Lady Morgan’s Memoirs
Lady Morgan to Lady Olivia Clarke, 28 October 1819
Florence, Palazzo Corsini,
October 28th, 1819.
We left you setting off for Florence. At the opera the
Counts Confalonieri and
Visconti told us we were mistaken, and that we were
going with them the next morning to Genoa! Without more ceremony they ran off
with our passport to the police and got it changed, and finalemente, as we say in Italy, we set
off next day for Genoa. Our journey lay partly over the Apennines; we began to
ascend them a little before the purple sunset of Italian skies, and pursued our
route by moonlight, and never did any light shine upon scenes more romantically
lovely. Nothing was wanting. In the cleft of a mountain we heard a funeral
chaunt, and the next moment appeared a procession of monks, their faces
covered, and only their eyes seen,—horrible, but strange and new to me.
We slept that night on the top of the mountain, and the next day, having walked
more than we drove, we beheld “Genoa the superb” at the foot of the
Apennines, and the Mediterranean spreading far and wide. Our hotel lay on its
banks, and we had scarcely dined,
when we were invited to
go on board a British ship of war that lay in the bay (the Glasgow,
Captain Maitland). Accompanied by our Italian friends,
off we sailed. There never was anything to equal the empressement of the officers and their kindness to me.
I left them my fan, and they gave me one. They had tea for us, and I was so
delighted with this most magnificent spectacle, that I went down between decks
and saw three hundred sailors at supper, notwithstanding the heat was at one
hundred degrees. The result was that the next day I was seized with rheumatism,
&c., and never knew one hour’s health during the fortnight I remained
there; still, I struggled against it, as I had so much to see, to learn, and to
hear,—went about to visit all the palaces,—oh, such ancient
splendour! Churches, hospitals, and institutions!—All the learned
professors, head physicians, &c., waited on Morgan. The Commander-in-Chief himself, who came to us the
moment we arrived, with his aides de camp, accompanied him to the different
hospitals, and he was solicited to give his opinion of the disorder of a young
heir to a great family, which he did with success. This family, and that of the
Marchese Pallaviccini, are the first in the town; they
were among the first also to come forward. They asked us to a splendid ball and
dinner, and we took so well that they insisted on our considering their table
as ours, and dining with them every day. We did so as long as my health and the
fatigue of going to their villa would admit of the thing. But oh, that you
could see us going! You must know that the old republican streets of Genoa are
so narrow, 114 | LADY MORGAN'S MEMOIR. | |
one excepted, that carriages cannot ply, as
the town is built up against the Apennines, and the villa Pallaviccini is
perched on the steepest; there is no going there, but being carried in sedan
chairs, and this is the way Morgan and I went every day;
for nothing but a goat and a Genoese chairman could scale those precipices. The
night of the ball, all the officers of the Glasgow went in this manner.
A propos, one of the officers
came on shore to see us, and sent up his name, Mr. Marcus
Brownrigg. It was no other than “I am your man, and
I’ll carry your can,” thrown into a very charming and
gentlemanly young man. I never saw so kind a creature. He said he had orders to
bring the Captain’s boat and ten men for me as often as I pleased. He
came with this set-out twice, and was in despair that I could not go. He wrote
me an elegant note to tell me so, but alas! after near a fortnight’s
struggle, and going out every day sick and weary, I was knocked down fairly, or
rather foully, with a bilious complaint that threatened fever. There was no
getting a breath of air,—I suffocated; however,
Morgan was nurse, doctor, all, and himself far from
well. In fact, in despair of my recovering in this scorching climate, he
wrapped me up one fine morning and threw me from my bed to the carriage, and
set off with me for Bologna. The moment we began to descend the mountains and
get into the fresh, delicious plains of Lombardy, I recovered, and we both got
well by the time we reached Parma, where the late empress of Europe reigns over
a dreary, desolate, and gloomy country town. Her only amusement is the opera,
and such an opera! a narrow lozenge box, lighted with
five tallow candles. We staid to see the chm-ches and Correggio’s
paintings, and would have staid longer, but we were entirely hunted out by the
bugs. Modena, though a royal residence, is a sad set out, and the whole of this
earthly paradise broken up into little states, neglected, poor, melancholy,
presents but one great ruin. We gladly escaped from these little capitals to
the lovely magnificent country. The vines festooned from tree to tree, present
their luxurious fruit to any hand that will pluck them. It was the vintage, and
I never saw such contrasts as the comfortless aspect and misery of the people,
and the enchantment and plenty of the scenery.
