Lady Morgan’s Memoirs
Lady Morgan to Lady Olivia Clarke, 26 June 1819
Lake of Como, Villa Fontana,
June 26, 1819.
The attentions of the Milanese increase with our
residence among them, and persons of all parties, Guelphs and Ghibellines, have
united to pay us attention. The Ex-minister of the Interior made a splendid
entertainment for us at his beautiful villa, as did the
Trivulgis, and a Marquis de
Sylvas, of whose villa and gardens there are many printed
accounts. We were told there was no hospitality in Italy. We not only dined out
three times a week on an average, but we have had carriages and horses so much
at our service, that though we have made several excursions of twenty and
thirty miles into the country, we never had occasion to hire horses but once,
and that was to go to Pavia, where we spent a few days, and made the
acquaintance of old Volta, the inventor
of the voltaic battery. We went with the Count and Countess Confalonieri to see
Monza, and its magnificent cathedral, where the iron crown of Lombardy is kept.
The difficulty and ceremonies attending on this, convince me that the
travellers (not even Eustace) who
mentions so lightly having seen this relic, have never seen it at all. We had
an order expedited the night before from the Arch-Duke to the chanoines of Monza, who received us in grand
pontificals at the gates of the church, as did the Grand-Master, of the
imperial suite at the palace of Monza, where the Arch-Duke
resides. We have also been to see the Grand Chartreuse, and in all my life I
was never so entertained; but as to churches, and pictures, and public
edifices, and institutions, my head is full of nothing else. To tell the truth,
we became latterly quite overcome and exhausted by the life we led, for we
never knew one moment’s quiet, nor had time to do anything. We had been
offered the use of two beautiful villas on the Lake of Como, for nothing; one
of them, the Villa Someriva, one of the handsomest palaces in Lombardy. We left
Milan ten days back, and have since lived in a state of enchantment, and I
really believe in fairy land. I know not where to refer you for an account of
the Lake of Como except to Lady M. W. Montague’s Letters. The lake
is fifty miles long, and the stupendous and magnificent mountains which embosom
it, are strewn along their edges, with the fantastic villas of the nobility of
Milan, to which, as there is no road, there is no approach but by water. We
took boat at the pretty antique town of Como, and literally landed in the
drawing-room of the Villa Tempi. The first things I perceived were the orange
and lemon trees, laden with fruit, growing in groves in the open air; the
American aloes, olive trees, vines, and mulberries, all in blossom or fruit,
covering the mountains almost to their summits. The blossoms and orange
flowers, with the profusion of roses and wild pinks, were almost too
intoxicating for our vulgar senses.
The next day we set off on our aquatic excursions through
regions the wildest, the loveliest, the most romantic that can be conceived. We
landed at all the
curious and classical points—at
Pliny’s fountain, the site of his
villa, &c.,—and after a course of twenty-five miles, reached my villa of Someriva, which we found to be a splendid
palace, all marble, surrounded by groves of orange trees, but so vast, so
solitary, so imposing, and so remote from all medical aid, that I gave up the
idea of occupying it, and we rowed off to visit other villas, and at last set
up our boat at a pretty inn on the lake, where we sat up half the night
watching the arrival of boats and listening to the choruses of the boatmen. The
next day we returned, and after new voyages found a beautiful little villa on
the lake, ten minutes row from Como, which we have taken for two months, at six
pounds a month. The villa Fontana consists of two pavilions, as they are called
here, or small houses of two storeys, which are separated by a garden. In one
reside the Signor and Signora, our hosts, with a charming family; in the other
reside the Signor and Signora Morgan, with an Italian
valet de chambre. These
pavilions are on the lake in a little pyramid; the vines and grapes festooned
from tree to tree, and woven into a canopy above. The lake spreads before us
with all its mountain beauties and windings. To the right lies the town of
Como, with its gothic cathedral. Immediately behind us, on every side, rise the
mountains which divide Italian Switzerland from Lombardy, covered with vines,
olives and lime trees, and all this is lighted by a brilliant sun and canopied
by skies bright, and blue, and cloudless. We have already made some excursions
into these enchanting mountains, which are like cultivated gardens raised into
the air; and walked within a mile of the Swiss
frontier. We have a boat belonging to the villa anchored in the garden, into
which we jump and row off. But of all the delights, imagine that shoals of
foolish fish float on the surface of the lake in the evening, and that
Morgan, who ambitioned nothing but a
nibble on the Liffey line, here catches the victims of his art by dozens! Our
villa consists of seven pretty rooms on the upper floor, and four below. The
floors are stone, sprinkled with water two or three times a-day, the walls
painted in fresco, green jalousies and muslin draperies, and yet with all these
cooling precautions, the heat obliges us to sit still all day. There is only
one circumstance that reconciles me to your not sharing our pleasures, and that
is a small matter of thunder and lightning, which comes about two days out of
three, and is sometimes a little too near and too loud for the nerves of some
of my friends. At this present moment it shakes the house, and the rain is
falling as if Cox of Kilkenny was coming again. If, by the
time we return, I don’t make “Les serpents de
l’envie sifflent dans votre cœur” with
my Spanish guitar, my name is not Oliver!
