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Turner, the landscape painter, had arrived in the West on a professional tour. Among those who entertained him with admiring hospitality, was Mr. John Collier, whom I have mentioned among my own most respected friends, as having preceded Turner to the grave. We were sailing on the St. Germain river, Turner, Collier and myself, when I remarked what a number of artists the West of England had produced from Reynolds to Prout.
“You may add my name to the list,” said Turner, “I am a Devonshire man.”
I asked from what part of the county, and he replied, “From Barnstaple.” I have several times mentioned this statement to persons who insisted Turner was a native of Maiden Lane, London, where, it is true, he appears to have resided in very early life, whither he must have come from the country. His father was a barber. When Turner had a cottage near Twickenham, the father resided with his son, and used to walk into town to open the gallery in Queen Anne Street, where I well remember seeing him, a little plain, but not ill made old man—not reserved and austere as his son, in whom the worth lay beneath a coarse soil.
LITERARY AND PERSONAL. | 199 |
We once ran along the coast to Borough or Bur Island, in Bibury Bay. There was to be the wind-up of a fishing account there. Our excuse was to eat hot lobsters, fresh from the water to the kettle. The sea was boisterous—the morning unpropitious. Our boat was Dutch built, with outriggers and undecked. It belonged to a fine old weather-beaten seaman, a Captain Nicols. Turner, an artist, half Italian named Demaria, an officer of the army, Mr. Collier, a mutual friend, and myself, with a sailor, composed the party. The sea had that dirty puddled appearance which often precedes a hard gale. We kept towards Rame Head to obtain an offing, and when running out
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I was present at Devil’s Point when he sketched the Sound, Mount Edgcumbe, Trematon Castle, Calstock, and scenes on the Tamar. We once passed an entire night together in a country inn with a sanded floor, where no beds were to be had, not far from the Duke of Bedford’s cottage on the Tamar. Most of our party went three miles to Tavistock. I volunteered to remain. They were to rejoin us after breakfast, the next day. Turner got some bread and cheese, and porter, for supper, which I did not relish, but by an after thought, procured some bacon and eggs, and after sitting conversing till midnight, with a fluency I never heard from Turner before or afterwards, he leaned over the table and fell asleep. I placed three chairs in a line, and stretching myself over them, got three or four hours’ rest, quite enough to be fresh to start with my companion at daybreak to explore some sweet spots in the neighbourhood, and return to breakfast before our friends rejoined us.
Turner said he had never seen so many natural beauties in such a limited spot of country as he saw there. He visited Mount Edgcumbe two or three times. I have a pencil sketch of his, which is a view of Cawsand Bay from the heights, with the end of a seat, a bottle of wine, table, and the men-of-war at anchor below. I value it as a relic of a great man, though a mere scrawl.
LITERARY AND PERSONAL. | 203 |
Some have said Turner was not conscious of his own superiority, I believe he was conscious of it. I believe him, too, the first landscape painter that has existed, considering his universality of talent. That he did not share in every-day susceptibilities, nor build upon things which the mass of artists esteem, is to his honour rather than demerit. His mind, too, was elevated. He did not wish to appear what he was not. He exhibited none of the servile crawling spirit of too many of his brethren. He was charged with being niggardly, but he had no desire to live in any other way than that to which he had been habituated, for he dared to be singular. His wealth he made for devotion to a better purpose than giving dilletanti parties, and assembling in his drawing-room bevies of visitors to no good purpose. He had no inclination for assortment with idlers uselessly. Concealed beneath his homely exterior, there was a first-rate intellect. He was aspiring in art, and knew the small value of thinking after others in social compliances. A painter, said to me that an artist could often see something amiss in his own picture he could not tell what, but Turner would instantly explain the defect; a single glance at the canvas from his eye was enough. He spoke little, but always to the point. He disregarded many things said about him and his peculiarities as unworthy, compared with the worth he set upon his labours. The most despicable individuals are those who make life a burthen to accommodate themselves to the world’s idle notions. That he could, when he pleased, deviate from his usual habits, I can answer.
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I was one at a pic-nic party of ladies and gentlemen, which he gave in excellent taste at Mount Edgcumbe. There we spent a good part of a fine summer’s day. Cold meats, shell fish, and good wines abounded. The donor of the feast, too, was agreeable, terse, blunt, almost epigrammatic at times, but always pleasant for one not given to waste his words, nor studious of refined bearing. We visited Cothele on the Tamar together, where the furniture is of the time of Henry VII. and VIII.
The woods are fine, and the views of some of the headlands round which the river winds are of exceeding beauty. In one place he was much struck, took a sketch, and when it was done, said:
“We shall see nothing finer than this if we stay till Sunday; because we can’t.”
It was the last visit he paid to the scenery of the Tamar, before he quitted the west. It was to the honour of several of the inhabitants of Plymouth, that boats, horses, and tables, were ready for his use during the time he remained. Every body felt that in paying him attention they were honouring a most extraordinary genius, whose artistic merit had not been exaggerated.
