Passages of a Working Life during Half a Century
Chapter VI
CHAPTER VI.
ON my return to London at the end of June, 1828, the meetings of
the Useful Knowledge Society were approaching their termination for the season. Parliament
was prorogued. The members of our committee had mostly left town; lawyers were on circuit;
members of Parliament were looking after their local interests. But I had to keep up a
tolerably active correspondence with some who took an especial interest in the works upon
which I was occupied—with none more unremittingly than Mr.
Brougham. Whether contending in friendly rivalry for the leadership of the
Northern Circuit with Mr. Pollock, or enjoying the
delicious quiet of his family home in Westmoreland, his mind was ever occupied with
thoughts of the society which he had founded, and which was daily growing more important.
Mr. Hill writes to me from Ambleside on the 30th
of August:—“I came here with Mr. Brougham, from Lancaster,
to-day. Scenery glorious of course. But I fear we talked more about diffusion of
knowledge than anything else. Mr. B. is delighted with all you
have done.” It was very pleasant to know that my preparations for the
“Library of Entertaining Knowledge” were
approved. I was chiefly engaged in writing “The Menageries,” which was a sufficient task
for my faculties; for I had to learn a good deal
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of the subjects upon
which I was to write. But Mr. Brougham, estimating the powers of other
men by his own, would have had me engage in some by-work for both of the series—the Useful
and the Entertaining. I had intimated a desire to write a Life of Alfred. With his characteristic readiness, while expressing his
gratification, he suggests to me not to lose sight of one interesting part of the
subject—“the ancient form of our government—there are many errors afloat in
this matter.” He then states that Mr.
Allen, of Holland House, has, more than all lawyers and historians, studied
it deeply, and he sends me a list of Mr. Allen’s articles in the
“Edinburgh Review,” on topics
connected with this question. I had also given to Mr. Brougham the
introductory portion of a life of Las Casas—a
subject which had deeply interested me, as a very young man, when I had read in Croft’s singular volume, “Love and Madness,” that, “all things
considered, Bartholomew Las Casas was perhaps the greatest man
that ever existed.” Mr. Brougham writes—“I have
lost sight of Las Casas. How near making a volume is it for the L.
E. K.? If not. for that, there must be at least enough for a treatise in the L. U.
K.” How could I let the grass grow under my feet with such an inciter to
activity?
In looking back at some correspondence of September, 1828, I am enabled to
form an accurate conception of the technical difficulties of producing a cheap book with
excellent wood-cuts. I had arranged to have my “Menageries” illustrated with representations
of animals drawn from the life. I was fortunate in securing the assistance of several
rising young men, who did not disdain what, some
Ch. VI.] | THE SECOND EPOCH. | 115 |
painters might have
deemed ignoble employment. Two of these are now Royal Academicians. There were not many
wood-engravers then in London; and this art was almost invariably applied to the production
of expensive books, printed in the finest style. The legitimate purpose of wood-engraving
was not then attained. It is essentially that branch of the art of design which is
associated with cheap and rapid printing. In the costly books of the period a single
woodcut introduced into a sheet to be worked off with the types, enhanced the cost of
manual labour in a proportion which would now seem incredible. In engraving the wood-cuts
for the “Menageries,” some attention of the artist
was necessary to give his shadows the requisite force, and his lights the desired
clearness, so as to meet the uniform application of the ink, and the cylindrical pressure,
in the printing-machine process. It was long before this excellence could be practically
attained. Without this explanation it would appear ludicrous that Mr. Hill should write to me from Mr. Brougham’s house,—“Everybody here is in raptures with
the proofs of the wood-cuts; but we have misgivings about the machine.” A
sheet of my book was to be set up with the engravings in their due place, and a hundred or
two were to be printed off by the rapid operation. “Mr.
Loch is here,” writes Mr. Hill.
“We have held a committee. He will be in London in a fortnight, quite at
leisure, and anxious to attend to our affairs. He has promised to assist at Clowes’s. I hope you will succeed in assembling
everybody.” “Everybody” not only meant the patentee of the
machine, the wood-engraver, the stationer, the ink-maker, and 116 | PASSAGES OF A WORKING LIFE: | [Ch. VI. |
the
ingenious overseer of the printing office, but as many of the committee as I could get
together. Imagine a learned society thus employed! Imagine a hard-worked editor thus
exhorted to interference with a printer’s proper duty! Yet such was a part of my
editorial duty at a time when the great revolution in the production of books to be
accomplished by the printing machine, was almost as imperfectly realised as when Caxton first astonished England by the miracles of the
printing press. We succeeded in partially overcoming the difficulties of making an
illustrated volume not despicable as a work of art, and yet cheap—something very different
from the lesson books with blotches called pictures, that puzzled the school-boy mind half
a century ago, to distinguish what some daub was meant to delineate; “It is backed
like a weasel’s,” says Brown—“or, like a
whale,” says Jones—“Very like a
whale,” concludes Robinson.
At this time my duties in connection with the “Library of Entertaining Knowledge” were simply those of author and
editor. I had retained a proprietary interest in the Almanac and Companion, although it was published for two years by Messrs. Baldwin. But the new series was a large undertaking, from
the risk of which I shrank. Again, Mr. Murray, as a
publisher, was to have been associated with my labours. In November, 1828, Mr. Tooke, the treasurer of the society, informed me that
Mr. Murray desired that I should send him “the form of a
reduced advertisement, descriptive only of the intended volume.” The
“Menageries” was
then sufficiently advanced for me to comply. Before the volume was ready for publication
the
Ch. VI.] | THE SECOND EPOCH. | 117 |
proprietor of the “Quarterly Review” took some alarm. The Society and he parted company, but
upon very friendly terms. I was urged to take “at the flood” this
opportunity of the “tide in the affairs of man.” I found a capitalist
ready to bear his part in my new venture. I made terms with the Society, which secured to
them a rent upon the copies sold of the “Library of Entertaining
Knowledge.” I was again a publisher in Pall Mall East, before Midsummer,
1829, when the first volume of the “Menageries” was
published. At the same period Mr. Murray issued the first volume of
his “Family Library.”
