Lady Morgan’s Memoirs
Lady Morgan to Alicia Le Fanu, 7 June 1812
Baron’s Court,
June 7th, 1812.
My dearest Friend,
“To each his suffering;” you have had
your portion, and it would have been unfair and unjust to have written to you
under the influence of my sadness, and have drawn from you an unavailing
sympathy at the moment you have been so actively and beneficially engaged in
soothing and comforting my dear Olivia,
who feels your goodness in her “heart of hearts.” You are a true friend,—I have always thought so,—I
have always said so, and every year of our friendship has given me fresh reason
to confirm my opinion. The dearest and strongest tie, which time, nature,
habit, and acts of reciprocal affection can form, has been wrenched from my
heart; I ought long since to have been, and yet was not, prepared for it. It
was a dreadful break up to the feelings; it is so much of life broken off. A
host of dearly remembered events, feelings, and associations, are necessarily
gone with it. Were it possible I could ever again love anything so well, I can
never again love anything so long. The best point of existence with me is over,
and new ties and new affections must be light in their hold, and feeble in
their influence, compared to those “which grew with the growth and
strengthened with the years.” My dear husband,
Olivia, yourself, and one or two more objects
are still left me, to whom I will cling. It is my
intention to sacrifice for the rest of my life to the heart, and to live in Ireland, if those I love cannot live with me in
England, where interest and ambition equally call Morgan and myself; he has no wish, scarcely any will, but mine, and is ready to make my
country his, “my people his people.” As yet, our views are very misty;
Lord and Lady
Abercorn are very desirous we should remain with them, as long
as they stay in Ireland, at least if not after; but as that will probably be
for a year or two, it would be impossible. We have not,
however, said so.
We have lately added to our party,
As Lord Byron calls him. He is reckoned
among the “rising young men” of England, and is one of the virtuosi
who purchased a farm at Athens, where he resided for some time. He was the
husband of Lord Abercorn’s lately
deceased and beautiful daughter. The
meeting was very afflicting, and for some time threw a shadow over our circle.
What think you of the state of public affairs? our
letters to-day, from England, say that the opposition still hold out, though
offered six places out of twelve in the Cabinet, or seven out of fourteen. What
a bouleversement in the state of
things when stars and garters go a begging!! and commoner’s misses refuse
to become princesses!!* The Cabinet remains empty
because no one thinks it worth their while to accept a
place in it, and yet all this we have lived to see! If the opposition permit
themselves in their condescension to be prevailed upon to govern an empire,
your brother will find his own level, and you will have your levers et couchers, and we shall find with
Louis the Fourteenth’s courtiers
that Cuff Street “est faite pour n’être comparée
à rien” (which, by-the-bye, and with deference to
Mr. Lefanu, is more true than of the
Louvre) and that “il ne plait pas à
Glasnevin.” In the midst of all this political tourbillon, people still submit to be
pleased and amused, and run after your comedy as they would have done in the
prosperous and Augustan days of Queen Anne.
Lady Abercorn tells me she has had
great accounts of its success from all sides. As she knows your bonne fortune is mine, she indulges me
with hearing of the good tidings. Livy
says you think she could write a comedy; I think so too, she has an immense
fund of true comedy in her own character, but writing is such a distinct thing
from ourselves that no inference can be drawn from thence. Lord Byron, the author of delightful Childe
Harold (which has more force, fire, and
thought than anything I have read for an age) is
cold, silent, and reserved in his manners,—pray read it if you have not.
When I was in London, Lord G. Greville read
me a poem of his own on the
same subject as Childe Harold.
The rival lords published their poems the same day; the one is cried up to the
skies, the other, alas, is cried down to ——!
We expect Livy
here, but she seems either unwilling or unable to leave home. We have no chance
of going ourselves to Dublin till winter; by that
time, every one that I have known and lived with (save yourself, the Atkinsons, and the Mason’s) will have left it; indeed they are almost all
gone already. It is astonishing the changes that have taken place in the little
circle of my intimacy within a few years, either by death or departure to
England. Among my literary friends, dear Psyche (Mrs. Tighe), Cooper Walker, and Kirwin are no more!
Sir Charles’s desire to know you
increases daily. Shall we ever all meet again and all be happy together? At
least write to me, and under all changes and circumstances, believe I love you
tenderly and sincerely.
S. O. M.
Joseph Atkinson (1743-1818)
Irish playwright educated at educated at Trinity College, Dublin; he was a friend of
Thomas Moore and Lady Morgan.
Lady Olivia Clarke [née Owenson] (1785 c.-1845)
The younger sister of Lady Morgan who married Dublin physician Sir Arthur Clarke
(1778-1857) in 1808. She wrote songs and a play, and published in the
Metropolitan Magazine and
Athenaeum.
George Hamilton- Gordon, fourth earl of Aberdeen (1784-1860)
Harrow-educated Scottish philhellene who founded the Athenian Society and was elected to
the Society of Dilettanti (1805); he was foreign secretary (1841-1846) and prime minister
(1852-55).
George Nugent Grenville, second baron Nugent (1788-1850)
Son of George Nugent Grenville, first marquess of Buckingham; he was MP, lord of the
Treasury, and author of
Portugal, a Poem, in Two Parts (1812) and
Some Memorials of John Hampden, his Party and his Times (1831).
He was remarkable for his corpulence.
Anne Jane Hamilton, marchioness of Abercorn [née Gore] (1763-1827)
Daughter of the earl of Arran; in 1783 she married Henry Hatton (d. 1793), in 1800 John
James Hamilton, first marquess of Hamilton. She entertained literary figures at her villa
at Stanmore, among them Lady Morgan.
Richard Kirwan (1733-1812)
Irish chemist, educated at St. Omer; he was elected to the Royal Society in 1780 and was
president of the Royal Irish Academy in 1799. He was a friend of Lady Morgan.
Joseph Le Fanu (1743-1825)
Of Dublin, son of William Le Fanu (1708-1797); his second wife was Alicia Elizabeth
Sheridan, daughter of Thomas Sheridan.
William Charles Monck Mason (1775-1859)
The son of Henry Monck Mason; he was an Irish antiquary who held a position in the
revenue department in Dublin (1796-1826 c.).
Sir Thomas Charles Morgan (1780-1843)
English physician and philosophical essayist who married the novelist Sydney Owenson in
1812; he was the author of
Sketches of the Philosophy of Morals
(1822). He corresponded with Cyrus Redding.
Mary Tighe [née Blachford] (1772-1810)
Irish poet, the daughter of William Blachford; in 1793 she married Henry Tighe
(1768-1836); following her death from consumption her poem
Psyche
obtained great renown.
Joseph Cooper Walker (1761-1810)
Irish antiquary, educated in Dublin by Thomas Ball; he spent time in Italy and published
Historical Memoirs of the Irish Bards (1786).