Morgan is making great progress on the guitar. I think
it would amuse you to witness the life we lead here. We rise early, and as our
house is a perfect smother, we open the blinds (the sashes are never shut), and
paradise bursts on us with a sun and sky that you never dreamt of in your
philosophy. We breakfast under our arcade of vines, and the table covered with
peaches and nectarines, while the fish literally pop their heads out of the
lake to be fed, though
Morgan, like a traitor, takes them by hundreds. Except you
saw him in a yellow muslin gown and straw hat, on the lake of Como, you have no
idea of human felicity! All day we are shut up in our respective little
studies, in which the light scarcely penetrates, for the intolerable heat
obliges every one to remain shut up during the middle of the day, and the
houses and villages look as if they were uninhabited. At two o’clock we
dine, at five, drink tea, and then we are off to the mountains, and frequently
don’t come back till night, or else we are on the lake; but in either
instance we are in scenes which no pencil could delineate, nor pen describe.
The mountains with their valleys and glens are covered with fig-trees,
chestnuts, and olive-trees, and with the lovely vineyards which are formed into
festoons and arcades, and have quite another appearance from the stunted
vineyards of France. The other day, after dinner, we walked on till we came to
some barriers, where we were stopped by douaniers. We asked where we were, and found it was
Switzerland. So, having walked through a pretty Swiss village, and admired a
sign, “William Tell,” we walked back to Italy
to tea. We are by no means destitute of society; some of our Milanese nobles
come occasionally to their villas on the lake, and we are always asked to join
the party. The Commandant de la Ville continues to give us tea parties, and we
have three very nice English families, of whom we see a good deal (that is, as
much as we like). One consists of three sisters, heiresses, and nieces to the
Bishop of Rochester, the Misses King.
They are sensible, 100 | LADY MORGAN'S MEMOIR. | |
off-handed women, travel about with no
protection but a Newfoundland dog, though still youngish, and are equally
independent in every other respect. They were so anxious to know us, and so
fearful of intruding, that the youngest (drôle
de corps) was coming in disguise as an Italian lady
(because English women, they said, have no right to force themselves on me),
with some story to get admittance! Another family, Mr.
Laurie’s, English people of fashion, with seven children,
a French governess, an Irish tutor, and an English housekeeper. Our last and
most delightful is Mrs. Lock and three
charming daughters; she is aunt to the Duke of
Leinster, being the old
duchess’s daughter, by Ogilvie. She is connected with all the first and cleverest
people in England, and smacks of all that’s best in the best way. She
was, she said, a long time negociating the business of an introduction to me,
and at last effected it by getting a dinner made on the lake, to which we were
invited. Since then we are in constant correspondence, either by voyages on the
lake or by notes. We dined there the other day, and by way of amusing the sweet
girls, who are shut up in the loveliest but most solitary site, I announced a
party in my vineyard; and there were the Kings, and my
Austrian commandant, and some of his officers and Spanish guitars, and a little
band of music and fireworks, provided by the young Signori of my host’s
family; there was tea, and cakes, and all sorts of things laid on the terrace
by the lake; and Mrs. Lock’s boat approached in
view, and the heavens looked transcendently bright, when lo! up rose one of the
lake | SOJOURN IN ITALY—1819. | 101 |
hurricanes, the lightning flashed, the thunder
rolled, tea, cakes, and fireworks were carried into the air, and poor
Mrs. Lock, after tossing for five hours in a boat,
which at every moment threatened to be overset, was too happy to land at
midnight, two miles off, at a wretched little village, and pass the night at a
cabaret or miserable public house. So much for my Como news!
The weather has been splendid; the heat was at ninety
degrees of our thermometer for some days. In the midst of the glories of this
beautiful clime these sudden storms burst forth, and while they last, spoil
all. Among our Comoesque amusements, one is going to the festivals of the
saints on the mountains, and to the churches. To-morrow we are to have an opera
in Como, with a company from Milan, and the Commandant has given us his box.
