CHAPTER II.
MR. HARNESS ENTERS THE MINISTRY.—HIS HAPPINESS IN A COUNTRY PARISH.
DISAGREEMENT BETWEEN LORD AND LADY
BYRON.—BYRON’s ECCENTRICITY. INJURIOUS CHARACTER
OF HIS LATER WORKS.—MR. HARNESS APPOINTED BOYLE LECTURER.
Mr. Harness did not enter the ministry with any view to
worldly advantage. He was not ignorant of the fact that the labourer in the vineyard is but
seldom a partaker of its fruit. So thoroughly did he understand the prospects of a clergyman in
the Church of England, that he said he should have hesitated to follow his inclinations had he
not had some expectations of independent means.* But no prudential obstacle interposing, and
having the full sanction of his parents, he was ordained to the curacy of Kilmeston near
Alresford, shortly after his graduating at Cambridge. Such a change, from a brilliant
intellectual society to a retired curacy,
* His grandmother, however, took a different view, and told him that a
curate required a very small income. “He should keep a horse,” she said,
“and his horse should keep him.” |
where his books were his only companions and his country
walks his only relaxation, would have been to some insufferably depressing; but to him, on the
contrary, those tranquil days seemed some of the happiest of his life; and he was more than
content to remain,
“The world forgetting, by the world forgot.” |
He afterwards removed to Dorking; but it was only upon the urgent remonstrances of his
father, who was unwilling to see his talents thus obscured, that he consented to leave his sphere
of quiet usefulness, and enter upon the arduous labours of a London cure.
Meanwhile, Mr. Harness’s friendly
intercourse with Lord Byron was not interrupted, though
carried on under some disadvantages. The Poet was prevented from dedicating “Childe Harold” to him, “for fear it should injure him
in his profession.” And it is evident that in some of his letters Mr.
Harness reproved him for his thoughtlessness and dissipation.
“You censure my life, Harness,” Byron writes in reply.
“When I compare myself with these men, my elders and my betters, I really begin to
conceive myself a monument of prudence—a walking statue—without feeling or
failing; and yet the world in general hath given me a proud pre-eminence over them in
profligacy!”
|
INTERCOURSE WITH BYRON. |
21 |
“From this time,” writes Mr. Harness,
“our paths lay much asunder. Byron returned to
London. His poem was published. The success was instantaneous; and he ‘awoke one morning
and found himself famous.’ I was in orders, and living an almost solitary life in a
country curacy; but we kept up a rather rapid interchange of letters. He sent me his poems as
they now appeared in rather quick succession; and during my few weeks’ holidays in
London we saw one another very often of a morning at each other’s rooms, and not
unfrequently again in society of an evening. So far, and for these few years, all that I saw
or heard of his career was bright and prosperous: kindness and poetry at home, smiles and
adulation abroad. But then came his marriage; and then the rupture with his wife; and then his
final departure from England. He became a victim of that revolution of popular feeling which
is ever incident to the spoilt children of society, when envy and malice obtain a temporary
ascendancy, and succeed in knocking down and trampling any idol of the day beneath their feet,
who may be wanting in the moral courage required to face and out-brave them.
Such was not the spirit that animated Byron. He could not
bear to look on the altered countenances of his acquaintances. To his susceptible temperament
and generous feelings, the reproach
of having
ill-used a woman must have been poignant in the extreme. It was repulsive to his chivalrous
character as a gentleman; it belied all he had written of the devoted fervour of his
attachments; and rather than meet the frowns and sneers which awaited him in the world, as
many a less sensitive man might have done, he turned his back on them and fled. He would have
drawn himself up, and crossed his arms and curled his lip, and looked disdainfully on any
amount of clamorous hostility; but he stole away from the ignominy of being silently cut. His
whole course of conduct, at this crisis of his life, was an inconsiderate mistake. He should
have remained to learn what the accusations against him really were; to expose the
exaggerations, if not the falsehoods, of the grounds they rested on; or, at all events, to
have quietly abided the time when the London world should have become wearied of repeating its
vapid scandals, and returned to its senses respecting him. That change of feeling did
come—and not long after his departure from England—but he was at a distance, and
could not be persuaded to return to take advantage of it.
