DEAR Sir—Mrs. Collier has been kind enough to say that you would endeavour to procure a reporter’s situation for W. Hazlitt. I went to consult him upon it last night, and he acceded very eagerly to the proposal, and requests me to say how very much obliged he feels to your kindness, and how glad he should be for its success. He is, indeed, at his wits’ end for a livelihood; and, I should think, especially qualified for such an employment, from his singular facility in retaining all conversations at which he has been ever present. I think you may recommend him with confidence. I am sure I shall myself be obliged to you for your exertions, having a great regard for him.
[John Payne Collier, who prints
this in his Old Man’s
Diary, adds: “The result was that my father procured for
Hazlitt the situation of a parliamentary
reporter on the Morning
Chronicle; but he did not retain it long, and as his talents were
undoubted, Mr. Perry transferred to him the office
of theatrical critic, a position
1812 | MARY LAMB’S PROTÉGÉE | 433 |
Crabb Robinson mentions in his Diary under the date December 24, 1812, that Hazlitt is in high spirits from his engagement with Perry as parliamentary reporter at four guineas a week.
I place here, not having any definite date, a letter on a kindred subject from Mary Lamb:—]
DEAR Mrs. C.—This note will be given to you by a young friend of mine, whom I wish you would employ: she has commenced business as a mantua-maker, and, if you and my girls would try her, I think she could fit you all three, and it will be doing her an essential service. She is, I think, very deserving, and if you procure work for her among your friends and acquaintances, so much the better. My best love to you and my girls. We are both well.
[John Payne Collier remarks: “Southey and Coleridge, as is well known, married two sisters of the name of Fricker. I never saw either of them, but a third sister settled as a mantua-maker in London, and for some years she worked for my mother and her daughters. She was an intelligent woman, but by no means above her business, though she was fond of talking of her two poet-married relations. She was introduced to my mother by the following note from Mary Lamb, who always spoke of my sisters as her girls.”
Mary Lamb had herself worked as a mantua-maker for some years previous to the autumn of 1796.]
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