Arrived at Bologna, we sent out our letters, and the next
day were visited by all that was delightful and distinguished in the town. The
Countess Semperiva, a young, pretty, clever widow,
took us at once under her wing; her carriage was at our door every morning to
take us to see the galleries, palaces, &c. She made a delightful dinner
party for us, so did our banker, at his villa; a Madame
Martinelli, the Beauty and Wit of Bologna, was equally kind, and
made two very elegant evening parties for us; at the last we found Crescentini, singing some of his own
delightful compositions at the piano, and Sir
Humphrey and Lady Davy;
nothing could be more cordial than he was, though he is completely turned into
a fine man upon town. All the cleverest professors called on Morgan, and when he went to the hospitals he
was complimented on his work (Outlines of the Physiology
116 | LADY MORGAN'S MEMOIR. | |
of Life), which, by-the-bye, has taken wonderfully in
Italy, and procured him infinite fame; a second edition of the French
translation has appeared. When we arrived at Bologna, they recommended us our
apartments by telling us they were well aired, as Lord
Byron only left them the day before. You may suppose he came to
Bologna to visit the learned body of that ancient university, or consult its
famous library. Not a bit of it. He came to carry off a young lady.
The hotels at Florence are handsome, comfortable, and
expensive. We set up at the Nova-Yorka, kept by an Englishwoman. Our arrival
being known, some of the principal persons came to visit us instanter; the Prince Corsini
(minister of the interior), Prince Borghese
(Bonaparte’s brother-in-law),
the Countess D’Albany, widow of
the last Pretender, and the fair
friend of Alfieri. Several of the
learned came to see Morgan,—Lord
Burghersh, the Ambassador, and Lady
Burghersh, Lady Florence Lindsay, and her
charming daughters, and lots of my Paris Wednesday evening acquaintances of all
nations. The Countess D’Albany, who never goes out,
asked us immediately; she is “at home” every evening, and holds
quite a royal circle. All her fine gold plate, the finest I ever saw, was
displayed. The circle is most formal, and you will scarce believe, and I am
ashamed to say, she kept the seat of honour vacant for me, next herself. It was
in vain, last night (for we go to her constantly), that when ambassadresses and
princesses were announced, I begged to be allowed to retreat, she would not
hear of it. You have no idea the sensation this makes among the folks
here, as she is reckoned amazingly high and cold. She has
remains of the beauty so praised by Alfieri. But the
kindest of all persons is the minister, Corsini. He made a
splendid dinner for us at his most magnificent palace, to which he invited all
the noted literary characters in Tuscany; a réunion, they say, almost unknown here. We were
invited to dine at the English Ambassador’s, where we had a large party.
Last night we went to Madame D’Albany’s full
of your letter, delighted with its dear, welcome contents, but quite
tristes about Moore. I had scarcely taken my seat by the
legitimate Queen of England, when Lord Burghersh brought
up a dashing beau, who was no other than “brave Colonel Camac,” who told me that he had
been all day roving about looking for us, for a friend who had just
arrived;—it was no other than Anacreon Moore!
Accordingly, while we were at breakfast next morning, enter brave
Colonel Camac and Moore! By the
advice of all friends he has taken a trip to Italy, till something can be done
to better his affairs; he travelled with Lord John
Russell, but parted company with his lordship to visit his
friend Byron, at Venice.
Moore said we were expected at Venice, and that he had
heard of us everywhere. Lord Byron bid
Moore tell Morgan he would be
happy to make his acquaintance, but not a word of encouragement to his
“lady intellectual.” I never saw Moore gayer,
better, or pleasanter. We have begged of him to come and breakfast with us
every day, and he goes with me the day after to-morrow, to the Comic Opera,
where I have Capponi’s box. He
then runs off to Rome, Naples, and 118 | LADY MORGAN'S MEMOIR. | |
returns to Holyrood
House, Edinburgh, where he settles down to write and arrange his affairs. What
elasticity and everlasting youth! Pray call on his excellent mother and tell
her all this; she will be delighted to hear of him. He feels about Italy much
as we do. He told us Morgan’s work, though attacked, has been treated with the
greatest respect as an extraordinary though a dangerous book.