Of the matrimonial quarrel I personally know nothing; nor, with the exception of Dr. Lushington, do I believe that there is anybody living who
has any certain knowledge about the matter. The
marriage
was never one of reasonable promise. The bridegroom and the bride were ill-assorted. They were
two only children, and two spoilt children. I was acquainted with
Lady
Byron as Miss Milbanke. The parties of
Lady Milbanke, her mother, were frequent and agreeable, and
composed of that mixture of fashion, literature, science, and art, than which there is no
better society. The daughter was not without a certain amount of prettiness or cleverness; but
her manner was stiff and formal, and gave one the idea of her being self-willed and
self-opinionated. She was almost the only young, pretty, well-dressed girl we ever saw who
carried no cheerfulness along with her. I seem to see her now, moving slowly along her
mother’s drawing-rooms, talking to scientific men and literary women, without a tone of
emotion in her voice or the faintest glimpse of a smile upon her countenance. A lady who had
been on intimate terms with her from their mutual childhood once said to me, “If
Lady Byron has a heart, it is deeper seated and harder to get at
than anybody else’s heart whom I have ever known.” And though several of my
friends whose regard it was no slight honour to have gained—as
Mrs. Siddons,
Joanna
Baillie,
Maria Edgeworth, and others of
less account,—were never heard to speak of Lady Byron except in
terms of admiration and attach-
ment, it is
certain that the impression which she produced on the majority of her acquaintance was
unfavourable: they looked upon her as a reserved and frigid sort of being whom one would
rather cross the room to avoid than be brought into conversation with unnecessarily. Such a
person, whatever quality might have at first attracted him—(could it have been her
coldness?)—was not likely to acquire or retain any very powerful hold upon
Byron. At the beginning of their married life, when first they
returned to London society together, one seldom saw two young persons who appeared to be more
devoted to one another than they were. At parties, he would be seen hanging over the back of
her chair, scarcely talking to anybody else, eagerly introducing his friends to her, and, if
they did not go away together, himself handing her to her carriage. This outward show of
tenderness, so far as my memory serves me, was observed and admired as exemplary, till after
the birth of their daughter. From that time the world began to drop its voice into a tone of
compassion when speaking of Lady Byron, and to whisper tales of the
misery she was suffering—poor thing—on account of the unkindness of her
husband.
The first instances of his ill-usage which were heard, were so insignificant as to be beneath
recording. “The poor lady had never had a com-
fortable meal since their marriage.” “Her husband had no fixed hour for
breakfast, and was always too late for dinner.” “At his express desire, she had
invited two elderly ladies* to meet them in her opera-box. Nothing could be more courteous
than his manner to them, while they remained; but no sooner had they gone than he began to
annoy his wife by venting his ill-humour, in a strain of bitterest satire, against the dress
and manners of her friends.” There were some relations of
Lady
Byron whom, after repeated refusals, he had reluctantly consented to dine with.
When the day arrived he insisted on her going alone, alleging his being unwell as an excuse
for his absence. It was summer time. Forty years ago people not only dined earlier than they
do now, but by daylight; and after the assembled party were seated at table, he amused himself
by driving backwards and forwards opposite the dining-room windows.†
There was a multitude of such nonsensical stories as these, which one began to hear soon after
Ada’s birth; and I believe I have told the
worst of them. No doubt, as the things occurred, they must have been vexatious enough, but
they do not
† The above gossip all came to me from different friends of
Lady Byron. |
amount to grievous wrongs. They were faults of
temper, not moral delinquencies; a thousand of them would not constitute an injury. Nor does
one know to what extent they may have been provoked. They would, in all probability, have
ceased, had they been gently borne with—and perhaps were only repeated because the
culprit was amused by witnessing their effects. At all events they were no more than a
sensible woman, who had either a proper feeling for her husband’s reputation, or a due
consideration of her own position, would have readily endured; and a really good wife would
never have allowed herself to talk about them. And yet it was by
Lady
Byron’s friends, and as coming immediately from her, that I used to hear
them. The complaints, at first so trifling, gradually acquired a more serious character.