I remember one evening on the Tamar, the sun had set, and the shadows become very deep. Demaria looking at a seventy-four lying under Saltash, said:
“You were right, Mr. Turner, the ports cannot be seen. The ship is one dark mass.”
“I told you so,” said Turner, “now you see it—all is one mass of shade.”
LITERARY AND PERSONAL. | 205 |
“Yes, I see that is the truth, and yet the ports are there.”
“We can take only what we see, no matter what is there. There are people in the ship—we don’t see them through the planks.”
“True,” replied Demaria.
There had been a discussion on the subject before between the two professional men, in which Turner had rightly observed, that after sunset, under the hills, the port-holes were undiscernable. We had now ocular proof of it.
Turner has paid the debt of nature, and has proved how well he understood the world, and how little the world understood him and his elevated views. Why should he become one of the many in thinking and acting, he whose associations were so much above its well-dressed or ill-dressed adherents in community of feeling. Truly great men, in every walk of life, judge and act for themselves. I observed a most intense regard for nature in this great artist, and a deep insight into its works; a silent examination and admiration; a retraction within himself, most probably generated by seeing the dissimilarity of the views of others, and their mode of thinking, with his own. Sound sense, curt manners, shrewd remarks, no artistic boo’ing, so common with his brother artists, to wealth or station for ends of profit, no currying high patronage, he won his way bravely and alone. He lived with his art, and cared not for the god of the multitude—for fashion. He hewed his way to fame through all the obstacles which beset the path of genius, and attained by his talents the highest place. This is not extravagant praise. Others
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In one of our rambles, from the party in our excursions, we got into a field where four or five fine fellows of seamen, landed from the boat of a man of war, were striking at something with a switch, and drawing back. When we came to the spot, it was a harmless snake. I took it up in my hand, and they looked at me with an expression of astonishment—men who would have boarded an enemy’s ship, or marched to the muzzles of the guns of a battery were alarmed at a miserable reptile. Verily, man is after all an incomprehensible animal. This same class of men much amused even Turner with their frolics. They are become a more staid and rational race now. When a ship was paid off, they expended pounds in the hire of hackney coaches passing between the two towns backwards and forwards, always themselves riding on the top, and packing any one who liked inside. All the vehicles were sometimes engaged in this way for a day together. I was told that one sailor with well-lined pockets hired twenty-four, all he could find, and made them drive about after him, he being in the headmost. Captain, afterwards Admiral Penrose, met two or three
LITERARY AND PERSONAL. | 207 |
“Now, my man, you are twenty pounds richer than you expected, take more care of your money in future.”
“Aye, aye, your honour, I thought I had money enough for a couple of days longer, though I could not tell what had become of it.”
I knew Plymouth as a boy. The naval commander-in-chief was then the one-legged Admiral Colpoys, of the old school, a tough man, brave as a lion. He had a sister, notorious as Bet Colpoys, a drunken reprobate, who, whenever she saw her brother in the public street used to follow and abuse him in a full stream of Billingsgate language. It was a trial for the poor old admiral’s patience. She is said to have become a penitent a year or two before her death, and to have expired a good Christian. But this is a tale of a remote period that comes back like a half-forgotten dream. When we advance in life, we do not forget such dreams notwithstanding our conviction of their insubstantiality. Our youth spent in hope, age sustains itself in memory, man being ever the sacrifice to the future or the past.
Sir Francis Drake I found still held in respect here. On a particular day in the year, the Corporation went
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This cut conveys the water from a stream called the ‘Mew,’ near Dartmoor, to the town, by a circuitous channel of twenty-four miles. A most patriotic undertaking, and what is still more, this great work was presented to the town by Drake, and constitutes one of the noblest gifts of public utility ever presented by an individual to his fellow citizens. I was shown the house in which Drake was born, and in front of it an old oak which grew there in his time. This house must not be confounded with Buckland Monachorum, the seat of the Drakes, which afterwards came by marriage to Lord Heathfield, the hero of Gibraltar. This last is on the left of the road from Plymouth to Tavistock, the other is on the right, an ancient-looking place. It is a tradition that when the tidings of the Great Armada reached Plymouth, where Drake’s ship lay with the commander-in-chief, Drake himself was on the Hoe playing at bowls, then a favourite game. Having the bowl in his hand, he exclaimed:
“Only this bowl more, and then for a bowl at the Spaniard.”
He made his hit and hastened on board. He was a kinsman of Hawkins, and I believe also of Gilbert, both great naval names, and natives of the town, though as to Gilbert’s natal place there is some uncertainty.