The sub-committees of the Society are once more in active work when the long
vacation had come to an end. The monthly meetings now regularly take place. At these
periodical gatherings there is a dinner at five o’clock—a plain English dinner, at a
moderate fixed charge, to which each present contributes. There is a subscription for wine.
On these occasions the organisation of the Society is fully developed. The subcommittees
report their proceedings; the general committee confirm them. Questions are asked;
suggestions are made. The chairman conducts the proceedings with the least possible parade
of words. The members express their opinions in the same quiet conversational tone. I never
heard but one oration in that assembly of which so many eloquent statesmen and lawyers
formed a part. That display came from a president of the Royal
Academy, whose rhetoric is as forgotten a thing as his “Rhymes on Art.” Let me look back upon
those pleasant meetings, at which I had generally the happiness to
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be
present during more than fifteen years. Let me, without confining myself to a particular
session of my early years in connection with the Society, look round that social table, to
call up the shadows of some whose reputations only survive, and to renew, as it were, the
friendships which I have still the happiness of possessing.
The dinner is over in an hour. There has been pleasant gossip and occasional
fun. A few cordial greetings have passed in the old form of the wine-pledge, which we of a
past generation regret to find almost obsolete. The cloth is cleared. Mr. Coates, the secretary, moves to the side of the
chairman, and there are then two hours of solid business. Subjects of science, of art, of
literature, having to be discussed, the talk is sure to be improving, and occasionally
amusing. The chair is generally filled by Mr. Brougham,
and, in his rare absence, more frequently by the treasurer, Mr.
William Tooke, than by Lord John
Russell, the vice-chairman. Other members, however, are occasionally called to
take the chair. Mr. Tooke was one of the founders of the Society, and
was for some years an active member. He was somewhat ambitious of literary distinction,
priding himself upon being one of “the family of
Tooke,” his father
having been known as the author of some valuable works on Russia; his brother Thomas being the eminent political economist, the
historian of “Prices.” Our treasurer had somewhat harsh treatment from the
critics as the biographer of Churchill. I always
regarded him as a kind-hearted man of moderate abilities—somewhat fussy, not altogether
disinclined to a job, and always disposed to be patronizing.
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THE SECOND EPOCH. |
119 |
Where shall I begin with those who did not fill the offices of the Society
amongst the sixty members of its committee? I cannot classify them according to their
professional pursuits; for in this gathering, statesmen, lawyers, physicians, professors,
not only clubbed their technical knowledge, but their various acquirements in science, in
history, in art, in ancient scholarship, in modern literature. I must take the individuals
somewhat at random, as they crowd upon my memory in connection with my own experience.
James Mill. I see the historian of British India,
sitting near Mr. Brougham, listening to his opinions
with marked attention. It always appeared to me a signal tribute to the intellectual
eminence of the great orator, that the writer who, of all others, aimed most at terseness
and perspicuity, should exhibit such deference to one whose reputation was built upon
broader foundations than logical profundity or metaphysical subtlety. Yet so it was. Their
minds were not certainly cast in the same mould; yet there must have been deep sympathies
between them—as is perhaps often the case when two men of apparently opposite temperaments,
and pursuing very different paths to eminence, are brought into friendly contact for a
common object. Mr. Mill was too soon removed from us. To me he
rendered valuable aid in the early numbers of the “Companion to the Almanac.”
Henry Hallam was one of the original promoters of
the Society, of which, during many years, he was an active member. That the historian of
the “Middle Ages,” was an
authority in the committee cannot be doubted. He was a sedulous attendant
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upon sub-committees. He read proofs diligently. In his general manner
rather cold and dry, he would occasionally deliver an energetic opinion, pregnant with good
sense and refined taste. I used at first to feel some shrinking from his critical faculty,
but no one could be more tolerant or encouraging; and if he made objections it was
generally without harshness. He was in the full possession of his high faculties when I
first had the opportunity of benefiting, in a small degree, by the quiet exhibition of his
varied acquirements. The great sorrow of his life had not then chilled his energy. He lived
to recover, outwardly, the loss which gave occasion to the noblest elegiac poetry in our
language.
I turn to a man eminent in a pursuit not less useful than that of the
historian—to Francis Beaufort, the hydrographer to
the Admiralty, under whose especial superintendence the Atlas of the Society attained a
perfection never before realised in this country. His design of producing the most
trustworthy maps at the cheapest rate, would have conferred an honourable distinction upon
this Association, if it had accomplished nothing else. But Captain
Beaufort (afterwards Admiral Sir Francis) did not
confine himself to the duties of this great undertaking. I could always rely upon his sound
judgment in discussing any project that I offered, or in the correction of proofs. No
member of the committee wrote purer English. Of his unremitting kindness I had ample
experience. The frankness, almost bluntness, of the sailor was never offensive, for it had
the true ring of the sterling metal of an honest mind, and the unvarnished courtesy of a
gentleman. Shall I place by the side of this worthy plain
Ch. VI.] | THE SECOND EPOCH. | 121 |
dealer and
plain speaker one of whom it has been said he often tried to make himself disagreeable, but
never succeeded? There was no man with whom I less perfectly sympathized when I first
joined the Society than Henry Bellenden Ker; gradually
I learnt to understand him. I have the happiness still to enjoy an intimacy that has
endured since those early days of our intercourse—proof against banter on one side, and
pettishness on the other. He was the most fertile in projects of any member of the
committee. Apart from the Society, he had ever some new scheme to suggest to me as a
publishing enterprise. His plans were not always practicable; but they always indicated the
fertility of his mind, and the refinement of his taste. He did me incalculable good in his
rough-riding when I was learning my paces in this intellectual manége.