There has been an imperial fête at Milan, called a carousal, for which we had an imperial invitation; but as court
dresses were necessary, we thought it not worth the expense. We are delighted
with the good family of our host here; they are, Don
Giorgo and Donna Teresa, the heads; he is
ready for the “Padrone,” and excellent in his way; she, the best
woman in the world; but as they speak Milanese, and very little Italian, we get
on as it pleases heaven. The chief beau is the eldest son, a major in the army,
and aide-de-camp to his uncle, a general; he is “Don
Gallias,” and my “poor servant ever,” for he
absolutely watches our looks and anticipates our wishes. Then two younger sons,
handsome lads, come home for their college vacation, and two
102 | LADY MORGAN'S MEMOIR. | |
pretty, brown, black-eyed girls, Donna
Giovana and Donna Rosina—nothing can
equal their gaiety and noise. They live in the garden, and the young men are
delightfully musical. The talent for music here is as common as speech. The
children walk hand in hand and sing in parts almost from the cradle. On
Sundays, the recreation of the peasantry is to get into boats, and float on the
lake, and sing in chorus, which they do wonderfully, but you never hear a solo,
though there is nothing but singing from morning till night. Such is our life,
circle, and society here! Considering the remoteness of our habitation
ce n’est pas mal. I
forgot to mention we have an ex-ambassador and his gay, French wife, and some
Capuchin friars, and that I was most gallantly received by the monks of a most
famous college here—one of them, the finest head I ever beheld. Nothing
can equal the beauty of some of the fine heads here, of our young hosts in
particular; but there is also the most hideous race, called Cretins, that ever
nature sent into the world to disgrace her handy works; they are precisely the
figure of nut-crackers, that we have in toyshops, not above two feet high, with
the head almost on the knees, but monstrously gay and self-conceited.
I labour, as usual, four or five hours a-day. I think I
shall do the best that I have done yet, and that my great glory is to come.
Lord Byron is, I hear, at Bologna. We
have read his Don
Juan. It is full of good fun, excellent hits, and
à mourir de rire. His
blue-stocking lady is sketched off wickedly well, but his shipwreck is
horrible, bad taste, bad feeling, and
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bad policy. I see
they have put in the French papers that I have left Italy for Vienna. I
don’t know the motive. What is to be done about Moore? We were going to write to
Byron about him, poor fellow!
Love to Clarke;
kisses to the children—sans adieu.
S. M.
Sir Arthur Clarke (1778-1857)
Irish physician and fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons; in 1808 he married Olivia
Owenson, sister of Lady Morgan.
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.
John Chetwode Eustace (1761-1815)
Roman Catholic priest and tutor; the author of a standard traveler's guide,
Tour through Italy, 2 vols, (1813).
Walker King, bishop of Rochester (1751-1827)
The son of the Rev. James King of Clitheroe, he was educated at Corpus Christi College,
Oxford and was prebendary of Peterborough (1794), canon of Wells (1796), prebendary of
Canterbury (1803). and bishop of Rochester (1809).
Cecilia Margaret Lock [née Ogilvie] (1775-1824)
The daughter of Emily FitzGerald, duchess of Leinster and her second husband William
Ogilvie; in 1795 she married Charles Lock, consul-general in Naples (1798-1803).
Thomas Moore (1779-1852)
Irish poet and biographer, author of the
Irish Melodies (1807-34),
The Fudge Family in Paris (1818), and
Lalla
Rookh (1817); he was Byron's close friend and designated biographer.
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.
William Ogilvie (1740-1832)
The tutor of Lord Edward FitzGerald who married his charge's mother, Emily FitzGerald,
Duchess of Leinster.
Pliny the younger (61-112 c.)
Roman letter-writer, the adopted nephew of Pliny the elder; the eighteenth-century
translation by William Melmoth was frequently reprinted.
Alessandro Volta (1745-1827)
Professor of physics at the Royal School in Como; he invented the electric cell in
1800.
George Gordon Byron, sixth Baron Byron (1788-1824)
Don Juan. (London: 1819-1824). A burlesque poem in ottava rima published in installments: Cantos I and II published in
1819, III, IV and V in 1821, VI, VII, and VIII in 1823, IX, X, and XI in 1823, XII, XIII,
and XIV in 1823, and XV and XVI in 1824.