I was induced to collect materials towards a history of the town, and a prospectus of the undertaking was printed by old Haydon, but it came to nothing. There did not seem to be a sufficient number of persons who would be subscribers to ensure the expense of the
LITERARY AND PERSONAL. | 209 |
During an excursion to Lidford, among others, with certain barristers of the Western Circuit, I visited the Devil’s Bridge, of one arch thrown across a chasm in the rocks, so narrow and dark that the water beneath is heard, but cannot be seen. Several of the party, myself of the number, descended by the course of the stream, until we reached the side of the water, from the decline of the ground. By the turn of an angle in the fissure, we could not see far up the stream; and two or three of us stripped, determined to get up the bed of the torrent, as far as the bridge. We waded where it was shallow, and swam several black pools, our hands nearly touching the walls of rock on each side, green with dank vegetation. In this way we got under the bridge. It was a gloomy fissure where the sun’s ray never penetrated, the cold was intense, and we were happy to work our way back again. An unhappy suicide, said to be a commercial traveller, flung himself over the parapet. It is an odd fancy to choose such modes of self-murder as are frightful in the contemplation, when so many ways of terminating existence with tranquillity are at hand. Perhaps it is from the desire of notoriety, that people fling themselves from the monument, or prostrate themselves under railway cars. Can it really be from that passion, which—
Aids the dancer’s heel, the writer’s head, And heaps the plain with mountains of the dead? |
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LITERARY AND PERSONAL. | 211 |
It was scarcely possible, in the first thirty years of a life spent in the midst of naval excitement, that I should not form opinions upon some obvious points connected with the service. The sea, as an element, had ever been my delight. I remember its bracing freshness and the pebbles at the bottom, as led by the nurse I looked into its rippling waves from the quay at Green Bank—how clear and charming it seemed to a vision opening upon life! Handed down from our ancestors, there was much tolerated, barbarous in act, erroneous in policy, and unjust in regard to those who ploughed its waters. The impress service was a disgrace alike to reason and humanity. Originating when the larger part of the people were serfs, the excuse of a sovereign’s right to the person and services of those who had no rights, might have been pleaded. Serfship ceasing in the reign of Elizabeth, the pretence, backed by the lawyers, of the right to impress mechanics, and players, for the sovereign’s pleasure whenever the amusements of the court called for it, was not then to be disputed, much less the services of seamen. This class was still enslaved under the tyrant plea of necessity; every natural and social right was entombed, and what was called common law was made flexible to justify it. The sailor was a martyr without a martyr’s consolations. The able seaman, who before he was fit for his duties, must have acquired an experience of six or seven years, and possess some scientific knowledge, was hunted down like a wild beast, outraged, degraded, his liberty
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The Admiralty, itself, was set at defiance in similar matters, so much does the permission of one injustice encourage others. A French officer on parole had his son with him, a well made lad of sixteen. The boy ran away, and by some means got on board the port-ship. The father’s parole would not let him leave Ludlow. He applied to the agent for prisoners of war,
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The naval punishments were dreadfully severe. The knout could not be worse than the cat. It was a greater torture in the naval than the military service, and was inflicted at the will of a superior, justly or unjustly, according to the temper of the man. Court-martials, too, inflicted most severe punishments. “Two poor fellows going round the fleet this morning, Sir,” the boatman has said to me when I was about to cross the Sound. My reply was “pull me in again!” The number of deaths resulting from this old and brutal custom, is only known to him from whom no secret is concealed.
There were many officers, by whom such scenes were considered unnecessary. They would govern a vessel like a family, and rarely indeed did such, ever themselves punish, or apply to courts-martial to punish those under them. Nelson and Collingwood hated punishments. “There is a man has been in irons for a week, my lord,” Captain Hardy would say to Nelson. “It is better for himself that his punishment were over.”
Nelson would seem to assent, and in a few minutes the signal would be flying to manœuvre the fleet, so that no punishment could take place. Again the admiral’s captain would report and remonstrate.
“Well, Hardy, I suppose it must be. Let me know when it is over, I shall go and write my letters.”
He used to say that he hated to see the backs of those fine fellows cut up, who stood to their guns as his
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I often used to ask why we did not, as of old, impress for soldiers, which would have been less injustice. The soldier had little more to acquire than the art of loading and firing a musket, and marching in line; the labour of only a month or two for a plough-boy’s intellect. The acquirement of complicated duties, as reefing and steering, rigging, musket, pistol, and cutlass practice, working heavy artillery, and the like, besides the mastership of resources under novel circumstances continually occurring, the seaman was still treated like a Russian slave, and the plough-boy, a mere machine, was respected like a free citizen. Such were my thoughts in those days. I have lived to see a happy change, both for the seamen and the country, which forty years of peace and mental progress have operated. A feeling of what is due to individual justice, a sense of good policy, and a union of British hearts in one sentiment of generous patriotism, has rendered our sea-girt land so much stronger, as it has yielded more to principles of equity and
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At Plymouth, after reading of our old navigators and the ravages of disease in their ships, I was told by Drs. Magrath and Beatty, that they had been one morning to the naval hospital to see a man suffering under an attack of real sea scurvy, of which for many years they had not encountered a single case. The stop was not put to this scourge without great labour and perseverance, backed by the strong influence of Lord Howe, nearly at the close of the last century. The man to whom England is so deeply indebted was Dr. Trotter. I heard it from excellent naval authorities. Thousands of lives, and hundreds of thousands of pounds he saved, by regulations as to the seamen’s diet and the increased use of vegetables. Ruptured in clambering up the sides of vessels to visit the sick, his own health ruined, he was allowed to retire after his inestimable services on one hundred and eighty pounds per annum! When several eminent individuals interfered in his behalf, they got only the usual reply of that day, “we admit Dr. Trotter’s merits, but we cannot resist interest.” The name of this deserving man was never mentioned without high encomiums by the naval officers and medical men of that time.
