action for libel, “that such libel was inserted in such newspaper without actual
malice, and without gross negligence; and that before the commencement of the action,
or at the earliest opportunity afterwards, he inserted in such newspaper a full apology
for such libel.” Imagine, at the present day, the Lord Chief Justice of the
Court of Queens Bench trying an action for libel,—with two leaders, such as Mr. Denman for the prosecution, and Mr. Scarlett for the defence,—the alleged libel being the report in a
country newspaper of a flagrant case of cruelty which was a notorious subject of local
indignation. The libel consisted in terming that “a brutal assault,” upon which
the assailants were held to bail. Imagine that the persons whose characters were thus
defamed were a pig-keeper and his wife, who let lodgings to poor people; and having a
dispute with a family of which the mother had only been confined a week, threatened to pull
the bed from under her, and turn her into the street. Imagine a London jury finding a
verdict for the plaintiff, with 50l. damages. Imagine a second
action for the same libel being brought by the wife. Imagine ten several actions against
ten London papers, for reporting the trial in the King’s Bench with a few words of
just comment upon the scandal of such litigation, when there was no “private
malice” or “gross negligence.” Imagine a hungry attorney, prowling for
prey, at the bottom of all these actions, who had no object to attain but the heavy costs
which he pocketed. These verdicts cost me 500l. in 1825. Is not the
newspaper press in a better condition than it was in, forty years ago?
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PASSAGES OF A WORKING LIFE: |
[Ch. II. |
The perils of the Libel Law did not much affect my confident belief in 1812
that I could navigate my little bark in safety. But I did feel, perhaps too acutely, the
difficulties of my position as a journalist under the shadow of the Castle at Windsor. It
was a time in which the patriotism which had upheld the nation through the fierce struggle
of twenty years required, at this great crisis of our history, when the fate of England was
trembling in the balance, the prop of a sincere and spontaneous loyalty. I deeply felt, as
one about to become a public writer, that upon the head of the Government I could only
bestow
“mouth-honour, breath “Which, the poor heart would fain deny but dare not.” |
I look back upon the public feeling of the first twenty years of my working life, and
compare it with the quarter of a century which was blessed with a female Sovereign. Oh,
could the generation which, during the reign of Victoria, has entered upon the duties of mature age, know the full value of
their privilege in being able to cherish the loyalty of the subject, not as an abstract
principle, but as a holy sentiment, often rising into the warmest devotion, they would pity
the youth of a less happy time, who had a struggle to maintain even his love of country
amidst the “curses not loud but deep” which attended its sensual and
frivolous ruler! We should have been perhaps plunged into a profounder abyss of royal
degradation, had not the long-established habit of decency still kept the public Court
circle free from ladies whose “misfortune” (as Lord
Ellenborough termed the fashionable sin upon the Ch. II.] | THE FIRST EPOCH. | 137 |
trial
of the Hunts) met with no pity in the eyes of the rigid Queen Charlotte.
The political atmosphere was not very bright on the 1st of August, 1812,
when the Windsor newspaper struggled into life. The 29th of July was a day of gloom, for
the intelligence arrived that the United States of America had declared war against Great
Britain. Wellington had advanced into Spain in June.
His position was a very difficult one. The English army and the French army were on
opposite banks of the Douro in the early part of July. Marmont was expecting a large accession of strength in the junction of
King Joseph’s army from Madrid.
Wellington was disappointed of the arrival of reinforcements under
Lord William Bentinck. There was a wide-spread
conviction that the Government at home was feebly supporting the one great captain whose
genius appeared likely to retrieve the disasters of a long series of “warriors”
not “for the working-day.” Parliament was prorogued
on the 29th of July. The speech of the Prince Regent was
in no degree a jubilant prophecy of a glorious future. It tamely expressed a trust that the
independence of the Peninsula would be secured; and hoped that Parliament would duly
appreciate the importance of the struggle in which the Emperor
of Russia had been compelled to engage.
