Sydney Owenson was now become a successful writer, with her name in the papers, and her praises in the post-office. She was petted by her publisher and, perhaps, a little spoiled by her public. Private incense, too, was offered to her taste, her beauty, and her genius—offered with the abundance and the fervour of Irish compliment. At times she may have listened to the charmer more than was wise in a young girl; at least, her elders thought and said so. Not that she went wrong, even by implication or in appearance—she had too much sense for that; but she found herself in a circle where every woman paid her compliments, and every man, as the mode in Ireland was, made love to her. She undoubtedly played with the fire; but she was too busy with her literary projects to do more than play—a weaker woman might have been consumed.
The following letter, although it has neither date nor address, was written to Mrs. Lefanu, shortly after
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I believe the surest mode of reviving your friendship for an object that, God knows, has very unconsciously forfeited it, is to tell you that you can be of some service to her. The foregoing page will tell you how I am at present employed, having engaged with Phillips to have the work* finished by the ensuing month. I left England sooner than I intended, merely to collect those materials and documents which were only to be had in the interior parts of Ireland, especially Connaught, where I have been among my own relations for some time. I have, however, now re-
* The Wild Irish Girl. |
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Have you seen my Novice of St. Dominic? I long much to hear your opinion of it, that is if you shall think it worth one. Pratt, the author, has written to me, for leave to select the best passages from that and St. Clair, and to publish them in a work called The Morality of English Novels. This is very flattering, and this you will say, “is all the egotism of authorship,” and so it is; but before I check the dear theme, I must tell you that my Irish melodies are doing wonders in London, and that I have published a song
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Mrs. Lefanu, who accepted her young friend’s amende in good part, did what was requested; wrote to Mr. Walker, who expressed himself much gratified by the application, when a friendship began between himself and Miss Owenson, which lasted the remainder of his life. The following letters are interesting for their own sake, as well as supplying a link in Miss Owenson’s history and correspondence.
Whilst engaged in writing the Wild Irish Girl, Miss Owenson this year published a collection of poems and melodies, most of which had been written at various times. The little book was entitled the Lay of the Irish Harp, and was published by Phillips. It had some success at the time it appeared; but Sydney Owenson is one of the many “Sapphos” whose songs have passed away.
I am just honoured with your obliging favour of 30th ultimo. It would make me truly happy to promote in any way your elegant undertakings. Any assistance I can afford you may freely command.
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With Mr. Burton’s publication, I am but slightly acquainted. I think, however, with you, that the Preface was contributed by the Bishop of Clonfurt. It was his Lordship who first mentioned the publication to me. He spoke with approbation of the Collection of Airs.
The compass of the Irish harp is certainly confined. It is a very imperfect instrument. The Welsh have improved considerably upon it. Their instrument is much superior to our’s. Our harp, however, answered perhaps sufficiently the purpose for which I believe it was usually employed—I mean as an accompaniment to the voice. On many occasions, I presume, the bard did little more than sweep his hand over the strings of his harp while he recited the “Tale of other Times.”
I am rejoiced to find that Carolan’s harp is preserved.
You are now in a part of the island where many of the Finian tales are familiarly known. You will, of course, collect some of them, and, perhaps, interweave them with the work on which you are at present employed. If you could obtain faithful descriptions of some of the scenes of those tales, you would heighten the interest of your romance by occasionally introducing them. On the summit of Slieve Guillen, lies the scene of The Chase, which has been so admirably translated by Miss Brooke. As it does not appear from your letter, that you are acquainted with her Reliques, permit me to recommend that inestimable work to your particular attention. Benham, the printer, in Great George’s Street, South, is in possession
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With the plan of your work I am unacquainted. Perhaps you have taken for a model, the prose romance of the Irish, which was, I believe, generally interspersed with poetical pieces, like the Spanish romance (see Percy’s Reliques for an account of the History of the Civil Wars of Granada) or, to refer to a modern production, The Mysteries of Udolpho.