I was pressed to enter the army. A commission
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There was then much more latitude in the navy than in the army, the mental calibre of the officers in the last named service was more contracted. Opinions were measured only by the fashion; too little was demanded of the military at setting out. A young midshipman of a twelvemonth’s standing, required in the exercise of his duty at the end of that twelvemonths of his career, more intellectual exertion than a full colonel in the army, who was not of the artillery or engineers. Hence the more expanded views of the seaman, enlarged resources, and greater self reliance. At a dinner party where there were guests of both services, I was attacked as if I had done something heinous for defending a statement of Cobbett’s. It was not whether the opinion was right or wrong. I replied, that I did not hold Cobbett’s opinions, that he was virulent and coarse, but that he now and then let fall a wholesome truth.
They were astonished I could read, much less quote anything such “a fellow” wrote with approbation. I replied that must depend upon the merit, or demerit of the argument. He was not to be censured when he stated the truth, that I did not concern myself about the man, but only about what he had written upon a
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“You are right Redding, I have taken Cobbett several years. He does let fall many strong truths, and if it be not in a Jemmy Jessamy sort of a way, it will still be a truth. As for his hard names, they are his own affair, he is abusive and violent; but when he writes a truth, it is another matter.”
My opponents were silent after that rejoinder. Poor Lockyer! he was a kind-hearted, strict but just officer, and died in command of the ‘Albion’ at Malta. He had many good stories of his own adventures, how his life was saved by becoming a prisoner to the South American Spaniards on the main, where he and his comrades were considered to be spies, and expected to be hung the next day. The officer of the guard over him was a mason, so was he, and winked at his escape in the night. How he became flag-lieutenant to Sir John Duckworth in the West Indies, that medley of a sailor and money-lover, and how after being up two nights in the burning latitude of Jamaica, he fell asleep while steering in the admiral’s boat, and how old Sir John Tommy, as they called him, hit him with his fist under the ear, “God d—— ye, sir, are you going to drown His Majesty’s commander-in-chief in the West Indies?” How in command of a schooner that sank off Port Royal, he and some others saved themselves on hencoops and similar articles, until picked up by the boat of a merchant vessel, from which he was swimming in another direction, much afraid of sharks,
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“Why,” said Nick in his usual lively way, “because I thought you would not pick me up at all, and so I was bearing up for Jamaica.” He had been several hours in the water, but his oily round little body could hardly have sank, had he been drowned. New Orleans was a subject of great indignation with him on account of the ignorance of our general commanding, who was killed.
“I could have flanked the whole Yankee position with a gun or two in the launches, and prevented our abominable disgrace.”
I was struck with the inefficiency there must be in officers’ reports, who act as judge-advocates at courts-martial. These courts are such tremendous odds against a prisoner, that the proceedings ought to be carried verbatim before the judge-advocate-general. Often persons act as judge-advocates in cases where the want of legal knowledge is most disadvantageous. In our ports an attorney generally holds the office. Verbatim reports would be much better than abstracts never certain to be correct. The judge-advocate-general could form a better opinion than any attorney’s abstract would enable him to do. I have known the court act erroneously too, where it would have been glad to be set right, and it was not done; I have seen it most overbearing. The judge-advocate-general himself cannot be ubiquitous; but a sworn report, verbatim et literatim, would secure justice. Of what then are those abstracts worth when Ensign Ramrod or Captain Sabretash takes the office
LITERARY AND PERSONAL. | 219 |
The ‘Raven’ schooner I had seen sunk in a gale of wind, and I was also destined to see the ‘Amethyst’ frigate wrecked, of which I have before spoken; it was in the night with no great sea running. When I reached the spot at daylight, the masts were cut away, but the hull was entire, and they were dragging the bodies of the drowned out of the waves, to the number of thirty or forty. I was introduced to Captain Sir William Bolton, R.N., Nelson’s nephew, who died in 1830. His father was heir presumptive to the title. There was a young officer, too, named Lindsell, to whom I was introduced at the same time, in the eleventh dragoons, on his way to Spain, where he fell. Pleasant dinners with stranger guests, from all parts of the world, were common. The regiments of cavalry embarked in Catwater, in miserably close transports, were often detained by contrary winds, and our club made it pleasant to many of the officers. The men slept over the horses on a species of deck, not more than three feet in height inhaling the breath of the animals beneath, in a state of the atmosphere insufferably hot. The horses were slung. I could not tell how the men contrived to exist. I recollect soon afterwards, in consequence of statements from Lisbon, the sides of the cavalry barracks were ordered to be taken down. The hot stables at home unfitting the horses for service when picketted out upon chopped straw. The complaint was general, that we sacrificed our fine animals to show and glossy coats, in place of considering what would render them efficient for active service.