Little at that doubtful period did I foresee that for the next two years the
war would assume such gigantic proportions that the chief difficulty of a journalist, not
insensible to the honour and safety of his country, would be to calm down his feelings. His
duty would lie in the endeavour not to surrender himself wholly and absolutely to the
wondrous excite-
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ment of the hour; amidst the elevation of spirit which
invested the technical details of an Extraordinary Gazette with no little of the splendour
of an epic poem, not to forget that there was a battle to be fought at home—social wrongs
to be inquired into, popular ignorance to be combated, rude assaults of democratic violence
to be resisted, antiquated fallacies in political economy to be exposed. No one who belongs
to a later generation can properly estimate the national feeling of half a century ago,
when the war was for life or death, for liberty or slavery. But, with all this enthusiasm,
the grandeur of the crisis through which we were passing could not then be fully
understood. The journalist might present the multifarious details of this mighty war with
fidelity. He might lose no opportunity of keeping alive that spirit which had sustained the
country through twenty years of unprecedented danger. But for a philosophic comprehension
of events amidst which the finger of Providence might be dimly descried pointing to a
better future, he must watch and wait, till his vision should be enlarged by the lapse of
time into something like a historical perception of these aspects of Mutability.
It was Sunday night the 16th of August. The evening promenade in the Long
Walk, which had succeeded to the regal promenade on the Terrace, had been interrupted by
the sudden withdrawal of the band of the 29th Regiment, who were summoned to their
barracks. The sun had gone down behind the hills of the forest, as I sat lonely in a
cottage belonging to my father, which then stood apart from any other houses, fronting the
Long Walk. I was meditating upon the unofficial news, which had
Ch. II.] | THE FIRST EPOCH. | 139 |
arrived on the Saturday night, of a victory in Spain—shaping my thoughts into exulting
verse as the death-song of a Guerilla who lay bleeding on that battle-field. Suddenly, from
the not distant barracks, rose the burst of “God save the
King,” and the cheers of a multitude. I rushed to the town. The 29th
Regiment was marching out of Park Street along the Frogmore Road to the inspiriting tune
which revolutionary Frenchmen called “çà ira,” but
which loyal Englishmen translated into “The Downfall of
Paris.” The Extraordinary Gazette, containing Wellington’s despatches relating to the great victory of Salamanca,
had been published on that Sunday morning, and had arrived at Windsor, to demand from the
enthusiasm of the moment this hasty nightmarch. I followed the measured tramp of the
soldiery, in common with the great mass of our population, unknowing what was to be done,
and yet filled with the passionate desire of the hundreds around me to give expression to
the belief that the tide had turned—that England might shout for a mighty victory by land,
as she had shouted for the Nile and for Trafalgar. The joyous troops marched into a field
adjoining Frogmore Gardens, and there, formed into line, fired three volleys, and gave
three cheers. Such was the British war-cry which they had given three years before, when
they met the French at Talavera, and contributed their part to the great battle which, says
the strategist Jomini, “recovered the glory
of the successors of Marlborough, which for a
century had declined, and showed that the English infantry could contend with the best
in Europe.” If Talavera was the hardest-fought battle of modern times, as
Sir Arthur Wellesley described 140 | PASSAGES OF A WORKING LIFE: | [Ch. II. |
it, Salamanca
was the most fruitful in its results. This victory of Wellington over
Marmont gave confidence to Russia, and awakened the hopes of
Germany that a new era was approaching. My “Dying
Guerilla” was not a false prophet when he exclaimed— “I see embattled Europe’s wrath, sublime Rush to the field and blacken all the clime; Insulted nations spurn their blood-stain’d lord, And Vengeance draw the soul-redeeming sword.” * |
The first duty of a Provincial Journalist is to present always a faithful,
and if possible a full, account of the occurrences of his district. But how little of all
this is worth a more permanent record! I was unfortunate in having few noteable things to
relate beyond the ordinary routine of the life of the Castle, and the monotonous
proceedings of vestries and borough magistrates. Quarter-Sessions offered little of abiding
interest. Assizes sometimes furnished something characteristic of the age, which looked
like materials for the Annual Chronicler. But the most exciting of such matters are apt to
become as motes in the historical sunbeam. I glance over my old newspapers, and almost
wonder how many local trifles came to be printed. And yet the work of the
“penny-a-liner” is the most attractive, whether in town or country, for its
little day. Shall I relate a ghost-story which greatly excited the people of Windsor, even
amidst the stir of a general election, in 1812? On the Terrace, sentinels were stationed at
various points during the twenty-four hours. Most persons have heard the apocryphal tale of
the sentinel who was found at midnight asleep, as it was
Ch. II.] | THE FIRST EPOCH. | 141 |
supposed, on his post, and who proved his fidelity by maintaining that
he had heard St. Paul’s clock strike thirteen, which it was ascertained to have done,
according to the legend. As a boy, I have listened to stories of a black dog walking on the
Terrace, wearing a large chain which he fearfully clanked. After the King’s seclusion
in the apartments looking upon the North Terrace, such stories became more common. On the
night of the 29th of September, the corporal’s relief-guard found beneath the window
of a private room under Queen Elizabeth’s Gallery, a brave fellow of the 29th
Regiment, who had been wounded twice at Talavera, prostrate with his musket, his bayonet
and his cap by his side. Taken to the guard-room, he related how he had seen a figure in
black approaching him; how he had challenged it, but was unanswered; how having brought his
musket to the charge, and advanced towards it, the figure disappeared; and how after an
interval of more than an hour, the figure again appearing, he cried out,
“I’m lost—I’m lost.” Even when a mischievous artist was,
shortly after, compelled to leave his pleasant apartments, carrying his phantasmagorian
devices with him, it was difficult for many to comprehend, in our somewhat benighted town,
that optical deceptions were not difficult to manage.
