Samuel Rogers and his Contemporaries
Lord Brougham to Samuel Rogers, [1850]
‘Brougham:’ Monday [1850].
‘My dear R.,—Since I received yours I have no
news, except that Lady Malet came down,
having called, but not being let in. Lady
Jersey is over in Germany on a king-hunting excursion; she goes
to Hanover, Berlin, and Weimar. Madame
Bury’s book, “Germania,” is very clever, but she
also is a king-hunter and an ultra legitimist. Her hatred of the new and
ridiculous republic has driven her (as is the way of women) into the opposite
extreme.
‘“Young
Italy,” by Baillie
Cochrane, is clever and really not ill written. He came with his
nice wife (D.
of Rutland’s granddaughter) to see me at Cannes. So he
328 | ROGERS AND HIS CONTEMPORARIES | |
must needs call me Lælius
1 in his book. I knew I was wise, but not exactly that
my wisdom was so meek as Horace
describes—
Lady Williams passed here the other day, but had a
sketching niece, who took her soon away to Keswick, where they have seen only
rain to draw. Here we have had vile and cold weather. Consider well your
movements, of which I before wrote.
‘Yours ever truly,
Marie Pauline Rose Blaze de Bury, baroness [née Stewart] (1813-1894)
Thought to be the illegitimate daughter of Lord Brougham, she lived in Paris and
corresponded with Matthew Arnold, George Ticknor, and Lord Lytton. Among her novels was
Mildred Vernon: A Tale of Parisian Life in the Last Days of the
Monarchy, 3 vols (1849).
Henry Peter Brougham, first baron Brougham and Vaux (1778-1868)
Educated at Edinburgh University, he was a founder of the
Edinburgh
Review in which he chastised Byron's
Hours of Idleness; he
defended Queen Caroline in her trial for adultery (1820), established the London University
(1828), and was appointed lord chancellor (1830).
Alexander Dundas Ross Wishart Cochrane-Baillie, first baron Lamington (1816-1890)
The son of Admiral Sir Thomas John Cochrane; he was educated at Eton College and at
Trinity College, Cambridge and was Conservative MP for Bridport (1841-52), Lanarkshire
(1857), Honiton (1859-68), and Isle of Wight (1870-80); he was raised to the peerage in
1880.
Horace (65 BC-8 BC)
Roman lyric poet; author of
Odes,
Epistles, Satires, and the
Ars Poetica.