You will now like to know how the deuce we have got into
a palace, into a suite of elegant and spacious apartments, filled with flowers
such as are only found in Italy. (Moore
says “how are we ever to leave it all.”) The fact is we are here in
the thraldom of a fairy. Everything has been prepared for us; we want for
nothing. A few days after our arrival, when we were sick of the expenses of our
inn, comes a gentleman to say he is the Marquis de
Capponi’s homme
d’affaire that he has an apartment ready for us,
an opera box, &c., &c., and here we are in a palace once belonging to
the Prince Corsini. The palace Capponi
is the finest I have seen, except the great Orsini, and a much more extensive
building than Carlton House. There are apartments for every season: those of
summer open into an orangery. The actions of its historical lords are painted
on the walls of the great saloon. They have eight villas round Florence, at one
of which we breakfasted the other day: one immense room laid out with
curiosities and antiquities. Should the handsome Marchese
Capponi call on you, (for he is now on his way to Ireland), tell
him how gratefully I express myself. All the English
say,
we are the only strangers for whom the Italians make dinners. We were the other
night at a party at Mrs. Mostyn’s,
(daughter of Mrs. Piozzi), where we met
Lord and Lady
George Thynne. Mrs. Piozzi is in high
health and spirits at eighty. Meantime, in spite of all my friends can say, I
am growing old, and now look forward only to living in your children, to whom I
trust I shall be restored early in the spring, for the moment the Alps are open
we set off, please God. I think half the Irish reform is owing to Florence
Macarthy. I expect a statue from that
enlightened and grateful people. The first thing I saw here in all the
booksellers’ windows was my picture stuck up with a good translation of
Florence Macarthy. It is
well done, and the picture pretty, but not like. Bartolini, the famous sculptor, has shown us great civility. He
has dedicated to me one of his best statues, a boy pressing grapes; the
original is bought by Lord Beauchamp, and a
cast done by himself is to be packed up and sent to Ireland for me. I shall be
like the Vicar of Wakefield and his
picture. I would willingly have made a visit to Italy blindfolded to have seen
only the Gallery at Florence;—we go there every day. I read to
Moore Lady
Belvidere, and it made us all die laughing. We leave this
for Rome on the 2nd of November.
S. M.
Vittorio Alfieri (1749-1803)
Italian tragic poet, author of
Saul (1782),
Antigone (1783), and
Maria Stuart (1804); he was the
consort of Louisa, (Jacobite) countess of Albany.
Lorenzo Bartolini (1777-1850)
Florentine sculptor patronized by Napoleon who made a bust of Byron in 1822.
Major Camac (1839 fl.)
Thomas Moore's travelling companion in 1819.
Marquis Gino Capponi (1792-1876)
Florentine nobleman and historian; he was an acquaintance of Francis Jeffrey and Lord
John Russell; he published
Storia della Repubblica di Firenze
(1875).
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.
Sir Humphry Davy, baronet (1778-1829)
English chemist and physicist, inventor of the safety lamp; in Bristol he knew Cottle,
Wordsworth, Coleridge, and Southey; he was president of the Royal Society (1820).
John Fane, eleventh earl of Westmorland (1784-1859)
The son of the tenth earl, educated at Harrow and Trinity College, Cambridge; after
service in the Napoleonic Wars he was a diplomat in Italy (1814-30) and ambassador to
Vienna (1851).
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.
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.
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).
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).
John Russell, first earl Russell (1792-1878)
English statesman, son of John Russell sixth duke of Bedford (1766-1839); he was author
of
Essay on the English Constitution (1821) and
Memoirs of the Affairs of Europe (1824) and was Prime Minister (1865-66).
George Thynne, second baron Carteret (1770-1838)
The son of Thomas Thynne, first Marquess of Bath; he was educated at St. John's College,
Cambridge and was a Tory MP for Weobley (1790-1812).