The staple of my newspaper was Politics. I am not about to offer any
narrative of the great events of the greatest era of modern history, but I cannot wholly
pass them over. When I look back upon the autumn and winter of 1812, and call to mind the
ever-varied excitement attending the wars in Spain, in Russia, in America, I feel that such
a concentration of points of immense public interest scarcely ever
142 | PASSAGES OF A WORKING LIFE: | [Ch. II. |
before demanded the vigilant and faithful attention of the journalist. The victory of
Salamanca was followed by the entrance of Wellington
into Madrid, and then came the unwelcome intelligence of the raising of the siege of
Burgos, and the retreat of the British army. I was the echo of the loud voice of public
complaint, that in the barracks and arsenals of Great Britain should have slumbered that
force which, two months before, would have put the Peninsular war beyond the reverses of
fortune. I denounced the policy which still regarded the contest as a war of experiment—the
policy of a weak government, ready again for the course of repairing errors by an
expenditure of means which far outran the limits of their original necessity.
“Demosthenes,” I said,
“reproached the Athenians that they were like rustics in a fencing-school,
who, after a blow, guard the part that was hit, and not before.” Yet the
gloom produced by the retreat to Portugal, after the triumph of Salamanca, was scarcely so
intense, because it was unmixed with a feeling of national disgrace, as when in that autumn
three British ships, in three distinct engagements, struck the once invincible flag to the
American stars and stripes. In October it was known that the French were in Moscow, and
that the Emperor was lodged in the Kremlin. The fluctuating fortunes of those times might
well teach the public writer the great duty contained in the sermon of six
words—“in adversity hope, in prosperity consider.” Even whilst the
French, after a perilous occupation of the great city, marched forth from the burning ruins
of Moscow, there was hope, but not certainty, that the European struggle was coming to an
end. But on Christmas Day, the French papers, announcing Ch. II.] | THE FIRST EPOCH. | 143 |
the return of
Bonaparte to Paris, and containing the famous
twenty-ninth bulletin which could not conceal the almost total annihilation of the French
army, rendered that joyous festival one of unusual solemnity. However great might be the
national gladness at our apparent deliverance, it was not in the spirit of Christianity
that we should read with unmixed exultation the frightful narrative of the extermination of
half a million of men. It was a solemn judgment upon “the vanity of human
wishes,” when those who a few months before were conquering invaders, were
finally to perish in a hasty retreat through a dreary and desolated region—the stronger,
who fell beneath the unsparing sabre of a pursuing enemy, happier than the weaker who died
by the wayside under the inflictions of Heaven which their leader had hoped to evade—the
biting frost, the arrowy sleet, and the blinding snow-storm.