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I must mention here an acquaintance with General Thomas, inspecting field officer, a native of Devonshire. His son was his aide-de-camp, and going out not many years ago to Australia, he was speared by the natives, among whom he had too carelessly ventured. Twenty years after I had quitted the county of Devon, I entered the Somerset Coffee-house, there were only two persons in the room, I seated myself where I could not see their faces, but I thought I recognized the voices. I found one was Dr. Maclean, the anti-contagionist, and the other was the general who died lately at the age of eighty-eight. It was a singular meeting, after such a lapse of time, and the recognition, too, by the voices. I am not aware of the date or place of Maclean’s decease. They were both kind-hearted excellent men.
Before I left Devon, I had two hair-breadth escapes for my life. I was on horseback on the bridle road, along what are called the Batten Cliffs in Whitsun Bay. At rather a dangerous part of the road, people in general dismounted, and led their horses. There was a railing between the road and the sea on the verge of the precipice, but in one place the rail was wanting, and precisely there did the horse start, so that one of its legs was actually over the edge of the precipice, at the bottom of which the sea was thundering upon the rocks. How the animal recovered itself I cannot tell. I felt little until I had got some distance from the place. Two men coming up, exclaimed, “a narrow escape, indeed.” Proceeding a little farther, I felt tremorish and faint; and dismounting, was obliged to lean against the hedge to support myself. The hazard I had run came upon me in full force.
LITERARY AND PERSONAL. | 221 |
The second hazard I encountered, was at a fire in the night. I entered the next house to that on fire, ignorant that the partition between the two was constructed of wood. The lower part of both houses was burning, and there was no downward retreat. I got upon a window sill where I knew the wall was substantial. One side of the room was occupied by a dresser well covered with earthenware. There was a great crackling for a minute or two, and then I saw the whole sink into the space below with a horrible crash. More I could not see, for the smoke and flame followed so quickly, that I had barely time to spring from the window unsinged, upon a heap of garden mould beneath. The height was much greater than any one would propose to leap by choice. I sustained no injury.
St. Sebastian, I remember, had been stormed about this time. I knew an officer who had run out in a king’s ship, and arrived just after the place was carried. He told me that he saw women with infants at their breasts lying bayonetted in the street. The conduct of our soldiers was most disgraceful here. It made a painful impression on every mind. It was too horrible to be detailed.
I had squandered money, nearly all I possessed, and much precious time to little purpose, and my resolve, I have already stated.
I sold the paper, at last, through a London agent, and strange enough, a financial friend of Perceval, a little time before, was the purchaser. Perceval’s assassination had not altered the state of literary taxation. His friend had been condemned to die, and pardoned through a legal opinion, that he had been only guilty of
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Walsh had been Member of Parliament for Wooton Basset. Whether he was considered clever among the stock-brokers of the city in the mystery of moneymaking, I do not know; but he was a very feeble-minded man, destitute of political, as he was of literary information. His manners were mild, and on the whole, I should describe him as a weak, unreflecting man, beyond a business which flourishes or fails, like the tables of hazard. He said he had ninety thousand pounds one morning, and the next day was thousands worse than nothing. He had in his despair, as it was “charitably” said, but in too much of a methodized despair, taken off twenty thousand pounds, with which he had been entrusted by Sir Thomas Plumer to purchase exchequer bills. He had been dabbling in lottery tickets and lost all he possessed, he then purchased American stock with his plunder, bought American coin, and set off to Falmouth to sail to America. From Falmouth, he franked a letter to his family, with a stolidity unparalleled, justice being in pursuit of him. He was brought back, tried and condemned, and was
LITERARY AND PERSONAL. | 223 |
I left behind me a locality to which I was much attached, and many kind friends of whom I heard little afterwards. I was gratified in reflecting that in many trying circumstances, I had, though young and inexperienced, never dishonoured myself by any compromise of principle, or any of that servility too common by which the road to wealth, if not to honour, is generally made certain. I took my farewell regretfully. Among others, on whom I called to take leave was Lord Boringdon. His lordship was not at home, but a letter followed me, as follows:
“I really am on every account extremely sorry to hear of your determination to quit this part of the country, and can only trouble you with the expression of my earnest hopes that the measure which you have adopted may in the event answer you most sanguine expectations.