It was like the discipline which a young barrister receives on his first circuit. Not to
wince under a joke; to see the kind heart and the earnest good will, ill-concealed by the
levity of tongue; to find indifference growing into cordiality, and then ripening into
friendship—this was my experience of a man whose ready talent, whose social aptitude,
rarely failed to secure the friendship of the young and of the aged—one who was a warm
politician without the bitterness of a partisan; whose companionable qualities gave
pleasure to the declining vigour of Lyndhurst, and who
continues, as he had begun, to be the cherished friend of Brougham.
In the present instance, as in others that will constantly occur, I find it
exceedingly difficult to speak with the same freedom of the living as of the dead. Yet,
looking back for more than a generation upon
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the eminent persons with
whom I had become acquainted, they all assume with me an aspect approaching to the
historical. I run over the list of the committee prefixed to the “British Almanac” for 1830. Of forty-five members,
whose essential services in the diffusion of knowledge live in my remembrance, twenty-five
are gone where “all hidden things shall be made manifest.” Yet to speak
impartially, I must not pass over those who remain with us, believing that the
“nil nisi verum” is a better
principle to act upon either for the living or the dead than the “nil nisi bonum.”
I have already, several times, mentioned Matthew
Davenport Hill as a member of the committee; and it is therefore unnecessary
that I should here dwell upon the energy of his character as a diffuser of knowledge. He
was one of the earliest members of the Society. His brother Rowland was elected when it was fully in action. Of modest demeanour;
courteous but independent; expressing his opinions with a prudent brevity,—few could have
given him credit for that unwearied industry in following out all the ramifications of a
complicated question; for that power of marshalling all the possible details of a great
theory which in practice resolved itself into the most complete organisation. The inventor
of the Penny Postage made no eager rush to the display of an imperfect project. He felt
every step of his way, and when he had ceased to have any doubt of the certainty of his
convictions, he put them forth with the confidence of genius, and was ready to do battle
for them with the courage which is the best pledge of victory. The young schoolmaster of
Hazelwood became one of the greatest of public benefactors.
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Amongst the founders of the society, Dr.
Roget was, from his accepted high reputation, the most eminent of its men of
science. He wrote its treatises on Electricity and on Magnetism. He was a diligent
attendant on its committees; a vigilant corrector of its proofs. Of most winning manners,
he was as heloved as he was respected. I met him in 1863, at an evening party, and had much
talk with him about our old intercourse. Full of animation,—with undimned intelligence—his
age was “as a lusty winter, frosty but kindly.” In his beaming face
there could scarcely be found the traces of that hard work—made up of professional
practice, of scientific writing, of secretaryship of the Royal Society, of lecturer at the
Royal Institution,—which he had gone through since he graduated in medicine at Edinburgh in
1798. Upon all questions of Physiology, Peter Mark Roget and Charles Bell are the great authorities in the Useful
Knowledge Society. No higher service could have been rendered to the association in its
early stages than Mr. Bell’s contribution to its treatises. His
“Animal Mechanics” is a
model of popular writing upon subjects which demand high scientific knowledge. This
charming production was published in 1828. At that time there was another member of the
medical profession—one, however, unconnected with our Society—who also contributed most
effectually to disperse the belief that science could only be taught in the use of
technical language;—that the uninitiated in the technicalities had better not attempt to
comprehend the mysteries of that temple where there was scant room for the worship of the
multitude. Dr. Neil Arnott, in 1827, published the
first portion of his
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“Elements of Physics; or Natural Philosophy, General and
Medical, explained in plain or nontechnical language.” Never was book more
popular; never was the completion of any undertaking more anxiously looked for. The first
volume of the “Sixth and Completed Edition” reaches me while I write
this chapter. It is a presentation copy from one who for five-and-thirty years has won the
love and gratitude of me and mine, as the wise physician and the hearty friend. I could not
forego this digression from the matters more immediately before me.
The Useful Knowledge committees, as I have looked upon these monthly
assemblages, present the aspect of something higher than toleration—a cordial union of men
of very different persuasions in religion, who have met upon a common platform for the
advancement of knowledge, to which religion can never be opposed. Let me group three
representatives of opinions that appear as far removed as possible from amalgamation.
Dr. Maltby, a great classical scholar, the
preacher at Lincoln’s Inn, the future bishop, first of Chichester, and then of
Durham, is a dignified representative of the Church of England. He is zealous for the
welfare of the Useful Knowledge Society, of which he was one of the earliest members. He
will do its work assiduously and carefully. He will not insist upon religious topics being
thrust in amongst secular. He will not stickle for the due honour of the Established
Church. How can he do either? By his side, it may be, sits Mr.
Isaac Lyon Goldsmid, the wealthy Jew, whose ambition, as that of the
Rothschilds and of other men of large property and unimpeachable
loyalty, is to have a voice in the British Parliament.
Ch. VI.] | THE SECOND EPOCH. | 125 |
Mr. Goldsmid is a man of something more than business talent; good
tempered; not obtruding the pride of riches; hospitable. Mr.
William Allen, the Quaker, may form the third in this group. I have often
called on him at his old place of business in Plough Court, where, a practical chemist, he
had been a thriving tradesman, and at the same time a Fellow of the Royal Society and a
valuable contributor to its transactions. He well merited the honour of his countrymen for
other qualities than his scientific acquirements. He was a liberal promoter of every public
scheme of benevolence. He established upon his estate at Lindfield, in Sussex, after he
withdrew from the cares of a commercial life, schools for boys, girls, and infants,—real
schools of industry, where agriculture was taught, as well as many useful arts. Whilst the
children had every opportunity for acquiring health in recreation, and improvement in a
good library, he built cottages for the labourers of his village, such as ought to have
shamed many a landowner out of his neglect. The memory of this good man is to me fresh and
fragrant.