If I might presume to offer any advice in regard to style, I would beg leave to recommend the familiar in the narrative parts. In the impassioned parts, it might rise sometimes to the lofty. In real life, the language of the passions is various and always appropriate. This, the writer of fictitious history should always keep in mind. The language of simple narration, where the passions are unconcerned, should be easy, elegant, and familiar. Such, I am sure, madam, is the language you will employ. And I am equally certain, that in the impassioned parts of your work, you will employ the words that burn, or melt, as the occasion may require. But I am, I fear, taking an unwarrantable liberty with you. My motive must be my apology.
I am happy to find that you still enjoy the protection of your father. He must be a comfort to you, while you are a blessing to him. Be so good as to remember me to him with great kindness; and believe me,
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If Dr. Gamble, of your town, should have a small packet for me, might I beg of you to take charge of it.
I hope you will be able to draw from the Bard of the Maygelligans, a complete history of his life. It would make a very interesting memoir. He is, perhaps, able to supply many anecdotes of the Bards of the North during the last century.
The next letter, written by Miss Owenson whilst residing with her father and sister, at Londonderry, gives a picture of herself and her surroundings which, as she kept no journal in those days, can only be seen in these incidental glimpses. For many years she kept nothing but common-place books full of extracts from the authors she had read.
Your letter is precisely ten minutes in my possession, and while dear papa is playing away, on an old Cremona, some fine old Irish airs, and a young musician, at the corner of my writing-table, is taking down the melody, here am I, with my poor whirlgig brain full of basses, trebles, and accompaniments, and my warm, impulsive heart, full of the most respected object of its friendship, scribbling away to her as fast as I can, and humming “Shelah na Conolan,” while papa plays and little Orpheus writes. Apropos of
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As I have not unpacked my books nor music, nor shall do so whilst here, I have been thrown upon the rational resources of painting watch papers, and rifling the riches of a circulating library. There is a fine romance by a fine scholar of Cambridge, where an Italian lady, in a glowing Italian summer evening, who (after a day’s travel in Italian scenery) goes into
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Miss Owenson had now completed her first national story, the Wild Irish Girl. Sir Richard Phillips was charmed with his new author, but he wished to monopolize her talent without paying the price. Miss Owenson, not in the least disposed to meet his views, wrote to Johnson, an opposition publisher, in St. Paul’s Churchyard, and the following exceedingly droll correspondence from the rival publishers is the result of this application.
Miss Owenson had received that special blessing prayed for by the quaint Scotch clergyman “a gude conceit o’ hersel,” and it stood her in good stead all her life.
I did not suppose that a mother would deprive a father of his child!
She must not, however, be tolerated in an act of extortion, presuming on his affection!
He will do all that can be demanded of parental affection, and he conceives he has already deported himself with a liberality dictated by his feelings for both mother and child.
But if she will be headstrong, &c., &c., &c., she must even take her course!
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If I had not seen specimens of your powers, an answer to your letter would have been very easy; as it is, I hesitate. You have been offered a very liberal sum; not much more—say a hundred pounds per volume is the most, as far as my knowledge extends—that has been given to the most popular writers, after their characters were established, for works of this nature and size. Admitting this to be your price, the volumes should be large, as they cannot be sold under five shillings, at the least, unbound,—not less than three hundred very honest pages. At my time of life, when, instead of advancing I ought perhaps to withdraw, I may be acting imprudently; but I cannot turn a deaf ear to your superior merit.
In depicting the miseries of the poor, your object, I trust, is not to inflame them, but to excite the attention of the rich to their relief. To whomsoever you send your MS. I recommend your keeping a copy, which should be transcribed page for page, not only to guard against loss, but for the sake of sending remarks should any offer.
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I write because the season, the London season, is now at its height, and this is the moment for a work like yours to appear.
The Novice did not meet with due notice at first, owing to the bad season of its appearance.
On sending off the MS. you may draw on me for fifty pounds.
I assure you that I am exceedingly well pleased with the Novice, and a second edition will be wanted by the time the new work is launched.