“I shall at all times be most happy to hear of your welfare, and feeling very sensibly the kind sentiments expressed in your farewell note,
I knew not what course to adopt on my arrival in town. The conduct of a paper in London suited me best, but I had not pecuniary means of my own left to establish one, and I had severed my connections in the metropolis by my long absence. Editors were then something with the public, and would not be respected if they bartered their political integrity as the wind blew. The government of the day sought support from the press, and there was a necessity that all parties should be consistent. A proprietary, many of which scarcely know their alphabet, demanding that an editor should prostitute himself to the changes in their ignorant views and pecuniary speculations, whenever a market seemed open for the purchase of principle as of an article of merchandize, was then not common and was always reprehended. The press led the public mind, and did not follow and pamper the hallucinations of the meanest tendencies in those who are the more ignorant, and therefore the least worthy part of the community as guides. The editors then were, for the most part, men of education, gentlemen in manners, and habits of thinking. Nor did high moral or political objects become directly dependent upon the omnipotence of money, ignorance, and low huckstering, without the fault lying at the door of literary men, who have been and are forced into false positions by the sovereignty of avarice over honour, and sensitive feelings adherent to their nature, outraged preventive of that earnestness and spirit which belong to those who write from the soul. There is scarcely a publication extant of a character which reflects without alloy the honest mind of the writer that conducts it, unless it be his own property.
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I felt on leaving the country as if I were beginning life anew. I came to town by what was then called the New Road over Salisbury Plain. Gloomy thoughts passed over my spirit; thoughts too literally realized in after life. I remember I composed, on my way, these lines—they depicted my feelings too truly.
This dream of life, this tiring dream
Of baffled hope, and vain endeavour,
This hour of foolery reason’s gleam
Faintly illumes, and quits for ever;
How strange its scenes of daily cheating,
So seldom sicken by repeating!—
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The same worn round of action guides
The circle of our fleeting hours,
And man’s succession onward glides,
Like spring-leaves or the summer-flowers,
Replacing those stern winter’s race
Had driven from their dwelling place.
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O weary, weary dream of life,
Yet never weary of repeating!—
Strange its delusion, toil, and strife,
We love the more for their deep cheating—
Nursing vain hopes, yet loth to tell
The dupery we feel too well.
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After all, life is aimless with only a few. All have some end ever in view, if it be fallacious. That end fixes the difference in character. The end of most is mere existence. A comparative few alone meet the envy of those who toil; but the idle have no end in life, and are unhappy. Some find evil to compensate the good, as illness, discontent, family feuds which stand in the way of their enjoyment until the curtain drops.
226 | FIFTY YEARS’ RECOLLECTIONS, |
I visited Stonehenge on my way, and walked from thence to Amesbury. It was a fine autumnal evening. The sun was setting in magnificent array, gorgeous with dazzling glories, well worthy of a delegated sovereignty over the inferior spheres. As I drew near that pile of an unknown age, the light of the orb of day, it being so near the horizon, threw long shadows from those gigantic uprights, like the projecting fingers of some one of titanic race—of the giants that dwelt upon the young earth. The light between the imposts was glowing and resplendent as burnished brass.
But all around was objectless, no tree, no enclosure, not even the humblest shrub broke the uniformity of the scene, though it contributed to heighten the effect upon the vision, by fixing the attention on the imposts, novel and striking as they appeared. They were symbols of a mystery never now to be revealed. The waste around them, silent, void, melancholy, had still its peculiar language. It addressed the heart silently. Its desolation, though dumb, indicated perished times and forgotten men. The stillness, the declining light, the lengthened shadows awed the spirit, conscious of unknown purposes and events, of which those stupendous stones were the sole memorial. I gazed upon them for the first and last time with indescribable feelings. I walked in and out among the prostrate as well as the upright colossi. I seated myself upon one of the ponderous and fallen masses, and contemplated the monuments around me in their senility as allied with things less durable, the term only a little longer. My reflections were not so much directed to the form of
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As I quitted that wonderful remnant of ruder times, I turned again and again to look at its grey columns in the twilight. I lingered and looked, and lingered again. Sombre thoughts arose, folding themselves like mist around a deeper obscurity than mortality could penetrate. We are but a minute particle of passing things, as a moment is a particle of eternity, and how humble ought we to feel when such truths press upon us. I reached Amesbury at dusk, I could sleep little that night, for tumultuous thoughts in which the past, present, and future intermingled.
The following bitter winter I spent in town, walked on the ice from Blackfriars to London Bridge, dirty and impure, and lumpy as it was—a dreary looking scene. A rising mist obscured the day almost constantly, so that the season was well characterised as a calamity. My spirits were not buoyant, nothing in that season was calculated to lift me above the state when we exclaim—
“There’s nothing in the world can make us joy.” |
The Serpentine skaters, the promenading, the streets piled up with snow and ice, the well and ill clad spectators, as they were then combined, were novelties.