There was perhaps no society in England, with the exception of the Royal
Society, which could present such a knot of young men of high promise as were assembled at
our committees in the earliest stages of their organisation. Mr. John William Lubbock, the only child of the eminent city banker,
assiduously followed his father’s calling, whilst he was attaining the highest
reputation as a mathematician. In 1825 he had graduated as M.A. at Cambridge. In 1828 he
was rendering me the most important assistance in the preparation of the “British Almanac.” For several years he
worked
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with the heartiest zeal at this apparently humble contribution
to the objects of the Society. But the occupation was not a humble one, for he was
practically developing his investigations upon the Tides, which subject formed several
papers in the Philosophical Transactions.
Devoting himself with the same readiness to superintend the astronomical portion of the
British Almanac, I was also brought into intercourse with
Mr. John Wrottesley, afterwards Lord
Wrottesley, and President of the Royal Society. He was a member of the bar.
Mr. Benjamin Malkin—afterwards Sir
Benjamin, when he accepted a high judicial appointment in India, and there
too soon closed his valuable life—devoted his great talents and acquirements with
indefatigable industry to the business of our committee. His forte was mathematics. His
brother Arthur was elected to the committee a few
years after, and in several departments rendered essential service as a writer and editor.
Mr. T. F. Ellis, the friend and executor of
Macaulay, had many opportunities, in the
revision of the Society’s works, to exercise his acute critical faculty. Mr. Lefevre (now Sir John) was also
one of the distinguished Cambridge graduates who gave to the Useful Knowledge Society the
prestige of their academical honours.
The University of London (as the College was then called) numbered amongst
its Professors some of the ablest members of our committee. Amongst the first of those who
joined the Society was Mr. George Long. In subsequent
“Passages,” I shall have so frequently to mention his name, as one of the most
important of my associates, that it will be scarcely necessary for me here to do more than
allude to his unequalled
Ch. VI.] | THE SECOND EPOCH. | 127 |
industry, his rich scholarship, his sound
judgment, which very soon gave him his right position amongst the eminent persons by whom
he was surrounded. Mr. De Morgan became a member
somewhat later. I first saw him in 1830. The occasion will arise for mentioning the eminent
services he rendered to the works in which I have been engaged. Mr. Key, and Mr. Malden, about the
same period commenced their distinguished career as teachers of youth, and very soon also
devoted their unprofessional services to the general diffusion of knowledge.
Mr. Leonard Horner was the Warden of the London
University, when he became a member of the Useful Knowledge committee. In their early
stages the new preparatory institution “for affording to young men adequate
opportunities for obtaining literary and scientific education at a moderate
expense;” and the new society for “imparting useful information to all
classes of the community,” were considered by many to be engaged in a
co-partnership for the political and theological corruption of youths and adults. In some
arrangements prescribed by a rigid economy in the finances of each, they did appear to
carry on their operations in concert. Thus, when I first attended in Percy Street to read
manuscripts and proofs, I had to thread my way up a staircase, on the walls of which
Dr. Lardner was hanging models for the
illustration of his approaching Lectures on Mechanics. As a necessary consequence, the
council of the University, and the committee of the Society, had several members in common.
Mr. Horner was not only surrounded with the reflection of his
eminent brother’s fame, but had that brother’s testimony, in
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his published letters, to the interest which young Leonard, as early
as 1811, took in the education of the people. How well he was qualified for popular
instruction was shown by an admirable series of articles on “The
Mineral Kingdom” which he contributed to the “Penny Magazine.” How ardently and unremittingly he strove
to elevate the condition, and provide for the health of the Working Classes, has been
manifested by his labours as a Factory Commissioner.
I am still hovering round the remembrance of the earlier members of the
Society, whose literary or scientific qualifications gave the assurance that no publication
would go forth, deformed by the inaccuracies of superficial information. In a volume
written by me ten years ago, I have expressed my opinion upon the system pursued in our
committees:—“From the time when the Society commenced a real
‘superintendence’ of works for the people—when it assisted, by diligent
revision and friendly inquiry, the services of its editors—the old vague generalities
of popular knowledge were exploded; and the scissors-and-paste school of authorship had
to seek for other occupations than Paternoster Row could once furnish. Accuracy was
forced upon elementary books as the rule and not the exception. Books professedly
‘entertaining’ were to be founded upon exact information, and their
authorities invariably indicated. No doubt this superintendence in some degree
interfered with the free course of original composition, and imparted somewhat of the
utilitarian character to everything produced. But it was the only course by which a new
aspect could be given to cheap literature, by
Ch. VI.] | THE SECOND EPOCH. | 129 |
showing that the
great principles of excellence were common to all books, whether for the learned or the
uninformed.”* To accomplish such real superintendence there were the services
at hand, in the department that may be broadly characterised as Natural History, of
Mr. Daniel, in Meteorology; of Mr. De La Beche, in Geology; of Mr. Vigors, in Zoology; and of Dr. Anthony Todd Thomson, in Botany and Vegetable Physiology. With each of
these gentlemen I was, in various labours, brought into pleasant and profitable
intercourse. I was in more direct and constant intimacy with Mr. William Coulson, the translator of Blumenbach’s “Comparative Anatomy.” In the composition of my little book on
“Menageries,” I
could always apply, in cases of doubt, to his technical information, and to the wide range
of the scientific knowledge of Mr. Vigors. The aid which Dr. Conolly rendered to the diffusion of knowledge was not
special or professional. In those departments of what we now call “social
science,” which include the public health in its largest sense, his experience was
always working in companionship with his benevolence. In 1831 we were united in the
production of a series which was directly addressed to the working classes. Dr.
