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Journal of the Conversations of Lord Byron
On Americans
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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.


“Since you left us,” said he, “I have had serious thoughts of visiting America; and when the Gambas were ordered out of Tuscany, was on the point of embarkation for the only country which is a sanctuary for liberty.

J. C. Hobhouse, in Westminster Magazine

“Since I have been abroad, I have received many civilities from the Americans*; among the rest, I was

* I have been favoured with a sight of a letter addressed by Lord Byron to Mr. Church, one of the American Consuls, in which he thus speaks of his Grecian project a few months after:

“The accounts are so contradictory, as to what mode will be best for supplying the Greeks, that I have deemed it better to take up (with the exception of a few supplies) what cash and credit I can muster, rather than lay them out in articles that might be deemed superfluous or unnecessary. Here we can learn nothing but from some of the refugees, who appear chiefly interested for themselves. My accounts from an agent of the Committee, an

LORD BYRON263
acquainted with the
captain of one of their frigates lying in the Leghorn roads, and used occasionally to dine on board his ship. He offered to take me with him to America. I desired time to consider; but at last declined it, not wishing to relinquish my Grecian project.

“Once landed in that country, perhaps I should not have soon left it;—I might have settled there, for I shall never revisit England. On Lady Noel’s death, I thought I should have been forced to go home (and was for a moment bent on doing so on another occasion, which you know); but I told Hanson that I would rather make any sacrifice.

“The polite attentions of the American sailor were very different from the treatment I met with from the captain

English gentleman lately gone up to Greece, are hitherto favourable; but he had not yet reached the seat of the Provisional Government, and I am anxiously expecting further advice.

“An American has a better right than any other to suggest to other nations the mode of obtaining that liberty which is the glory of his own!”

264CONVERSATIONS OF
of a sloop of war belonging to our Navy, who made the gentleman commanding my yacht haul down my pennant. They might have respected the name of the great
navigator.* In the time of peace, and in a free port, there could have been no plea for such an insult. I wrote to the captain of the vessel rather sharply, and was glad to find that his first lieutenant had acted without his orders, and when he was on shore; but they had been issued, and could not be reversed.

“You see I can’t go any where without being persecuted. I am going to Genoa in a few days.”


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