I never could quite relish the humour of Southey’s song of “The March to Moscow.” I knew how much of horror was involved in the
forced confessions of Napoleon: “The enemy,
who saw upon the roads traces of the frightful calamity which had overtaken the French
army, endeavoured to take advantage of it. He surrounded all the columns with his
Cossacks, who carried off, like the Arabs in the deserts, the trains and carriages
which separated. This contemptible cavalry, which only makes a noise, and is not
capable of penetrating through a company of Voltigeurs, rendered themselves formidable
by favour of circumstances.” The grim fun of the Laureate’s song seems
now to be the voice of revelry in a charnel-house:—
144 | PASSAGES OF A WORKING LIFE: | [Ch. II. |
“And worse and worse the weather grew, The fields were so white and the sky so blue. Sacrebleu! Ventrebleu! “What a terrible journey from Moscow!” |
It is a grotesque tragedy which describes how “Platoff he played them off, And Markoff he marked them off, And Touchekoff he touched them off, And Kutusoff he cut them off, And Woronzoff he worried them off, And Doctoroff he doctored them off, And Rodinoff he flogged them off.” |
Half a century makes a difference in the intensity of national hatreds. And
thus, we apprehend, few would now join in heartfelt admiration of the pious imitation of
Dante which winds up
Southey’s popular and prophetic song of thanksgiving:— “’Twas as much too cold upon the road As it was too hot at Moscow, But there is a place which he must go to, Where the fire is red and the brimstone blue, Morbleu! Parbleu! He’ll find it much hotter than Moscow.” |
And yet this was the tone that, from the beginning of the century,
faithfully represented the popular feeling of the middle classes of Englishmen. When the
ambitious despot was finally struck down—when the Prometheus, who had long dazzled the world with the fire that he boasted to
have drawn from Heaven, was bound to a solitary rock in the Atlantic—we began to feel some
pity for the fallen. Gradually we came to acknowledge the splendour of his military genius;
to believe that he was not altogether alien to humanity; to confess, with some contrition,
that
Ch. II.] | THE FIRST EPOCH. | 145 |
the “place which he must go to” was to be
determined by a purer and higher wisdom than the passions of his enemies, however just
might have been their original hostility. I have seen this bitterness subside with some
into a maudlin feeling of admiration—a prostration before Power, enslaving the mind even
more effectually than a blind patriotism.
The spring of 1813 brought with it a lull in the hurricane of foreign
politics. Windsor was excited by a grand royal funeral—that of the Duchess of Brunswick, on the 31st of March. But there was a stronger
excitement in some mysterious circumstances which followed that funeral. It was known that,
previous to the interment, while workmen were employed in making a subterraneous passage
from the middle of the choir of St. George’s Chapel to the new Royal Mausoleum under
the building called Wolsey’s Tomb-House, they had accidentally
broken away a part of the vault of Henry the Eighth, but
which was not then opened. On the morning after the funeral the Prince Regent was seen to enter the Chapel, attended by Sir Henry Halford. A master-mason and a master-plumber had
been previously sent for, who were to do some work with their own hands which could not be
entrusted to common mechanics, and about which they were to preserve the most profound
secresy. The Chapel was again closed; the Prince Regent returned to the Castle; the mason
and plumber, burdened with some tremendous mystery, were afraid to speak to their curious
neighbours; and yet the mystery did ooze out. Solemn whisperings went from the Castle to
the town; from the town to the villages; and wild rumours soon found their way to London.
The most
146 | PASSAGES OF A WORKING LIFE: | [Ch. II. |
various and contradictory narratives now had their due place
in the daily papers. For myself, I deemed it prudent to remain silent, rather than become a
propagator of erroneous details and absurd fictions. I was enabled at last to present an
authentic account of the investigations which took place in the vault of Henry
the Eighth. This differed very slightly from the narrative published a
fortnight afterwards by Sir Henry Halford. The intimation of Clarendon, that after the Restoration the body of Charles the First could not be found after the most diligent
search, was disproved by the discovery of the 1st of April, 1813. When the plumber had cut
open the upper part of the leaden coffin, and the cerecloth in which the body had been
wrapped was removed, there was the long oval face with the pointed beard, which reminded
those present of the portraits of Vandyke. The head
was loose, although it had been carefully adjusted to the shoulders, and it was taken up
without difficulty, and held to view. The narrative of the court physician has no false
delicacy in attempting to conceal the results of this remarkable examination. Perhaps the
epigram of an uncourtly poet may present to posterity a more vivid picture of the scene as
regarded its living accessories:— “Famed for contemptuous breach of sacred ties, Between them stands another sceptred thing— It moves, it reigns—in all but name a king. Charles to his people, Henry to his
wife, In him the double tyrant starts to life. Justice and death have mix’d their dust in vain; Each royal vampire wakes to life again. Ah, what can tombs avail! since these disgorge The blood and dust of both—to mould a George.” |
Ch. II.] |
THE FIRST EPOCH. |
147 |
I know not how these “Windsor
Poetics,” as they are entitled in the complete edition of Byron’s works, came to my knowledge some half century
ago, and were fixed in my memory, with several variations. Possibly they lived some time as
an oral tradition, which was eagerly transmitted amongst the great majority who had no love
for the Regent. Thus it was that party hatreds fell with
all their bitterness on the head of the Prince of Wales, as national hatreds blackened the
character of Napoleon. The lapse of fifty years has
produced the same results in either case. We do not speak of the Regent with the bitterness
of some of his contemporaries. We smile at his frivolities; we have some pity even for his
errors; we do not believe that he meant to be a “Charles to
his people;” and if he had something of the bearing of
“Henry to his wife,” we must admit that he
was not “the double tyrant” of these farouche lines, and simply desired to be left unmolested, to live
for himself alone, not overmuch caring for “sacred ties,” public or domestic.