Conolly brought to this useful labour—of which I shall have to make more
particular mention—a lucid style, and an accurate conception of the true mode of reaching
the uneducated. “Be thou familiar, but by no means vulgar,” is as good a
maxim for a popular writer, as for a young courtier going forth into the world, to deal
with all sorts and conditions of men.
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[Ch. VI. |
We had many lawyers on the committee. I have mentioned several who were
distinguished for their remarkable scientific qualifications. Others of the bar were
accomplished scholars. But no one displayed a more elegant taste than John Herman Merivale. His translations from the Greek Anthology, and from
the minor poems of Schiller, have not been condemned
to that oblivion which attends the greater number of poetical attempts. The purity and
elegance of the whole mind of Mr. Merivale is reflected in his poems.
Courteous and sympathizing, I look back upon my occasional intercourse with him with
respect almost bordering upon affection. Mr. George Cornewall
Lewis brought his various high qualifications to the service of the Society
at a later period, when he became a contributor to its publications. I mention him among
the lawyers, for before he joined the Useful Knowledge committee he had been called to the
bar. Of the elder lawyers, no one was more valuable to the society than Mr. James Manning—perhaps the most profound of the
historical and antiquarian lawyers of his time. His accurate information upon many abstruse
legal matters was amply displayed when he became one of the most important contributors to
the “Penny Cyclopædia.”
Mr. David Jardine was also a most useful
contributor to the legal department of the Cyclopaedia, and was the author of “Criminal Trials,” published in the
Library of Entertaining Knowledge—a valuable contribution to our constitutional history.
Let me not omit to mention the youngest of the lawyers amongst us—Mr. Thomas Falconer, who was called to the bar in 1830. He
inherited literary. tastes, and was an acute as well as a modest critic
Ch. VI.] | THE SECOND EPOCH. | 131 |
upon the unpublished volumes and articles that were submitted for his revision.
Mr. John Wood (afterwards chairman of the Inland
Revenue) was at the bar. He was skilful in financial and statistical matters, and greatly
assisted in a vigilant administration of the Society’s pecuniary affairs. Of a higher
character of mind was Mr. James Loch, the auditor for
the management of the vast properties of the Duke of
Sutherland and Lord Francis Egerton. He
had a hard battle to sustain against that class of philanthropists who contended that the
removal of a wretched cottier tenantry by emigration, to make room for the influences of
capital, was harsh and unfeeling. Mr. Loch vindicated his measures
with signal ability. The time was to come when the Irish famine would teach us what a
happiness it was for the Highlands, that there was a man who had the courage to carry out
his just conceptions of the duty of a great landed proprietor. Some years of cordial
intercourse with Mr. James Loch satisfied me that a sound benevolence,
combined with a clear intellect, was the basis of his character.
I have finally to turn to a knot of men, eminent in the political annals of
our country. They might at first view be regarded as the Corinthian capitals of our
edifice. But this would only be a half-truth. Lord John
Russell, Lord Auckland, Lord Althorp, Mr. Denman,
Mr. Spring Rice, Sir Henry
Parnell, were always ready to work as members of our committee, even after
they had been called to the highest offices of the State. After the Reform era I have sat
at the monthly dinner with five Cabinet Ministers, to whom it appeared that their duty was
132 | PASSAGES OF A WORKING LIFE: | [Ch. VI. |
to carry forward that advancing intelligence of the people which
had conducted them to power, and which would afford the best security that liberal opinions
and democratic violence should not be in concert, as the “one increasing
purpose” was working out the inevitable changes of society and government. The first
poet of the generation that was immediately to follow them has probably shadowed out the
convictions that made Ministers of State zealous educationists: “Yet I doubt not through the ages one increasing purpose runs, And the thoughts of men are widened with the process of the suns.” |
It was not only in the meetings of our committees that I had the advantage,
for my editorial guidance, of the opinions of men of accurate minds and sound information;
but I was frequently also in correspondence with those who took a more than common interest
in particular works. Such a work was that well-known contribution to the “Library of
Entertaining Knowledge,” which first established the reputation of
Mr. George Lillie Craik as a sound thinker and
an accomplished writer. To myself, individually, the recollection of that autumn of 1828 is
especially dear, for it saw the commencement of an intimacy which ripened into the unbroken
friendship of six-and-thirty years. In the preliminary stages of discussion on the objects
and mode of treatment of a book such as this, which was to embrace a vast number of
illustrative anecdotes of the love of knowledge overcoming the opposition of circumstances,
there were necessarily different estimates of the value of scientific and literary studies,
whether “for
Ch. VI.] | THE SECOND EPOCH. | 133 |
use,” or “for delight,” or
“for ornament.” The great distinction between the love of knowledge for its own
sake, and the love of knowledge as the means of worldly advancement, may be traced very
distinctly in the two popular volumes of Mr. Craik, and the equally
popular “Self Help” of
Mr. Smiles. Mr.
