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Journal of the Conversations of Lord Byron
Byron's Werner
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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.


“I have almost finished,” said he, “another play, which I mean to call ‘Werner.’ The story is taken from Miss Lee’sKruitzner.’ There are fine things in ‘The Canterbury Tales;’ but Miss Lee only wrote two of them: the others are the compositions of her sister, and are vastly inferior.

* His grandfather, Admiral Byron. I have heard him more than once speak of Campbell’s having named him in ‘The Pleasures of Hope.’

LORD BYRON 265
William Harness, in Blackwood's Magazine

“There is no tale of Scott’s finer than ‘The German’s Tale.’ I admired it when I was a boy, and have continued to like what I did then. This tale, I remember, particularly affected me. I could not help thinking of the authoress, who destroyed herself. I was very young when I finished a few scenes of a play founded on that story. I perfectly remember many of the lines as I go on.

“‘Vathek’ was another of the tales I had a very early admiration of. You may remember a passage I borrowed from it in ‘The Siege of Corinth,’ which I almost took verbatim.* No Frenchman will believe that ‘Vathek’
* “There is a light cloud by the moon;
’Tis passing, and will pass full soon.
If by the time its vapoury sail
Hath ceased the shaded orb to veil,
Thy heart within thee is not changed,-
Then God and man are both avenged,—
Dark will thy doom be—darker still
Thine immortality of ill.”
266CONVERSATIONS OF
is the work of a foreigner. It was written at seventeen. What do you think of the Cave of Eblis, and the picture of Eblis himself? There is poetry. I class it in merit with (though it is a different sort of thing from) ‘
Paul and Virginia,’ and Mackenzie’sMan of Feeling,’ and ‘La Roche’ in ‘The Mirror.’”

Werner’ was written in twenty-eight days, and one entire act at a sitting. The MS. had scarcely an alteration in it for pages together. I remember retaining in my memory one passage, which he repeated to me, and which I consider quite Shakspearian.

“Four—
Five—six hours I have counted, like the guard
Of outposts, on the never-merry clock,—
That hollow tongue of time, which, even when
It sounds for joy, takes something from enjoyment
With every clang. ’Tis a perpetual knell,
Though for a marriage-feast it rings: each stroke
Peals for a hope the less; the funeral note
Of love deep-buried without resurrection
In the grave of possession; whilst the knoll
Of long-lived parents finds a jovial echo
To triple time in the son’s ear.”
LORD BYRON 267

“What can be expected,” said I to him, “from a five- act play, finished in four weeks?”

“I mean to dedicate Werner,” said he, “to Goëthe. I look upon him as the greatest genius that the age has produced. I desired Murray to inscribe his name to a former work; but he pretends my letter containing the order came too late.—It would have been more worthy of him than this.”


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