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Lady Morgan’s Memoirs
Journal entries: January-May 1836
INTRODUCTION & INDEXES
DOCUMENT INFORMATION
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Preface
Vol. I Contents.
Prefatory Address
Chapter I
Chapter II
Chapter III
Chapter IV
Chapter V
Chapter VI
Chapter VII
Chapter VIII
Chapter IX
Chapter X
Chapter XI
Chapter XII
Chapter XIII
Chapter XIV
Chapter XV
Chapter XVI
Chapter XVII
Chapter XVIII
Chapter XIX
Chapter XX
Chapter XXI
Chapter XXII
Chapter XXIII
Chapter XXIV
Chapter XXV
Chapter XXVI
Chapter XXVII
Chapter XXVIII
Chapter XXIX
Chapter XXX
Chapter XXXI
Chapter XXXII
Chapter XXXIII
Chapter XXXIV
Chapter XXXV
Chapter XXXVI
Chapter XXXVII
Chapter XXXVIII
Vol. I Index
Vol. II Contents
Chapter I
Chapter II
Chapter III
Chapter IV
Chapter V
Chapter IV
Chapter VII
Chapter VIII
Chapter IX
Chapter X
Chapter XI
Chapter XII
Chapter XIII
Chapter XIV
Chapter XV
Chapter XVI
Chapter XVII
Chapter XVIII
Chapter XIX
Chapter XX
Chapter XXI
Chapter XXII
Chapter XXIII
Chapter XXIV
Chapter XXV
Chapter XXVI
Chapter XXVII
Chapter XXVIII
Chapter XXIX
Chapter XXX
Chapter XXXI
Chapter XXXII
Chapter XXXIII
Chapter XXXIV
Chapter XXXV
Chapter XXXVI
Chapter XXXVII
Chapter XXXVIII
Chapter XXXIX
Chapter XL
Vol. II Index
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January 1836.—What a melancholy winding-up of the year 1835, and commencement of the year 1836. I went ill to Malahide Castle for Christmas-day—tried to bully a sore throat and head-ache, but finally knocked down and took to my bed, which I only left at the end of eight days, to be wrapped in hot blankets and conveyed to my own bed in Kildare Street. The united skill and hourly attendance of my dear husband and good Doctor O’Grady, shirked old death, and saved me from a delirious fever. How my head worked! what books I wrote! what plans I laid for the good of those I loved! what regrets that I had not settled my worldly affairs as I wished! But did I recant one opinion? Not one! I thought I should die, and yet I repeatedly said to myself, had I the sorry battle of life to fight over again, I should just take my old ground!

January 20.—The Registration Society is going on famously, all the young liberals of the highest rank
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have joined. They say it is entirely got up by “
Lady Morgan’s School of young men.” The high compliment!

January 30.—I have met with a loss that breaks my heart; I have lost the locket with lord Byron’s hair, sent me by Countess Guiccioli, enclosed in a curious reliquary. The small gold chain which I wore round my neck, and from which it hung, broke; I must have dropped it walking down Kildare Street this morning, to warm myself after a cold drive. I am the most unlucky woman in England.

February 1.—The Tories, at last, have placed O’Connell at the head of ascendancy in England; of this, his speech at Birmingham the other day, is a proof. It represents the spirit and opinion of England.

O’Connell is one of the instances of men who have been the offspring of events. From event to event he has climbed. He has grasped his opportunities; where will he end?

February 5.—Read last night Mrs. Lee’s Life of Cuvier. It gives me no just idea of the man, and still less of his reputation in France—where he was considered a great naturalist and bad philosopher. He was a man of the highest scientific genius and of the highest personal character; but vain, ambitious, tergiversating, serving all the powers that could serve him; equally subservient to Louis XVIII. as to Napoleon; and prouder of his station, honours, and title, than of his immortal scientific reputation.

March 20.—Death of my old friend Sir William Gell. Poor Gell! it seems but yesterday that I saw
LAST RETURN TO KILDARE STEEET—1836.413
him walking up Berkeley Square, the mirror of fine men upon town. He had written a
Topography of Troy as early as 1804. How often we met in my gay days in London, again at his residence at Rome, and a great deal at Naples, at the Margravine of Anspach’s, and many other places. He died at Naples, on the 4th February, 1836, worn out by twenty years’ gout.

April 1.—Busy to-day with my Woman and her Master, making extracts for it.

April 2.—I have been reading Von Raumer’s Letters on England. Clever, but German; a laborious but inconclusive book—full of brilliant incoherences. The product of a bold mind grappling with strong truths; but not following them to their consequences.

A letter to-day from Lady Cork, announcing the death of her macaw, the original of my article in the Book of the Boudoir.