Craik’s views upon this cardinal point are very clearly expressed in a
letter written to me by him in the autumn of 1829, but having no date except the day of the
week (a very perplexing custom for the historian or biographer). His views are so
interesting, that I make no apology for the length of the quotation:—
“Our concern, it appears to me, is neither with individuals who
have in any way been exalted from one region of society to
another, nor even with such as have been chiefly the authors of their own
exaltation,—for the fact of their exaltation is not at all the one upon which we wish
to fix attention, even although we should make it out to have been in every case the
consequence of their abilities and attainments. What, then, is our subject? Not the triumphs of genius, nor of perseverance, nor even of
perseverance in the pursuit of knowledge, because it is not the success of the effort, at least in a gross and worldly sense, we would point
attention to; nor is it by any means what is called genius to
which we are exclusively to confine ourselves, while we still less mean to include
every species of perseverance. But we want a category which
shall embrace, for example, the cases at once of Lady Mary
Wortley Montague, of Franklin, of
all, in short, who, whether in humble or in high life, have pursued knowledge with
ardour, and distinctly
134 | PASSAGES OF A WORKING LIFE: | [Ch. VI. |
evidenced, by the seductions they resisted
or the difficulties they encountered and overcame for her sake, that she was the first
object of their affections; and that the pursuit of her, even without any reference to
either the wealth, the power, or the distinction, which she might bring them, was, in
their estimation, its own sufficient reward. It appears to me, then, clearly, that our
title must be, not Anecdotes of Self-taught Genius at all, for that is greatly too
limited, but Anecdotes of the Love of Knowledge—that being, in
truth, the one distinction which we find common to all the examples we would embrace,
as well as the disposition which we mean chiefly to excite and foster.”
Mr. Craik had written a preliminary dissertation, in
the sound views of which Mr. Brougham expressed himself
to me as generally coinciding. But in a portion of a letter, dated from Westmoreland in
September, 1828, (and I judge, therefore, to have preceded by a month or two the letter
from Mr. Craik which I have quoted,) Mr. Brougham
takes a different view of the range of such a work as that proposed: “His
(Mr. Craik’s) idea of the line to be drawn as to
self-educated men in modern times, is also quite correct; but we must, nevertheless,
confine the examples to cases which are quite plainly those of men who have greatly
altered their situation by force of merit. As Watt, Arkwright, Franklin, Burns, Bloomfield, Mendelssohn—making the ground of division or
classification self-exaltation rather than self-education,
though they often will coincide. This field is quite large enough for one book; but the
work might be followed by another comprehending the rest of it, and including all
self-taught
Ch. VI.] | THE SECOND EPOCH. | 135 |
Genius in the larger sense. To give an example—I
should certainly exclude Newton, though, like
Pascal, he taught himself mathematics; also
Granville Sharpe, though he raised himself
by his merit to great fame; but he was grandson of the Archbishop of York, and could not be said to alter his station in life.
I look forward to Mr. Craik’s labours as of the greatest use
to the Society, and to the good cause; having the greatest confidence in his sound
principles, and a very high opinion of his talents.”
This interesting discussion was continued between Mr. Brougham, Mr. Hill, Mr. Craik, and myself, till it was seen how the opposite
views could be resolved into a general agreement. I have before me Mr.
Brougham’s proof of Mr. Craik’s first
volume. To Mr. Brougham is to be assigned the merit of giving to the
book in this proof the title which has come to be one of the commonest forms of speech:
“The Pursuit of
Knowledge under Difficulties.”
The title originally stood,—
“The Love of Knowledge
overcoming Difficulties in its Pursuit.”
John Allen (1771-1843)
Scottish physician and intimate of Lord Holland; he contributed to the
Edinburgh Review and
Encyclopedia Britannica and published
Inquiry into the Rise and Growth of the Royal Prerogative in
England (1830). He was the avowed atheist of the Holland House set.
William Allen (1770-1843)
Quaker chemist and philanthropist; he founded and edited
The
Philanthropist (1811-17).
Sir Richard Arkwright (1732-1792)
Inventor of a spinning machine patented in 1769 and cotton manufacturer.
Neil Arnott (1788-1874)
Educated at Marischal College, Aberdeen, he was a physician and Benthamite social
reformer who studied sanitation.
Robert Baldwin (1780-1858)
London bookseller apprenticed in 1794; he entered into partnership with Charles Cradock
and William Joy, and was publisher of the
London Magazine.
Sir Francis Beaufort (1774-1857)
Born in County Meath, he was naval lieutenant (1796) and hydrographer to the Navy
(1829-55). He was twice married.
Sir Henry Thomas De la Beche (1796-1855)
Educated at Royal Military College at Marlow, he was a writer and geologist, elected
president of the Geological Society in 1847.
Sir Charles Bell (1774-1842)
Scottish surgeon and anatomical illustrator; his first publication was
The Anatomy of the Brain, Explained in a Series of Engravings (1802). He was a
close friend of Francis Jeffrey.
Robert Bloomfield (1766-1823)
The shoemaker-poet patronized by Capel Lofft; he wrote the very popular
The Farmer's Boy (1800).
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).
Robert Burns (1759-1796)
Scottish poet and song collector; author of
Poems, chiefly in the
Scottish Dialect (1786).
William Caxton (1422 c.-1492)
The first English printer, who set up a press at Westminster in 1476 and translated
several of the books he published.
Charles Churchill (1732-1764)
English satirist and libertine, a schoolmate of William Cowper; his brief but brilliant
career began with the publication of
The Rosciad (1761).
William Clowes (1779-1847)
The son of a Chichester schoolmaster, he was the first printer to develop the steam
press, from 1823.
Thomas Coates (1802 c.-1883)
A London solicitor, he was secretary to the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge
(1826-46) and secretary to the University of London (1828-35).
John Conolly (1794-1866)
English physician who studied in Edinburgh and was physician to the Hanwell Lunatic
Asylum.
John Singleton Copley, baron Lyndhurst (1772-1863)
The son of the American painter; he did legal work for John Murray before succeeding Lord
Eldon as lord chancellor (1827-30, 1834-35, 1841-46); a skilled lawyer, he was also a
political chameleon.
William Coulson (1801-1877)
The younger brother and heir of the journalist Walter Coulson; he was a London surgeon,
translator, and editor for
The Lancet.
