Lady Morgan’s Memoirs
Lady Morgan to Lady Olivia Clarke, May 1819
Milan, Alberto Reale,
May 1819.
My dear Love
By this I trust you have received my letter from Geneva,*
which we left with difficulty and infinite regret. We had entreaties and
invitations to remain for months to come, and as a temptation to bring us back,
we have the offer of a house and garden on the
Lake as long as we please to occupy it. We were loaded
with books and little presents at our departure, and letters and notes of
adieu, with the most flattering testimonies of esteem and even of affection.
They were all astonishment at what they termed my simplicity, as they expected
to find me a learned lady at all points. The day before we departed we dined
with the Prince or Hospodar of Wallachia, who is travelling with his charming
family of three generations, his Prime Minister, and a number of his court!
What I would have given if you had seen us in the midst of their turbans and
beards! the Princesses and the sweet little children speaking nothing but
Greek, and conversing with me by signs, all dressed in. Greek costume, and the
servants in the beautiful Albanian dress! The men speak French like Parisians,
and we have made up a great intimacy with Mavrocordato, the minister, who is young, handsome, and
pleasant. The women had eyebrows painted like a horseshoe down to the nose.
They set out for Italy the day after us, and overtook us on the road with a
suite of five carriages. Our first day’s journey from Geneva was through
the lovely valleys of Savoy to Chambery—the capital. There we had
letters, and found green peas, strawberries, and kind and enlightened people.
Accompanied by learned librarians and professors, we visited the public
institutions, and what interested me more, the town and country house of
Madame de Warrens. For the whole of
our journey, so far, see Rousseau’s Confessions.
Here we found my France better known than in Ireland, for although it was
mise à l’Index,
that is interdicted by the government with Madame de Stael’s last work, I was assured that it
was to be found in almost every house.
Having passed two or three days in Chambery, which is not
much larger than Drogheda, we proceeded the next day through scenes of romantic
beauty that defy all description. At a lovely Alpine village—Aquibelle,
we were so delighted, that we made a halt, and made some delightful little
excursions on foot, where no carriage could penetrate. Here the snow mountains rose closely on us. The next day’s
journey all appearances of spring gradually faded into a perfect winter, the
horrible grandeurs of the Alps multiplied around us, and fatigued in spirits
and imagination, we reached the dreary little village of Lanslebourg late in
the evening, where all presented a Lapland scene, nothing but snow and ice, and
a hurricane blowing from the mountains. We found at the foot of Mont Cenis,
which we were to begin to ascend the next morning, an inn kept by a good little
Englishwoman, and I believe, next to finding myself at your chimney corner,
this truly English inn gave me the greatest pleasure I could feel. It snowed
all night, and we began our ascent in a shower of snow, with four stout horses
and two postilions dragging our light carriage. My imagination became
completely seized as we proceeded, and I sat silent for near seven hours, my
teeth clenched, my hands closed, my whole existence absorbed in the sublime
horror that surrounded me. The clouds that form your sky were rolling at our
feet, and the pinnacles of the mountains were con-
fronted
with the dark vapours which formed their Alpine firmaments in stormy weather.
We had a slight glimpse of what they call “la
tourmente” which obliges travellers to employ
guides to hold down the carriage on each side to prevent its being carried
away. We had three feet of snow under our wheels; but the road was otherwise
fine. Such a noble work, such a monument of the mighty means and great views of
Bonaparte! As we descended, a slow
spring gradually opened on us, the snows were melting, the trees budding, and
once arrived in the lovely plains of Lombardy, the same glowing summer
presented itself we had left in the valleys of Savoy. We passed a day at the
first Italian town we reached, Susa, at the foot of Mont Cenis, and with the
old Governor, with whom we had a delightful scene. The next day we arrived at
Turin—a pretty city of palaces—took a handsome apartment in the
Hotel de l’Europe, and sent out our letters of presentation by our
Italian valet de place. The next day
the whole town of Turin was down on us. Some of the corps diplomatique, some of the ministers and officers
of the Court, the Prussian Ambassador and Ambassadress, the Prince
Hohenzollern, the principal physicians and professors;—all left their
cards and offers of service. The Countess of Valpergua,
one of the leaders of the haute
noblesse, took us at once to herself, and without the least
form or ceremony, told us that in the first place we must command her
carriages, and horses, and her box at the opera. The night after our arrival
she made a ball for us and introduced us personally to the whole Piedmontese
noblesse. The palace Valpergua, was the first Italian great house I saw,
and the suite of rooms we passed through that night were, I think, more
spacious and numerous than the rooms of state at the Castle, though
Madame Valpergua told me she had only opened half the
suite. A few nights afterwards, the Prussian Ambassadress made a ball for us
equally brilliant. She told me that she had lately been at Baden, and that the
Princess of Baden, hearing I was travelling, was very anxious to see me and pay
us every attention—that they had both spent a night crying over The
Missionary. But what flattered us infinitely more, was the
attention of the Count de Balbo, minister, who, as head of
the University, gave orders that all the professors should attend to receive
us. At the University, imagine my shame to see all the learned muftis in their
robes, each in his department, receiving us at the doors of their halls and
colleges. In the Cabinet de Physique, they prepared all sorts of chemical
experiments for us, &c., &c. These poor gentlemen were under arms three
days for us. I must give you one of our days at Turin. From nine to twelve,
morning, we received visits from professors and literati who accompanied us to
see the sights. Every one dined at two o’clock. Between four and five,
regularly, the Countess Valpergua called for us in an open
carriage, and we drove to see some villa near the town. By seven o’clock
we were back for the Corso, where all the nobility drive up and down till the
opera begins. From thence we went to a coffee-house and had ices, and then to
the Opera, where, during the whole night, visits were
received, and everything was attended to but the music; by eleven we were at
home. The Court was at Genoa; but the Master of the Ceremonies showed us the
palace from top to bottom.
