Lady Morgan’s Memoirs
John Hamilton Gray to Lady Morgan, 19 June 1856
Balsover Castle, Chesterfield,
June 19, 1856.
Dear Madam,
I take the liberty of addressing you on the subject of
our common correspondence with the editor
or author of Rogers’s Table
Twaddle.
There never was anything more false than that my dear
old friend, Viscountess Keith, and her
sister, Miss Thrale, and her late
sister, Mrs. Meyrick Hoare, refused to
be reconciled to their mother. On the contrary, as soon as Mr. and Mrs. Piozzi returned from their wedding tour
of four or five years on the Continent, Lady Keith and her
two younger sisters, then
534 | LADY MORGAN'S MEMOIR. | |
fine, handsome girls, fresh
from school, made a point of soliciting a renewal of intercourse. And
Lady Keith has often related to me their first
meeting, which was a very curious one, at Mrs.
Piozzi’s own house, and after that Lady
Keith, who had a very handsome establishment, gave Mr. and
Mrs. Piozzi many good dinners, and thereby aggravated
Piozzi’s
gout,—Piozzi, of whom Lady
Keith always speaks very kindly.
Long after Miss
Thrale’s marriage with Lord
Keith, Mrs. Piozzi died,
and Lady Keith went from Tulliallan, in Scotland, to Bath,
to attend her death-bed. It is very unfair to bring such stories forward, which
are calculated to annoy two excellent old ladies—I say two, because there
never was any question of reconciliation with the youngest, Mrs. Mostyn, who lived with
her mother until her marriage, which, by-the-way, was a run-a-way one.
Old Rogers ought to have known better
than to circulate such false trash; for he was at one time intimate, and was,
indeed, an admirer, if not a suitor, to one of the younger Miss
Thrales.
I could have given the editor of the Twaddle a much more pleasing anecdote of old
Rogers than any of those in his
book. About nine years ago, a letter containing bills which I had signed,
amounting to upwards of two thousand pounds, was not received by my steward, to
whom I had addressed it. It was found, a month after, safe at the bottom of the
dead-letter box, in the post-office of Glasgow, having been oddly mistaken for
a valentine. However, for some weeks I was in great alarm, and I called on
Rogers,
with whom I had, for
some time, been acquainted, to ask his advice, as he also, shortly before, had
the misfortune to have bills to a very large amount abstracted from his bank.
After very kindly telling me how he thought I ought to proceed under my
supposed loss, he went on to say (and here his face became quite beaming with
benevolence and satisfaction) that as soon as his loss became known, he
received offers of pecuniary aid and credit to any amount, from hosts and hosts
of friends, amongst the highest character, station, and rank in
England—men from whom he little expected such proofs of disinterested
regard. He added, that his opinion of human nature had, from that day, been
immeasurably improved. This is, I think, a more pleasant anecdote than any
contained in the Table Twaddle, and on that account I beg you to pardon this
long letter.
I have the honour to be,
Dear Madam,
Very truly yours,
Alexander Dyce (1798-1869)
Editor and antiquary, educated at Edinburgh High School and Exeter College, Oxford; he
published
Recollections of the Table-Talk of Samuel Rogers
(1856).
John Hamilton Gray (1800-1867)
The son of Robert Gray of Carntyne, he was educated at Glasgow and Magdalen College,
Oxford; he was vicar of Bolsover and a noted antiquary.
Cecilia Mostyn [née Thrale] (1777-1857)
The youngest daughter of the brewer Henry Thrale and his wife Hester Thrale [Piozzi]; in
1795 she eloped with John Meredith Mostyn (1775-1807) from whom she later separated.
Gabriel Mario Piozzi (1740-1809)
Italian musician who in 1784 became the second husband of Hester Lynch Thrale over the
strenuous objections of Samuel Johnson and her daughter Queenie.
Hester Piozzi [née Lynch] (1741-1821)
Poet, diarist, and friend of Doctor Johnson; in 1763 married 1) Henry Thrale (1728-1781)
and in 1784 2) Gabriel Mario Piozzi (1740-1809). She contributed to the Della Cruscan
volume,
The Florence Miscellany (1785).
Samuel Rogers (1763-1855)
English poet, banker, and aesthete, author of the ever-popular
Pleasures of Memory (1792),
Columbus (1810),
Jaqueline (1814), and
Italy (1822-28).
Sarah Rogers (1772-1855)
Of Regent's Park. the younger sister of the poet Samuel Rogers; she lived with her
brother Henry in Highbury Terrace.