George Lillie Craik (1798-1866)
Scottish literary historian and professor of English literature and history at Queen's
College, Belfast (1849); he published
Spenser and his Poetry, 3 vols
(1845).
John Frederic Daniell (1790-1845)
Natural philosopher and associate of William Thomas Brande at the Royal Institution; he
published
Meteorological Essays (1823) and other works.
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.”
George Eden, earl of Auckland (1784-1849)
The second son of William Eden, first Baron Auckland (d. 1814); educated at Eton, Christ
Church, Oxford, and Lincoln's Inn, he courted Annabella Milbanke and was MP for New
Woodstock. He was governor-general of India (1836-42).
Francis Egerton, first earl of Ellesmere (1800-1857)
Poet, statesman, and Tory MP; a younger son the second marquess of Stafford, he was
educated at Eton and Christ Church, Oxford, was chief secretary for Ireland (1828-30), and
translated Goethe and Schiller and contributed articles to the
Quarterly
Review.
Thomas Flower Ellis (1796-1861)
Educated at Hackney and Trinity College, Cambridge, he pursued a legal career, wrote for
the
Edinburgh Review, and was a friend and biographer of T. B.
Macaulay.
Thomas Falconer (1805-1882)
Educated at Lincoln's Inn, he was a barrister, judge, editor at the London Review
(1834-37) and member of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge.
Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)
American printer, scientist, writer, and statesman; author of
Poor
Richard's Almanack (1732-57).
Sir Isaac Lyon Goldsmid, first baronet (1778-1859)
Financier and philanthropist; he was the father of Anna Maria Goldsmid and a friend of
Thomas Campbell. Charles Knight described him as “something more than business
talent; good tempered; not obtruding the pride of riches; hospitable.”
George Granville Leveson- Gower, first duke of Sutherland (1758-1833)
The son of the first marquess of Stafford (d. 1803); he was one of the wealthiest men in
Britain with an annual income of £200,000; his program for Scottish clearances and
resettlement was widely unpopular. He was created duke in 1833.
Henry Hallam (1777-1859)
English historian and contributor to the
Edinburgh Review, author
of
Introduction to the Literature of Europe, 4 vols (1837-39) and
other works. He was the father of Tennyson's Arthur Hallam.
Matthew Davenport Hill (1792-1872)
English barrister, the brother of Sir Rowland Hill; he was MP for Hull (1833-35),
recorder of Birmingham (1839) and a reformer of criminal laws.
Sir Rowland Hill (1795-1879)
The son of Thomas Wright Hill; he was a civil servant who instituted the penny postage in
1840.
Leonard Horner (1785-1864)
Scottish geologist, brother of Francis Horner; he was educated at Edinburgh University
and was secretary of the Geological Society (1810) and fellow of the Royal Society
(1813).
David Jardine (1794-1860)
The son of a Unitarian minister, he was educated at Glasgow University and practised law
before becoming a police magistrate at Bow Street (1839).
Henry Bellenden Ker (1785 c.-1871)
Son of the botanist of the same name; he was educated at Lincoln's Inn where he
befriended Henry Brougham with whom he was afterwards associated as a legal reformer. He
published in the
Edinburgh Review.
Thomas Hewitt Key (1799-1875)
Educated at St John's and Trinity Colleges, Cambridge, he was mathematics professor at
the University of Virginia (1825-27) and professor of Roman language, literature, and
antiquities at University College, London (1828-42).
Dionysius Lardner (1793-1859)
Lecturer on science and contributor to the
Edinburgh Review; he
published the
Cabinet Cyclopaedia (1829-1846).
Sir John George Shaw- Lefevre (1797-1879)
The son of Charles Shaw; educated at Eton, Trinity College, Cambridge, and the Inner
Temple, he was a barrister, civil servant, MP for Petersfield (1832-33), and founding
member of the Athenaeum Club.
Sir George Cornewall Lewis, second baronet (1806-1863)
The son of the first baronet (d. 1855); educated at Eton, Christ Church, Oxford, and the
Middle Temple, he was a barrister, author, editor of the
Edinburgh
Review (1850), chancellor of the exchequer (1855-58), and home secretary and war
secretary (1859-63).
James Loch (1780-1855)
The son of George Loch of Drylaw, he was educated at Edinburgh University and was a
barrister, estate commissioner, and Whig MP for St Germains in Cornwall (1827-30). He
contributed to the
Edinburgh Review.
George Long (1800-1879)
After education at Trinity College, Cambridge, he was professor of classical languages at
the University of Virginia (1824-28) and University College, London (1828-31,
1842-46).
Sir John William Lubbock, third baronet (1803-1865)
Banker, mathematician, and treasurer of the Royal Society; educated at Eton and Trinity
College, Cambridge, he was active in the Society for the Promotion of Useful
Knowledge.
Henry Malden (1800-1876)
Educated at Trinity College, Cambridge, he was a poet and classical scholar who was
professor of Greek at University College in London (1831-76). He contributed to
Knight's Quarterly Review.
Arthur Thomas Malkin (1803 c.-1888 c.)
The son of Benjamin Heath Malkin (1769-1842); educated at Bury St Edmunds and Trinity
College, Cambridge, he was an alpinist and member of the Society for the Diffusion of
Useful Knowledge.
Sir Benjamin Heath Malkin (1797-1837)
The son of Benjamin Heath Malkin (1769-1842); educated at Bury St Edmunds and Trinity
College, Cambridge, he was a friend of Macaulay and judge of the supreme court at
Calcutta.
Edward Maltby, bishop of Durham (1770-1859)
Educated under Parr at Norwich and at Pembroke College, Cambridge, he was preacher at
Lincoln's Inn (1824-33), bishop of Chichester (1831) and of Durham (1836-56). Sydney Smith
described him as “a thoroughly amiable, foolish, learned man.”