228 | FIFTY YEARS’ RECOLLECTIONS, |
I had published, while in the country, twenty-five copies of a poem called “Retirement,” which I presented to my friends, and of which no copy that I know of is at present extant. Preceded by a production of my boyhood, entitled “Mount Edgcumbe,” I wrote a prologue for the opening of Drury Lane Theatre, but I escaped being among the “Rejected Addresses,” as I told Horace Smith, “because it was never sent.” I could not please myself about the last dozen lines, and suffered the time fixed for its being given in to the committee to elapse.
I found Samuel composing a work on courts-martial, having ceased to write for the ‘Pilot’ several years before. He soon after sailed for Demerara. In that horrible winter, I remember a country friend of mine had his pocket picked of a handkerchief, and was grievously annoyed. He regarded it as a species of reflection upon his own vigilance. Determined to be revenged upon some of the pick-pocket tribe, he procured fish-hooks, and had them fastened into the pockets of an old coat with the barbs downwards. He, thus accoutred, sallied forth into the Strand in the dusk of the evening. Amid a crowd at Charing Cross, he felt a hand in his pocket, and giving himself a jerk as he said to get the hooks well into the rogue’s flesh, he moved on with his prey closely following. He then quickened his pace, giving every now and then another jerk. In this mode, affecting not to feel the fish he had hooked, he led the knave clear of the crowd to a
LITERARY AND PERSONAL. | 229 |
He unbuttoned his coat to slacken the pocket, but in vain did the thief endeavour to extricate himself, the hooks were too deep in the hand, so my acquaintance took out his knife, and whipped off the skirt of the old coat he had used for the trap, and bade the pickpocket walk off to a surgeon, as he thought he had been tolerably well punished, directing him to be careful respecting his person again, if he spared no others of the King’s subjects. The pickpockets are generally among the least powerful of those who thus live upon their wits, and my friend was a strong man, so that the robber would have had little chance in a struggle with him, especially having only one hand to spare.
I had found out the young American Graham on my arrival, alluded to as having the patronage of Mr. Burdon. Being attacked with typhus fever, I went to see him. Mr. Burdon had sent him a medical man, under whose care he slowly recovered, but never looked so well in person after he came to town. His kind patron urged him to abandon literature as a profession, and from having studied the law in America for some time, recommended that he should continue to do so here. He was entered of the middle Temple, at which Mr. Burdon and myself became his securities. Nor was this all, his munificent patron afterwards sent him to Cambridge, where, though he did not neglect his studies, he became intimate with young men of fortune, of little principle, and dissipated. He left Cambridge with the same sort of moral character as too many display on taking leave of the university, who go
230 | FIFTY YEARS’ RECOLLECTIONS, |
In this letter, he said, “I wish I could tell you of anything gratifying, I am still harassed by claims that I cannot discharge, and by the sting of wants I cannot satisfy. The increasing illness of Mr. Burdon, my excellent friend, which has assumed an aspect more alarming than ever, agitates me more than all my pecuniary distresses. His complaint perplexes the science, and baffles the prescriptions of his medical attendants, and after fluctuating between hopes and fears, doubts and certainties for twelve weeks, we have now nothing left us but the most alarming apprehensions. If he should not recover, I cannot count the distresses of his family which is wrapped up in his existence. I hardly have the courage to calculate the quality of my own fortitude. Nothing can replace with me his liberal kindnesses, his paternal affection. But it is a subject too gloomy and too heart-oppressing for affection to anticipate.”
He then referred to Caleb Colton’s injury to his arm, by the bursting of his gun—his life being despaired of, and continued, “I have written some articles for the reviews, but the stipend was too trifling to make it profitable. I hope soon to do something in the literary way that will tell better. I intend to
LITERARY AND PERSONAL. | 231 |
232 | FIFTY YEARS’ RECOLLECTIONS, |
In 1821, being at the time coadjutor of the poet Campbell, in conducting the New Monthly Magazine, I got some money for him for contributions written at my suggestion. He had been a member of the academics in Chancery Lane, and was the forensic rival of Talfourd, whom he far surpassed in natural talent, would he had equalled him in perseverance, and the practise of similar virtues, Graham and Talfourd were at this time in close intimacy. Talfourd wrote the dramatic article for my part of the New Monthly, and delivered it punctually on the day which required it for the printer. Graham anticipated the sum for his labours before they were half completed. I had recommended him to Ugo Foscolo, for an amanuensis, and he laboured diligently while he had no money. The fiery Italian, and hot Yankee were not likely to agree long. Foscolo had two female servants, and he accused Graham of being too intimate with one of them. Foscolo used an epithet towards him in the matter which he determined to resent. I was in consequence surprized one day by a note from him to the following effect—
“I am going out with Foscolo. He used an expression about me which I could not tolerate. I walked to his house, and as he would not apologize or explain, I insulted him, and applied to him the epithet he deserved. After a little shuffling, he has had the courage to call me out, and I go on the instant. If anything should happen to me pray do go down to my place, and take away my things. There will be but a few shillings to pay at my lodgings, but there will be some money in my pockets—keep everything, and leave the rest to the parish! I don’t apprehend any danger, but I am
LITERARY AND PERSONAL. | 233 |
They met at Primrose Hill. On the receipt of the above letter, I went up towards Foscolo’s house, and met Mr. William Wallace of the Temple, who had been Foscolo’s second. He told me the affair had terminated. Graham’s second, a member of the Irish bar now alive, said that Graham had won the toss for the first fire. Having given the insult designedly, he could not honourably avail himself of his advantage, and therefore fired wide, that Foscolo might take his satisfaction. Foscolo refused to fire at all, or to say that he was satisfied, wanting to enter into an argument on the point in dispute, which the seconds refused to hear. As Foscolo would neither answer nor take his shot the adverse parties moved off the ground. Foscolo’s excuse was that he had too great a contempt for his adversary to fire at him—then why challenge him?
