Letters and Journals of Lord Byron
Lord Byron to Thomas Moore, 9 December 1820
“Ravenna, Dec. 9th, 1820.
“Besides this letter, you will receive three packets, containing, in all, 18 more sheets of Memoranda, which, I fear, will cost you more in postage
than they will ever produce by being printed in the next century. Instead of waiting so
long, if you could make any thing of them
A. D. 1820. | LIFE OF LORD BYRON. | 383 |
now in the way of reversion (that is,
after my death), I should be very glad,—as, with all due regard
to your progeny, I prefer you to your grand-children. Would not Longman or Murray
advance you a certain sum now, pledging themselves not to have them published till after my
decease, think you?—and what say you?
“Over these latter sheets I would leave you a discretionary
power*; because they contain, perhaps, a thing or two which is too sincere for the
public. If I consent to your disposing of their reversion now,
where would be the harm? Tastes may change. I would, in your case, make my essay to
dispose of them, not publish, now; and if you (as is most likely) survive me, add what you please from your own
knowledge; and, above all, contradict any thing, if I have mis-stated; for my first object is the truth, even at my own
expense.
“I have some knowledge of your countryman, Muley Moloch, the lecturer. He wrote to me several
letters upon Christianity, to convert me; and, if I had not been a Christian already, I
should probably have been now, in consequence. I thought there was something of wild
talent in him, mixed with a due leaven of absurdity,—as there must be in all talent, let
loose upon the world, without a martingale.
The ministers seem still to persecute the Queen * * * * *
* * but they won’t go out, the sans of b—es. Damn Reform—I want a place—what say you?
You must applaud the honesty of the declaration, whatever you may think of the
intention.
“I have quantities of paper in England, original and
translated—tragedy, &c. &c. and am now copying out a Fifth Canto of Don Juan, 149 stanzas. So that there will be
near three thin Albemarle, or two thick
volumes of all sorts of my Muses. I mean to plunge thick, too, into the contest upon
Pope, and to lay about me like a dragon till I
make manure of * * * for the top of
Parnassus.
“Those rogues are right—we do laugh
at t’others—eh?—don’t we†?
* The power here meant is that of omitting passages that might
be thought objectionable. He afterwards gave me this, as well as every other
right, over the whole of the manuscript. † He here alludes to a humorous article, of which I had
told him, in Blackwood’s
Magazine, where the poets of the day were all grouped together in a variety
of fantastic shapes, with “Lord Byron and little
Moore laughing behind, as if they
would split,” at the rest of the fraternity. |
384 | NOTICES OF THE | A. D. 1820. |
You shall see—you shall see what things I’ll say,
‘an it pleases Providence to leave us leisure. But in these parts they are all
going to war; and there is to be liberty, and a row, and a constitution—when they can
get them. But I won’t talk politics—it is low. Let us talk of the Queen, and her
bath, and her bottle—that’s the only motley nowadays.
“If there are any acquaintances of mine, salute them. The
priests here are trying to persecute me,—but no matter.
“Yours, &c.”
William Lisle Bowles (1762-1850)
English poet and critic; author of
Fourteen Sonnets, elegiac and
descriptive, written during a Tour (1789), editor of the
Works
of Alexander Pope, 10 vols (1806), and writer of pamphlets contributing to the
subsequent Pope controversy.
Queen Caroline of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel (1768-1821)
Married the Prince of Wales in 1795 and separated in 1796; her husband instituted
unsuccessful divorce proceedings in 1820 when she refused to surrender her rights as
queen.
Thomas Norton Longman (1771-1842)
A leading London publisher whose authors included Southey, Wordsworth, Scott, and
Moore.
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.
Thomas Samuel Mulock (1789-1869)
Born in Dublin, was secretary to George Canning and a satirical writer for
The Sun; he became a Baptist minister; his daughter Dinah Maria was
a well-known writer.
John Murray II (1778-1843)
The second John Murray began the
Quarterly Review in 1809 and
published works by Scott, Byron, Austen, Crabbe, and other literary notables.
Alexander Pope (1688-1744)
English poet and satirist; author of
The Rape of the Lock (1714)
and
The Dunciad (1728).
Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine. (1817-1980). Begun as the
Edinburgh Monthly Magazine,
Blackwood's assumed the name of its proprietor, William Blackwood after the sixth
number. Blackwood was the nominal editor until 1834.
George Gordon Byron, sixth Baron Byron (1788-1824)
Don Juan. (London: 1819-1824). A burlesque poem in ottava rima published in installments: Cantos I and II published in
1819, III, IV and V in 1821, VI, VII, and VIII in 1823, IX, X, and XI in 1823, XII, XIII,
and XIV in 1823, and XV and XVI in 1824.