James Manning (1781-1866)
The son of a Unitarian minister, he was educated at Lincoln's Inn and was a writer,
barrister, and serjeant-at-law (1840).
Moses Mendelssohn (1729-1786)
German philosopher and writer on aesthetics, friend of Lessing thought to be the
inspiration for
Nathan der Weise.
John Herman Merivale (1779-1844)
English poet and translator, friend of Francis Hodgson, author of
Orlando in Ronscevalles: a Poem (1814). He married Louisa Drury, daughter of the
headmaster at Harrow, and wrote for the
Monthly Review while
pursuing a career in the law.
James Mill (1773-1836)
English political philosopher allied with the radical Joseph Hume; he was the father of
John Stuart Mill.
Lady Mary Wortley Montagu [née Pierrepont] (1689-1762)
English poet and epistolary writer, daughter of the first duke of Kingston; she quarreled
with Alexander Pope and after living in Constantinople (1716-18) introduced inoculation to
Britain.
Augustus De Morgan (1806-1871)
Educated at Trinity College, Cambridge, he was a Unitarian and the first professor of
mathematics at the London University (1828).
John Murray II (1778-1843)
The second John Murray began the
Quarterly Review in 1809 and
published works by Scott, Byron, Austen, Crabbe, and other literary notables.
Sir Isaac Newton (1642-1727)
English scientist and president of the Royal Society; author of
Philosophae naturalis principia mathematica (1687).
Henry Brooke Parnell, first Baron Congleton (1776-1842)
The son of Sir John Parnell, second baronet; he was Whig MP for Queen's County (1802,
1806-32), Portarlington (1802), Dundee (1832-41); he held high government offices and wrote
on economics.
Blaise Pascal (1623-1662)
French philosopher and moralist, the author of
Pensées
(1670).
Sir Jonathan Frederick Pollock, first baronet (1783-1870)
The son of a saddler, he was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge and was MP for
Huntingdon (1831-44); he succeeded Lord Abinger as lord chief baron of the exchequer in
1844.
Thomas Spring Rice, first Baron Monteagle (1790-1866)
The son of Stephen Edward of Limerick; he was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge and
was MP for Limerick City (1820-32) and Cambridge borough (1832-39). He was chancellor of
the exchequer (1835-39) and contributed to the
Edinburgh
Review.
Peter Mark Roget (1779-1869)
English physician and professor of physiology at the Royal Institution; he was a nephew
of Samuel Romilly well-connected in Whig circles, best remembered for inventing the
thesaurus that bears his name.
John Russell, first earl Russell (1792-1878)
English statesman, son of John Russell sixth duke of Bedford (1766-1839); he was author
of
Essay on the English Constitution (1821) and
Memoirs of the Affairs of Europe (1824) and was Prime Minister (1865-66).
Granville Sharp (1735-1813)
After working as a clerk in the Ordinance Department he became a prominent abolitionist
and supporter of evangelical and radical causes.
John Sharp, archbishop of York (1645-1714)
Educated at Christ's College, Cambridge, he was an antiquary and pious high-churchman
made archbishop of York in 1691.
Samuel Smiles (1812-1904)
Writer, physician, lecturer, and social reformer, whose best-known book was
Self-help (1859).
Frederick Spencer, fourth earl Spencer (1798-1857)
The younger son of George Spencer, the second earl; he was educated at Eton and served as
a naval captain and as Whig MP for Worcestershire (1831-1832) and Midhurst (1832-1834,
1837-1841).
Edward Stanley, first Baron Monteagle (1460 c.-1523)
The son of Thomas Stanley, first earl of Derby; fighting under Thomas Howard, earl of
Surrey, he was instrumental in the English victory at Flodden Field.
Anthony Todd Thomson (1778-1849)
Edinburgh-trained physician who practised in London; he published
A
Conspectus of Pharmacopoeias (1810) and other works. He wrote for the
Literary Gazette.
Thomas Tooke (1774-1858)
Political economist, son of the writer William Tooke (1744-1820); he was FRS and a
founder of the Political Economy Club (1821).
William Tooke (1744-1820)
Chaplain to the English Factory at Kronstadt, near St. Petersburg (1774-91);
miscellaneous writer; author of
The Life of Catharine II, Empress of
Russia, 3 vols (1798).
William Tooke (1777-1863)
Son of the Russian historian of the same name; a London solicitor, he was a founder of
University College, London, active in the Royal Society for Literature, and MP for Truro
(1832-37). He contributed to the
New Monthly Magazine and
Gentleman's Magazine. Charles Knight described him as
“kind-hearted man of moderate abilities—somewhat fussy.”
Nicholas Aylward Vigors (1785 c.-1840)
Educated at Trinity College, Oxford, he served in the Peninsular War, was an Irish MP for
Carlow (1832-35, 1837-40), and published papers on zoology.
James Watt (1736-1819)
Scottish inventor of the steam engine patented in 1769.
John Wood (1789-1856)
Educated at Glasgow University, he was a Liverpool Unitarian, sugar refiner, and
barrister who was MP for Preston (1826-32) and member of the board of inland revenue
(1849-56).
John Wrottesley, first baron Wrottesley (1771-1841)
After education at Westminster School and military service he was a Whig MP for Lichfield
(1799-1806) and Staffordshire (1823-37); he was raised to the peerage in 1838.
The Penny Magazine. 16 vols (1832-1846). Edited by Charles Knight for the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge.
The Quarterly Review. (1809-1967). Published by John Murray, the
Quarterly was instigated by Walter
Scott as a Tory rival to the
Edinburgh Review. It was edited by
William Gifford to 1824, and by John Gibson Lockhart from 1826 to 1853.