Lady Cork to Lady Morgan.
6, New Burlington Street,
April 3, 1836.
Dear Lady Morgan,

Your old friend departed this life a few days ago; he is buried in my garden, and his merits well deserve an epitaph from your pen. He committed but one crime, and only made a bit of an assault on George the Fourth’s stocking. That was an offence merely, the crime was running away with a piece out of Lady Darlington’s leg. I have been ill with the tic, but am
414 LADY MORGAN'S MEMOIR.  
better now, and just going out of town for the holidays. Your admirer,
Lady Hatherton, has just returned from Paris. Are you coming to England—and when? I am more stupid than ever—only pick a little bit of dinner and drink a little drop of tea. I have neither vocals nor wit going on, chez moi. Don’t forget that I am ninety years old, and was, and am, and shall be to the end,

Your ever affectionate,
M. Cork and Orrery.

A charming note from Lord Morpeth.

Nuneham,
April 5th, 1836.
My dear Lady Morgan,

How am I to thank you enough for your most amiable letter, which has just come to divert the not-unoccupied repose of my holidays?
“In vain to deserts my retreat is made,
The tithes attend me to the silent shade.”
And so far, not inappropriately, as I am the guest of the
Archbishop of York, and within seven miles of Oxford. But then there is another awful phantom, styled poor laws,
“Whose gloomy presence saddens all the scene,
Shades every flower, and darkens every green.”
I am showing symptoms of bolting from the stout turnpike, where I ought to travel into pleasant pas-
LAST RETURN TO KILDARE STEEET—1836.415
tures. I am convinced that Dublin has been very gay, though you will not allow it. I am very sorry to miss the occasion of renewing my acquaintance with
Mrs. Laurence.

I cannot but be glad that Sir Charles has worked so hard for the lobster and anchovy sauces; I wish that his country might continue to appropriate some still more persevering labour from him. I shall feel the grey towers of Malahide a great and real loss. But we will have a look and luncheon there some morning.

Your most loyal servant,
Morpeth.

April 11.—Working all day and all night; spirits at a low ebb.

April 13.—Another, too, gone! Poor Godwin died on the 7th, at the Exchequer Office, Whitehall Yard, aged eighty-one. I saw the last of him in his den at the Star Chamber, last year.

April 18.—I am getting down my old harp, which I had exiled to a lumber-room, and will have it put in order. I will then get up a song or two.

April 24.—Unable to use my eyes, in any way, since the 19th. I write these few lines unknown to Morgan. Indebted all this time to the charity of strangers for the distraction of a little conversation, all other resources bereft me. Lady Beecher has been very kind in coming to me; the once celebrated Miss O’Neil—the “Juliet” of admiring thousands. When she was a poor, obscure young actress, I saw her by chance as Belinda, in “All in the Wrong” and
416 LADY MORGAN'S MEMOIR.  
afterwards in a suit of armour, dressed as an Amazon, as the heroine in
Timour the Tartar. I sought her out, and asked her to a party the next evening, and predicted her future triumph. Shortly after I followed her triumphant success in London. She is passing through Dublin on her way to see her old mother. She comes every day to see me while she stays here. The poetry of her own voice remains; it is still Juliet’s voice in the balcony; but all else that was poetical in her beauty has gone. She is now a thin, elegant-looking lady; but no beauty, except that she has the indestructible beauty of goodness.

May 20, London.—Arrived in London quite safely, and we settled in pleasant lodgings in Stafford Row, Buckingham Gate.

Poor Lady Glengall died on Monday, seventy years of age. She was the daughter of the celebrated Mrs. Jeffries (Groves of Blarney) of county Cork. She was the Lady Cahir of my youth.

May 22.—We are charmingly lodged, and in a quarter I like above all others. Yesterday, dined with some of my literary friends at Mr. Dilke’s. Kind, gay, and pleasant. After dinner, I got up and danced a reel with the grave editor, “to my girls playing,” and then we walked home, and sauntered till midnight, and by moonlight, under the trees of my pretty Grosvenor Place; how pleased I am with it, what true delight to live with trees!

May 27.—Got a cheerful letter from my beloved Sydney, so up early and at work for Woman and her Master.

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I have made acquaintance with the Lockharts, he editor of the Quarterly, and she Sir W. Scott’s daughter; we were mutually charmed with each other, and have sworn an eternal friendship.

Ambition, and vanity, and social tastes, have led me much into that chaos of folly and insincerity called the world; but domestic life is my vocation—unfortunately, my high organisation, and my husband’s character of mind, our love of art, and all that is best worth knowing, renders la vie domestique impossible. Yesterday, I went with Lady Dudley Stuart, and Urquhart (the Turkish traveller) to visit Wilkie, and see his pictures—a charming Flemish painted-like house, Knightsbridge, in a garden, and a pretty, “neat-handed Phillis,” opened the door. The great picture was the “Columbus in the Convent,” which is to be removed to-day to Somerset House. Fine heads for expression, and a fine conception; but in execution slap-dash—no finish, but good effect at a distance. A picture of the Duke of Wellington, much flattered; Lady Salisbury who was standing before it, remarked, “he is much changed now,” (the tiresome Liberals would change everything.)

Wilkie is simple and enthusiastic—he is the Teniers of England—domestic interiors. He told us an amusing story of the Turkish ambassador sending him, on his arrival, a cake for his breakfast, à la Turque.