“Poor Lady Byron was afraid of her life.” “Her husband
slept with loaded pistols by his bedside, and a dagger under his pillow.” Then there
came rumours of cruelty—no one knew of what kind, or how severe. Nothing was definitely
stated. But it was on all hands allowed to be “very bad—very bad indeed.”
And as there was nothing to be known, everybody imagined what they pleased.
But whatever Lord Byron’s treatment of his wife may
have been, it could not have been all evil. Any injuries she suffered must have occurred
during moody and angry fits of temper. They could
not have been habitual or frequent. His conduct was not of such a description as to have
utterly extinguished whatever love she might have felt at her marriage, or to have left any
sense of terror or aversion behind it. This is evident from facts. Years after they had met
for the last time,
Lady Byron went with
Mrs. Jameson, from whom I repeat the circumstance, to see
Thorwaldsen’s statue of her husband, which was
at
Sir Richard Westmacott’s studio. After looking
at it in silence for a few moments, the tears came into her eyes, and she said to her
companion, “It is very beautiful, but not so beautiful as my
dearByron.” However interrupted by changes of
caprice or irritability, the general course of her husband’s conduct must have been
gentle and tender, or it never would, after so long a cessation of intercourse, have left such
kindly impressions behind it. I have, indeed, reason to believe that these feelings of
affectionate remembrance lingered in the heart of Lady Byron to the last.
Not a fortnight before her death, I dined in company with an old lady who was at the time on a
visit to her. On this lady’s returning home, and mentioning whom she had met,
Lady Byron evinced great curiosity to learn what subjects we had
talked about, and what I had heard of them, “because I had been
28 | CHARACTERISTICS OF BYRON. | |
such a friend of her husband’s.” This instance
of fond remembrance, after an interval of more than forty years, in a woman of no very
sensitive nature—a woman of more intellect than feeling—conveys to my mind no
slight argument in defence of Byron’s conduct as a husband. His
wife, though unrelenting, manifestly regretted his loss. May not some touch of remorse for the
exile to which she had dismissed him—for the fame over which she had cast a
cloud—for the energies which she had diverted from their course of useful action in the
Senate,* to be wasted in no honourable idleness abroad—and for the so early death to
which her unwife-like conduct doomed him, have mingled its bitterness with the pain of that
regret?
But what do I know of Byron? The ill I will speak of
presently. Personally, I know nothing but good of him. Of what he became in his foreign
banishment, when removed from all his natural ties and hereditary duties, I, personally, am
ignorant. In all probability he deteriorated; he would have been more than human if he had
not. But when I was in the habit of familiarly seeing him, he was kindness itself. At a time
when Coleridge was in great embarrassment, Rogers, when calling on Byron, chanced to
mention it. He immediately
* He had made some good speeches in the House. |
| KINDNESS TO FRIENDS AND SERVANTS. | 29 |
went to his writing-desk, and
brought back a cheque for a hundred pounds, and insisted on its being forwarded to
Coleridge. “I did not like taking it,” said
Rogers, who told me the story, “for I knew that he was in
want of it himself.” His servants he treated with a gentle consideration for
their feelings which I have seldom witnessed in any other, and they were devoted to him. At
Newstead there was an old man who had been
butler to
his mother, and I have seen Byron, as the old man waited behind his chair
at dinner, pour out a glass of wine and pass it to him when he thought we were too much
engaged in conversation to observe what he was doing. The transaction was a thing of custom;
and both parties seemed to flatter themselves that it was clandestinely effected. A hideous
old woman, who had been brought in to nurse him when
he was unwell at one of his lodgings, and whom few would have cared to retain about them
longer than her services were required, was carried with him, in improved attire, to his
chambers in the Albany, and was seen, after his marriage, gorgeous in black silk at his house
in Piccadilly. She had done him a service, and he could not forget it. Of his attachment to
his friends, no one can read
Moore’s
life and entertain a doubt. He required a great deal from them—not more,
perhaps, than he, from the abundance of
his
love, freely and fully gave—but more than they had to return. The ardour of his nature
must have been in a normal state of disappointment. He imagined higher qualities in them than
they possessed, and must very often have found his expectations sadly balked by the dulness of
talk, the perversity of taste, or the want of enthusiasm, which he encountered on a better or
rather longer acquaintance. But, notwithstanding, I have never yet heard anybody complain that
Byron had once appeared to entertain a regard for him, and had
afterwards capriciously cast him off.