When the Regent was “the first gentleman in Europe,” in aristocratic
phrase, we did not know that he wanted the prime quality of a gentleman, that of speaking
the truth. When Scott recorded the king’s
condescending kindness, relying upon “Windsor” for the advancement of his son,
we scarcely took into account that Scott, by nature and education, was
an idolator of those born in the purple, living or dead. When Thackeray, having imbibed the democratic spirit of another generation in
spite of himself, heaps odium upon the Fourth George, we accept the
bitter phrases without much inquiry into evidence. There was a time when this nominal or
actual sovereign had enthusiastic
148 | PASSAGES OF A WORKING LIFE: | [Ch. II. |
partizans. But when he was an
ingrate to the Whigs, and deceived the Tories about Catholic Emancipation, he became, to
most men, a mere Sybarite, unworthy of a throne. Will dispassionate History be more tender?
My business and my inclination often led me now to the capital. There I was
enabled to gather some flavour for my insipid dish of Windsor ideas, in the full flow of
London talk. There I got away from the Court atmosphere, and the College atmosphere, and
the Corporation atmosphere, to think boldly and speak freely with friends who were fighting
their way amidst a crowd of aspirants in Law, in Literature, and in the Arts. Politics,
however, were the absorbing topics of every society. The people of Germany had risen as one
man to do battle against the conqueror, humbled but not overthrown, at whose feet the
sovereigns had crouched. The adherents of the Bourbons in London were full of revived and
long-suspended energies. I was introduced to one who had played an important part before
the meeting of the States-General—the Marquis of
Chambonas. I passed some pleasant and instructive evenings with the former
lord of a great château near Montpelier, in—the Fleet Prison. Here, for some mysterious
reason, he had lived, securely and contentedly, with his niece, for some years; never going
beyond the walls, untouched by the squalid misery of the place, having no companionship
with other prisoners, but holding audience in a large and well-furnished apartment, where
men of note, even such men as George Canning, would
come to visit him. His ostensible occupation was that of a teacher of the French language.
On certain nights of the week he held a
Ch. II.] | THE FIRST EPOCH. | 149 |
soirée, at which he would read a French author, interspersing a
running commentary of spirited and tasteful criticism. I regretted that before his return
to France at the peace of 1814, I had not availed myself of his proposition that I should
correspond with him for my improvement in a French style. There was something more than met
the eye in that proposal. I came to learn that the old Marquis had been so long secluded
from the outer world, that he might be a safe and unsuspected recipient of the secrets of
the Royalists on the other side of the channel. It was not to obtain a correct accent, to
hear Racine and Moliere read with unaccustomed elegance, that writers and statesmen went to
that second floor of the Fleet Prison, where the Marquis sat through all the changes of
seasons, not deficient in any of the means of procuring abundant comforts and luxuries. His
lively niece had her piano; she was always ready to mix with the select acquaintance who
found their way to her strange abode; and the monotony of her life was often relieved by an
afternoon walk with a friend or two—but always with a female friend—to the Hampstead or
Highgate Hills, care being necessarily taken that she should return to the Fleet before the
“lock-up.”