Graham next became a translator for the newspapers, and realized a good income, but he plunged into fresh extravagances or rather vices. He formed an acquaintance with a loose woman, and although he was editor of the “Literary Museum,” and connected with a most respectable publisher, the demands upon him became in a short time very large. When he obtained this editorship, he wrote to me asking contributions:
“I put a song of yours,* ‘The Destroying Angel’
* In the “New Monthly Magazine,” Vol. III, p. 11. Names were then seldom attached to contributions. |
234 | FIFTY YEARS’ RECOLLECTIONS, |
“I have a notion of publishing a new edition of Colton’s ‘Hypocrisy,’ and dedicating it to himself. The beauty of Issachar is gone, and the virtue of Sophy departed for ever! ‘Blackwood’ is heavy and dull, not much better than the London this month. From what I have read of yours, I think it is livelier than either. This sentence is a lawful hexameter,* as also the two preceding—so good bye, Mr. Cyrus, whether in London or Epirus.”
Had he reflected on his own career, when he thus overcharged the acts of another!
This was the last communication I had from him before he left England. He continued his headlong career until his means were inadequate to meet his expenses. Debt followed. He borrowed of all his friends, even of Talfourd and myself, and the former could then as little afford it as I could, all which Graham well knew. He neglected his literary labours.
* Southey’s lumbering hexameters had before been the subject of general conversation. |
LITERARY AND PERSONAL. | 235 |
I never expected to hear more of one who had thus devoted himself to crime, but within two years after his escape, I received the following letter from New York which I give verbatim:—
“It is one of my greatest miseries that I cannot, in any way, control the waywardness of fortune, which is every day forcing me to violate the most fixed resolutions, and to perpetuate outrages upon the feelings of those who have been my best friends. A young gentleman of New York, being on the eve of making a tour in Europe, has requested letters to London from me, a request I have hitherto avoided, but in this case, refusal or evasion was impossible. I have ventured to write to you. Mr. Hosack belongs to the best family in this city. His father is a celebrated physician and scholar, president of the Rutger’s College, and a man of great wealth and leading. To have refused, would
236 | FIFTY YEARS’ RECOLLECTIONS, |
What an application arising out of the dilemma in which a little forecast would have enabled him to see he had involved himself, had Mr. Hosack delivered the letter to me! He did not; it came to me through the Liverpool Post Office. Another year and the history of this young and gifted man terminated. It appears that he engaged himself upon a periodical work in New York, called ‘The Enquirer,’ when he amply satisfied the proprietors on the score of ability. His father, a merchant of the same city, had died while his son was in England. The latter was born at Catskill, and had studied the law some time, under Barent Gardiner, when he took it into his head to start off for France.
LITERARY AND PERSONAL. | 237 |
“What may be the result of the unhappy rencontre which is to take place in the morning between Mr. Barton and myself, cannot of course be predicted by me. In the supposition that it will be fatal, I bid you farewell, in the only language that is now left to me, I am perfectly indifferent as to myself, but I trust most earnestly that Mr. Barton (toward whom I have not the faintest enmity of any kind) may escape. I admit that I am in the wrong—that by giving him a blow, I have forced him into the position of a challenger; and that by not doing what he has, he would have blasted his character as a gentleman for ever. In common justice I am bound thus to absolve him from all suspicion of unbecoming conduct respecting the challenge. The provocation, though slight, was still a provocation, which I could not overlook. It is out of the question for me to explain, retract, or apologize. I will not hear of any settlement short of some abject and craven submission from him. Mr. Barton is a talking man, who dwells very complacently on his own skill as a marksman; on his experience as a duellist, and on his accuracy as a person of ton. I pretend to none of those things, and therefore must oppose the most inflexible obstinacy.
238 | FIFTY YEARS’ RECOLLECTIONS, |
This story has not before been correctly told except in the Monthly Magazine in a short account I gave to the editor.
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