Lady Morgan’s Memoirs
Journal entries: July 1854-November 1855
Poor Charles
Kemble! I knew the whole dynasty of the
Kembles, from King
John downwards; Charles was the last and
best of the whole stock—beautiful, graceful, gallant, and a very fine
gentleman; such he was when I first knew him.
July.—Silvio
Pellico is dead.
During our delightful residence on the Lake of Como, the
Villa Fontana was frequented by some of the most illustrious men in Lombardy.
Confalonieri, Count Porro, Count
Pecchio, and the charming women of their family. Silvio Pellico was the delight of all; he was
then all poetry. Many a moonlight night he passed with us in a gondola on the
lake, while Pecchio
sang to his guitar and the others joined in one of their
sweet canzone. He was a great
favourite with my dear Morgan.
The poor Pellico
on his deliverance from prison entered into the travaux forcés of the old, bigoted Marchesa Baralo. His great merits, his glowing
imagination were gone; the most elegant of poets, the most free-thinking of
philosophers, became a melancholy monk, and earned shrift by the utter
prostration of his intellect.
September 2.—Moore Park. A sort of hospital for
odds and ends. Since I arrived here, a month this day, I have been charmed with
everything, en gros et en détail. I have an
obituary already. Abbott Lawrence, my
most kind and hospitable host is gone. Poor old Colburn gone too—my brilliant advertiser and publisher of
thirty years! one who could not take his tea without a stratagem. He was a
strange mélange of meanness and munificence in his
dealings. There was a desperate vengeance that had more of the jealousy of love
than the resentment of business in his attempt to destroy my fame and fortune
when I went to Messrs. Saunders and
Otley with my second France.
We had a last quarrel about the cheap edition of my novels two months ago. I
read of his death in the papers. I wish that we had parted friends.
Another death!—General
Pepe is dead at Turin, at the age of seventy-two—one of
the noblest men in the contemporary history of modern Italy.
I am getting up memorials for a history of Moore
526 | LADY MORGAN'S MEMOIR. | |
Park and its many associations. Sir William Temple, Swift, Stella, &c. Shall I ever get it finished?
November.—In the beginning of September I went to
Llanover on a visit to Sir Benjamin and
Lady Hall. The gardens there are always
in their full beauty in the autumn.
I went thence to Stamford Hall, Leicestershire, to pay
one more visit to my dear and venerable friend, the Baroness Braye, and her charming daughter, Catherine, Countess of Beauchamp.
I arrived there very ill, with a severe attack of
bronchitis. Nothing could exceed their kindness. I left Stamford Hall and my
dear friends with the intention of proceeding to Combermere Abbey.
Lady Braye’s last words to me were to
intreat that I would keep away as long as I could from the fogs of London. But
I found myself so unwell on the railway, that is, my eyes so painful, that I
proceeded on to London, and found my house more comfortable and pretty than
ever. No high stairs! no long galleries and their draughts! and in short, I was
at home. And so ends my vittegiatura of the autumn of 1855.
Giulia, marchesa di Barolo (1786-1864)
Italian philanthropist and prison reformer who in 1806 married the Marquis Carlo Tancredi
Falletti of Barolo.
Henry Colburn (1785-1855)
English publisher who began business about 1806; he co-founded the
New
Monthly Magazine in 1814 and was publisher of the
Literary
Gazette from 1817.
Count Federico Confalonieri (1785-1846)
Italian nationalist and a leader of the 1821 rebellion against Austrian rule, for which
he was imprisoned for twelve years.
Augusta Hall, Lady Llanover [née Waddington] (1802-1896)
The daughter of Benjamin Waddington; in 1823 she married the industrialist and politician
Benjamin Hall; she was a political hostess and promoter of Welsh national customs and
literature.
Benjamin Hall, baron Llanover (1802-1867)
The son of Benjamin Hall, ironmaster and MP, he was educated at Christ Church, Oxford and
was Whig MP for Monmouth (1832-37) and Marylebone (1837-59); he was First Commissioner of
Works (1855-58).
Esther Johnson [Stella] (1681-1728)
The lifelong friend of Jonathan Swift and object of his birthday verses; they were
rumored to be secretly married.
Charles Kemble (1775-1854)
English comic actor, the younger brother of John Philip Kemble and Sarah Siddons.
John Philip Kemble (1757-1823)
English actor renowned for his Shakespearean roles; he was manager of Drury Lane
(1783-1802) and Covent Garden (1803-1808).
Abbott Lawrence (1792-1855)
Boston textile-manufacturer and philanthropist; he was minister to Great Britain
(1849-52).
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.
Edward John Otley (1798-1857)
In partnership with Simon Saunders he purchased Henry Colburn's Conduit Street
circulating library in 1824, afterwards becoming publishers.
Sarah Otway, baroness Braye [née Cave] (1768-1862)
The daughter of Sir Thomas Cave, sixth baronet; in 1790 she married Henry Otway; in 1839
she succeeded to the title of third Baroness Braye.
Giuseppe Pecchio (1785-1835)
Italian man of letters and philhellene born in Milan, he emigrated to England following
the failure of the Italian uprising of 1821; in 1828 he married Philippa Brooksbank.
Silvio Pellico (1789-1854)
Italian dramatist and revolutionary sentenced to death in 1821; his sentence was commuted
and he published a prison memoir,
Le mie prigioni (1832).
Guglielmo Pepe (1783-1855)
Italian general and liberal who served under Napoleon and fought against Austrian rule in
1848.
Count Luigi Porro Lambertenghi (1780-1860)
Italian nobleman sentenced to death by the Austrians; after taking refuge in Britain he
fought in the Greek war of independence before eventually returning to Italy in
1840.
Simon Saunders (1783-1861)
In partnership with Edward John Otley he purchased Henry Colburn's Conduit Street
circulating library in 1824, afterwards becoming publishers of novels and the
Metropolitan Magazine.
Jonathan Swift (1667-1745)
Dean of St Patrick's, Scriblerian satirist, and author of
Battle of the
Books with
Tale of a Tub (1704),
Drapier
Letters (1724),
Gulliver's Travels (1726), and
A Modest Proposal (1729).
Sir William Temple, baronet (1628-1699)
English statesman, diplomat, and patron of Jonathan Swift; his much-admired essays were
published as
Miscellanea, 3 vols (1680, 1692, 1701).