Never were the ordinary politicians, whose opinions were unceasingly
fluctuating amidst the shifting scenes of the great drama that was being played out, more
baffled and disturbed than in the early summer of this year. The sanguinary battles of
Lutzen and Bautzen had been fought; and when the exhausted combatants on either side had
agreed to an armistice, it was believed that there was an end of the German insurrection,
and that there would be another patch-
150 | PASSAGES OF A WORKING LIFE: | [Ch. II. |
ing-up of hostilities as in the
days of Tilsit. In the middle of May Wellington was
within his lines in Portugal. There was a class of people then, as there always will be,
who are best described by the poet who best knew human nature: “Success or loss, what is or is not, serves As stuff for these men to make paradoxes.” |
The paradox now was, that Wellington was deficient in boldness
because he bided his time. Yet in one short month he marched from the frontier of Portugal
to the opposite frontier of Spain, and on the 21st of June he won the crowning victory of
Vittoria. The consequences of this signal triumph were so manifest, that people throughout
the kingdom gave themselves up to one tumult of joy, and abandoned for ever their doubts of
the great general who was now regarded as the hope of Europe. We quickly passed, too, into
a more confident feeling that the naval supremacy of England was not utterly destroyed. In
the same pages in which I had to comment on the great victory by land, I had to record that
wonderful sea-fight of a quarter of an hour between the Shannon and the Chesapeake, which lifted our flag
as effectually out of the disgrace of 1812 as if a whole American squadron had been carried
into Halifax. In August, arrived the news of the battles of the Pyrenees and the fall of
St. Sebastian. The armistice in Germany had come to an end. In the same month the battle of
Dresden had been fought, and Moreau was killed. Some
journals still doubted the ultimate result of the mighty continental struggle.
The believers in Moore’s
Almanack—and they comprised nearly all the rural population and very
Ch. II.] | THE FIRST EPOCH. | 151 |
many of the dwellers in towns—would turn this year with deep anxiety
to the wondrous hieroglyphic which was to exhibit the destiny of the nations. When
“Master Moore,” as the good folks called him, uttered
his mystical sentences under the awful heading of “Vox Cœlorum, Vox
Dei, the Voice of the Heavens is the Voice of God,” how small
sounded the mundane reasonings of the newspaper writers. If the great astrologer prophesied
disaster, few would be the believers in success. There was scarcely a house in Southern
England in which this two shilling’s worth of imposture was not to be found. There
was scarcely a farmer who would cut his grass if the Almanack predicted rain. No
cattle-doctor would give a drench to a cow unless he consulted the table in the Almanack
showing what sign the moon is in, and what part of the body it governs. When, on the 3rd of
November, the guns were fired for the intelligence of the mighty victory of Leipzig, few
would believe that the war would have a favourable termination till they had read
“the Signs of Heaven” in the mysterious picture which might haply
foreshadow the fall of the Beast in the Revelations. It was more than probable, in the
rapid march of events in that great time, that the Almanack of Francis Moore, Physician, which, from the large number printed, went to
press in June, might prescribe something very unsuited to the diagnostics of the body
politic at the time of its publication in November. But as the “skimble-skamble
stuff” would suit any turn of fortune, if rightly interpreted, it would be
easy to believe that the prophet had foretold the passage of the Rhine by the Allied Armies
on the last day of the year.
Henry Peter Brougham, first baron Brougham and Vaux (1778-1868)
Educated at Edinburgh University, he was a founder of the
Edinburgh
Review in which he chastised Byron's
Hours of Idleness; he
defended Queen Caroline in her trial for adultery (1820), established the London University
(1828), and was appointed lord chancellor (1830).
John Campbell, first baron Campbell (1779-1861)
Barrister and biographer; he was a liberal MP for Stafford (1830-32), Dudley (1832-34),
and Edinburgh (1834-41); created Baron Campbell (1841), lord chancellor (1859).
George Canning (1770-1827)
Tory statesman; he was foreign minister (1807-1809) and prime minister (1827); a
supporter of Greek independence and Catholic emancipation.
King Charles I of England (1600-1649)
The son of James VI and I; as king of England (1625-1649) he contended with Parliament;
he was revered as a martyr after his execution.
Dante Alighieri (1265-1321)
Florentine poet, the author of the
Divine Comedy and other
works.
Demosthenes (384 BC-322 BC)
Athenian orator, author of the
Philippics.
Thomas Denman, first baron Denman (1779-1854)
English barrister and writer for the
Monthly Review; he was MP,
solicitor-general to Queen Caroline (1820), attorney-general (1820), lord chief justice
(1832-1850). Sydney Smith commented, “Denman everybody likes.”
John Drakard (1775-1854)
Radical journalist; he was the publisher of the
Stamford News
(1809),
The Champion (1813), and
Champion of the
East (1830).
Sir Vicary Gibbs (1751-1820)
Tory MP and attorney-general during the Portland and Perceval governments (1807-12); from
1812 he was a judge in the court of common pleas.
Sir Henry Halford, first baronet (1766-1844)
The second son of James Vaughan MD of Leicester; a court physician, he was created
baronet in 1814 and was president of the College of Physicians (1820-1844).