I am favoured with your letter of the 8th, and as you wish for a more explicit declaration of terms, I hereby agree to give you three hundred pounds, British, for the copyright of your work, entitled the Wild Irish Girl, on condition that it make three large volumes in duodecimo. With respect to a farther consideration, I would not advise you to look for it—in my own experience I have not had an instance,
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I write (in the greatest haste) to say, that agreeably to your proposal of my meeting the overture of a lady—a young and beautiful lady, one with whom I have been long enraptured—I will give two hundred pounds for the Wild Irish Girl, now, and fifty pounds on the publication of the second and the third editions respectively.
The two hundred pounds to be drawn for in three notes, of fifty pounds each, at two, four, and six months, from the 1st of May, and the other fifty pounds at nine months from the day of publication.
The fifty pounds from the new editions to be drawn at six months each.
When I wrote my first of the two letters I thought we had sold but six hundred and fifty copies of the Novice, and I then found we had sold seven hundred and ten, my stock-keeper having mistaken.
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I gave you leave, therefore, to draw for the premium on the second edition, and also for fifty pounds on account of my own child, which you have hitherto so cruelly detained, but which I was confident you could not persist in witholding from his fond parent!
My terms were those which a calculation indicated as just and liberal, and you know I told you at the outset that I was nothing better than a calculator!
You will, however, I fear, make something more of me!
I have now advanced fifty steps instead of one, which is more than you desired; you are, therefore, mine, all mine, even by agreement, leaving the will out of the question!
God bless you, and believe me always devotedly,
It provokes me that a foolish spirit of revenge and retaliation in Mr. Johnson, owing to my giving Mr. Carr five hundred pounds for his Northern Summer, for which he had offered but one hundred pounds, should have stimulated him to step between you and me, and give so monstrous a price for a work which he has not seen, on a first application; a species of work, too, wholly out of his line of publication.
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I am content, however, because such a spirit cannot but meet with its own punishment, and because, though unlawfully obtained, you are to benefit by it!
Still I am persuaded that my honest (legitimate) two hundred, and fifty pounds per edition, would have produced as much to you, and you would have no qualms of conscience, arising from your having robbed a parent of his own child.
In the first emotions, after receiving your letters, Cherry happening to call at the very instant, I resolved to outbid Johnson, though I might give five hundred pounds; some further consideration of the subject, has however, resolved me not to alter my last offer of two hundred pounds, to be drawn for in any way convenient to yourself, and fifty pounds per future edition after the first of fifteen hundred copies, which will little more than repay the two hundred pounds.
I am sorry you had not faith in me, and that you have been misled and dazzled so as not to feel your true interest. I am ever disposed to give to authors three-fourths of the product of their labours—and I could not live with less than the other fourth.
A little calculation (my favourite theme) may satisfy you that I made you a fair offer; and Johnson might as well have given you three thousand pounds as three hundred pounds, stimulated as he is by pique and a spirit of revenge.
The letter of Mr. Cherry must, therefore, be considered as nothing. I shall be glad to receive the re-
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I am convinced you will ultimately find that you have been foolish and maliciously advised about the disposal of your new work.
You ought to have done justice to your own feelings and not have been induced to act against your conscience as you have done.
You know well what is due to me in this affair; but you are not to be blamed—you have been led astray by a go-between, whose conduct at my house ought to have excited your lasting contempt.
The history of all literature will do honour to my offers, and I am resolved to stand or fall by the liberality of my conduct towards you. My offer of two hundred pounds and fifty pounds for future editions, is all that reason could expect. In asking three hundred pounds, you were advised to be very unreasonable.
I say this in perfect good humour, being stimulated to write by something which has passed to-day from a
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Not able to part from you, I have promised your noble and magnanimous friend, Atkinson, the three hundred pounds. His appeal was irresistible, and the Wild Irish Girl is mine, to do with her as I please!
You were too rapid about the Novice. Had her sister gone to Johnson he must have fathered the Novice, also, and have answered your drafts in her favour.
Write soon, and endeavour to make it up with me. It will be long before I shall forgive you! at least not till I have got back the three hundred pounds and another three hundred with it.
If you know any poor bard—a real one, no pretender—I will give him a guinea a page for his rhymes in the Monthly Magazine. I will also give for prose communications after the rate of six guineas per sheet. Your attention to this will oblige me, and may serve some worthy geniuses.
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