At last here we are, in the ancient capital of Lombardy,
now under the government of the Emperor of
Austria, whose brother, the Arch-Duke
Regnier, is the lord-lieutenant here. Milan is a very fine city,
and as far as we have gone, a delightful residence for us. The Count Confalonieri, and his lovely Countess,
came to us the moment of our arrival, and from that moment attentions, visits,
friendship, and services on all sides. Madame Confalonieri
began by taking us to the Corso, one of the great places of exhibition, and
introducing us at the Casino, where the nobility are exclusive, and where even
professional men are not admitted, and then insisting on our considering her
opera-box as ours during our residence here. Thus presented, our success was
undoubted; but we found it was already prepared for us by the eternal France,
and by Morgan’s work in French,
sent here from Geneva.* Not only the liberal party have visited and invited us,
but the Austrian Commander-in-Chief and his wife have been to see us, and we
have spent an evening there. We dined yesterday at the Count de
Porrio’s, whose palace is celebrated for its Etruscan
vases, &c., &c. The Italian dinner is very elegant; the table is
covered with alabaster vases, flowers, fruit, and all sorts of ornaments; the
soups and meats, are
served on the side-table, cut up, and handed round by the
servants, so all is kept cool and fresh—the great object of their lives
here. From the only English residents here, we have received the kindest and
most hospitable attentions. These are Lord
and Lady Kinnaird, and Colonel and Lady
Martha Keating.
The Opera-house is considerably larger than the
Opera-house at London, and truly magnificent and imposing; but the stage only
is lighted: the women go in great bonnets, and it is, therefore, by no means so
brilliant or enjoyable as ours. The orchestra is immense, and the scenery, for
beauty and taste, beyond what you can imagine; and the ballet the finest in
Europe as a drama, though the dancing is bad; as soon as the ballet begins,
every one attends. They have played one wretched opera for these forty nights
back, for they don’t change these entertainments ten times a year. Last
night we had a new one brought out, and helped to damn it. God bless you all,
dear loves, and send me safe back to you!
S. M.
Richard Bentley (1794-1871)
London bookseller who in 1819 partnered with his brother Samuel (1785-1868) and in 1829
formed an unhappy partnership with Henry Colburn that was dissolved in 1832.
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.
Francis II, emperor of Austria (1768-1835)
He succeeded Ludwig II as emperor of Hungary and Bohemia and took the title of emperor of
Austria in 1804; with his minister Meternich he dominated the Holy Alliance.
Maurice Bagenal St Leger Keating (d. 1835)
He served in the 22nd light dragoons from 1778 and was MP for Kildare (1790, 1801-02); he
published
Eidometria, or, Optic Mensuration (1812).
Charles Kinnaird, eighth baron Kinnaird (1780-1826)
The son of George Kinnaird, seventh baron Kinnaird; he was Whig MP for Leominster
(1802-05) before he succeeded to the title. He was the elder brother of Byron's friend,
Douglas Kinnaird.
Prince Alexander Mavrocordatos [Αλεξανδρος Μαβροκορδατος] (1791-1865)
Greek statesman and diplomat with Byron at Missolonghi; after study at the University of
Padua he joined the Greek Revolution in 1821 and in 1822 was elected by the National
Assembly at Epidaurus. He commanded forces in western Central Greece and retired in 1826
after the Fall of Messolonghi.
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.
Emperor Napoleon I (1769-1821)
Military leader, First Consul (1799), and Emperor of the French (1804), after his
abdication he was exiled to Elba (1814); after his defeat at Waterloo he was exiled to St.
Helena (1815).
Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778)
Swiss-born man of letters; author of, among others,
Julie ou la
Nouvelle Heloïse (1761),
Émile (1762) and
Les Confessions (1782).
Germaine de Staël (1766-1817)
French woman of letters; author of the novel
Corinne, ou L'Italie
(1807) and
De l'Allemagne (1811); banned from Paris by Napoleon, she
spent her later years living in Germany, Britain, and Switzerland.