John Hunt (1775-1848)
English printer and publisher, the elder brother of Leigh Hunt; he was the publisher of
The Examiner and
The Liberal, in
connection with which he was several times prosecuted for libel.
James Henry Leigh Hunt (1784-1859)
English poet, journalist, and man of letters; editor of
The
Examiner and
The Liberal; friend of Byron, Keats, and
Shelley.
Antoine-Henri Jomini (1779-1869)
Swiss general who fought in the Swiss, French, and Russian armies, and published a series
of important books on military tactics.
John Locke (1632-1704)
English philosopher; author of
Essay concerning Human
Understanding (1690) and
Some Thoughts Concerning Education
(1695).
Moliere (1622-1673)
French actor and playwright; author of
Tartuffe (1664) and
Le Misanthrope (1666).
Francis Moore (1657-1714 c.)
London physician and astrologer; his annual almanac,
Vox
stellarum, was continued into the nineteenth century as
Old Moore's
Almanack.
Thomas Moore (1779-1852)
Irish poet and biographer, author of the
Irish Melodies (1807-34),
The Fudge Family in Paris (1818), and
Lalla
Rookh (1817); he was Byron's close friend and designated biographer.
Jean Victor Marie Moreau (1763-1813)
French general who defeated the Austrians at Hohenlinden (1800) and was later exiled by
Napoleon.
Emperor Napoleon I (1769-1821)
Military leader, First Consul (1799), and Emperor of the French (1804), after his
abdication he was exiled to Elba (1814); after his defeat at Waterloo he was exiled to St.
Helena (1815).
Horatio Nelson, viscount Nelson (1758-1805)
Britain's naval hero who destroyed the French fleet in the Battle of the Nile (1798) and
defeated the combined French and Spanish fleets at Trafalgar (1805) in which action he was
killed.
Jean Racine (1639-1699)
French neoclassical playwright, author of
Andromaque (1667),
Bajazet (1672),
Mithridate (1673) and Phèdre
(1677).
James Scarlett, first baron Abinger (1769-1844)
English barrister and politician educated at Trinity College, Cambridge and the Inner
Temple; he was a Whig MP (1819-34) who served as attorney-general in the Canning and
Wellington ministries.
John Scott (1784-1821)
After Marischal College he worked as a journalist with Leigh Hunt, edited
The Champion (1814-1817), and edited the
London
Magazine (1820) until he was killed in the duel at Chalk Farm.
Robert Southey (1774-1843)
Poet laureate and man of letters whose contemporary reputation depended upon his prose
works, among them the
Life of Nelson, 2 vols (1813),
History of the Peninsular War, 3 vols (1823-32) and
The Doctor, 7 vols (1834-47).
Sir Anthony Van Dyke (1599-1641)
Flemish painter who studied under Rubens and spent the last decade of his life as a court
painter to Charles I.
Scipion Victor, marquis de Chambonas (1750-1830)
Mayor of Sens, brigadier general, and Minister of Foreign Affairs under Louis XVI; he
fled to London where he was employed as a goldsmith before returning to France in
1814.
The Champion. (1814-22). A Sunday London newspaper edited by John Scott (1784-1821); John Thelwall (1764-1834) was
proprietor and editor from 1818.
The Examiner. (1808-1881). Founded by John and Leigh Hunt, this weekly paper divided its attention between literary
matters and radical politics; William Hazlitt was among its regular contributors.
The London Gazette. (1665-). The official organ of the British government, published twice weekly.
Morning Chronicle. (1769-1862). James Perry was proprietor of this London daily newspaper from 1789-1821; among its many
notable poetical contributors were Coleridge, Southey, Lamb, Rogers, and Campbell.
Morning Post. (1772-1937). A large-circulation London daily that published verse by many of the prominent poets of
the romantic era. John Taylor (1750–1826), Daniel Stuart (1766-1846), and Nicholas Byrne
(d. 1833) were among its editors.
Old Moore's Almanack. (London: 1697-). Published under various titles since the seventeenth century, originally by Francis
Moore.
Stamford News. (1809). A radical paper; the proprietor was John Drakard and the editor John Scott.
The Times. (1785-). Founded by John Walter, The Times was edited by Thomas Barnes from 1817 to 1841. In the
romantic era it published much less literary material than its rival dailies, the
Morning Chronicle and the
Morning
Post.