LORD  BYRON  and  his  TIMES
Byron
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Journal of the Conversations of Lord Byron
Byron's fever at Constantinople
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JOURNAL

OF THE

CONVERSATIONS

OF

LORD BYRON:

NOTED DURING A RESIDENCE WITH HIS LORDSHIP

AT PISA,

IN THE YEARS 1821 AND 1822.


BY THOMAS MEDWIN, ESQ.

OF THE 24TH LIGHT DRAGOONS,

AUTHOR OF “AHASUERUS THE WANDERER.”


LONDON:
PRINTED FOR HENRY COLBURN, NEW BURLINGTON STREET.
1824.


J. C. Hobhouse, in Westminster Magazine

“The severest fever I ever had was at Patras. I had left Fletcher at Constantinople—convalescent, but unable to move from weakness, and had no attendants but my Albanians, to whom I owe my life.

LORD BYRON 87

“They were devotedly attached to me, and watched me day and night. I am more indebted to a good constitution for having got over this attack, than to the drugs of an ignorant Turk, who called himself a physician. He would have been glad to have disowned the name, and resigned his profession too, if he could have escaped from the responsibility of attending me; for my Albanians came the Grand Signior over him, and threatened that if I were not entirely recovered at a certain hour on a certain day, they would take his life. They are not people to make idle threats, and would have carried them into execution had any thing happened to me. You may imagine the fright the poor devil of a Doctor was in; and I could not help smiling at the ludicrous way in which his fears shewed themselves. I believe he was more pleased at my recovery than either my faithful nurses, or myself. I had no intention of dying at that time; but if I had died, the same story would have been told of me as was related to have happened to Colonel Sherbrooke in America. On the very day my fever was at the highest, a friend of mine declared that he saw me in St. James’s Street; and somebody put my name down in the book at the Palace, as having enquired after the King’s health.

88 CONVERSATIONS OF

“Every body would have said that my ghost had appeared.”

“But how were they to have reconciled a ghost’s writing?” asked I.

“I should most likely have passed the remainder of my life in Turkey, if I had not been called home by my mother’s death and my affairs,” said he. “I mean to return to Greece, and shall in all probability die there.”

Little did I think, at the time he was pronouncing these words, that they were prophetic!


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