Now, after these good and great qualities, I revert to the evil of Byron’s character and conduct. And here, if he were bad, were there no
extenuations, derived from the peculiarities of his position and education, to be pleaded for
him? Was he not better, instead of worse, than most young men have proved who were similarly
circumstanced? He had virtually never known a father’s love, or a mother’s
tenderness. He was from early childhood wholly cut off from those motives to virtue, and those
restraints from vice, which, amid a band of brothers and sisters, grow up around us with the
family affections. Home is the only school in which right principles and generous feelings
find a genial soil and attain a natural growth. Without a home the boy sees nothing, knows
nothing, considers
nothing, and feels for
nothing but himself; and a home Byron never had. The domestic charities
and their ameliorating influences were only known to him by name. He was from boyhood his own
master; and would it have been strange, if, with strong passions, an untutored will, fervent
imagination, and no one with authority to control him, he was sometimes led astray? But during
the time he was in London society, what young men were there, with the same liberty to range
at will as he, who were less absorbed by its dissipations? Who among them abstracted so much
time from the fascinations of the world as he, to study as he studied, and to write as he
wrote? I have little doubt, though I don’t know it, that in the season of his
unparalleled success he was not likely to have been more rigid in his conduct than his
companions were in their principles. But it is at least extraordinary that, while thus courted
and admired, if his life was as licentious as some have represented, the only scandal which
disturbed the decorum of society, and with which Byron’s name is
connected, did not originate in any action of his, but in the insane and unrequited passion of
a woman.
Byron had one pre-eminent fault—a fault which must be
considered as deeply criminal by every one who does not, as I do, believe it to have resulted
from monomania. He had a morbid
love of a bad
reputation. There was hardly an offence of which he would not, with perfect indifference,
accuse himself. An old schoolfellow, who met him on the Continent, told me that he would
continually write paragraphs against himself in the foreign journals, and delight in their
republication by the English newspapers as in the success of a practical joke. When anybody
has related anything discreditable of Byron, assuring me that it must be
true, for he had heard it from himself, I have always felt that he could not have spoken with
authority, and that, in all probability, the tale was a pure invention. If I could remember,
and were willing to repeat, the various misdoings which I have from time to time heard him
attribute to himself, I could fill a volume. But I never believed them. I very soon became
aware of this strange idiosyncrasy. It puzzled me to account for it; but there it was—a
sort of diseased and distorted vanity. The same eccentric spirit would induce him to report
things which were false with regard to his family, which anybody else would have concealed
though true. He told mo more than once that his father was insane and killed himself. I shall
never forget the manner in which he first told me this. While washing his hands, and singing a
gay Neapolitan air, he stopped, looked round at me, and said, “There always was
a madness in the family.” Then after
continuing his wasting and his song, as if speaking of a matter of the slightest indifference,
“My father cut his throat.” The contrast between the tenor of the
subject and the levity of the expression was fearfully painful: it was like a stanza of
“
Don Juan.” In this instance, I
had no doubt that the fact was as he related it, but in speaking of it only a few years since
to an
old lady* in whom I had perfect confidence, she
assured me that it was not so; that
Mr. Byron, who was
her cousin, had been extremely wild, but was quite sane and had died quietly in his bed. What
Byron’s reasons could have been for thus calumniating, not only
himself, but the blood that was flowing in his veins, who can divine? But, for some reason or
other, it seemed to be his determined purpose to keep himself unknown to the great body of his
fellow-creatures—to present himself to their view in moral masquerade, and to identity
himself in their imaginations with Childe Harold and the
Corsair, between which characters and his own—as
God and education had made it—the most microscopic inspection would fail to discern a
single point of resemblance.
Except this love of an ill-name—this tendency to malign himself—this hypocrisy
reversed, I have no personal knowledge whatever of any evil act or
evil disposition of
Lord
Byron’s. I once said this to a gentleman* who was well acquainted with
Lord Byron’s London life. He expressed himself astonished at
what I said. “Well,” I replied, “do you know any harm of him but what he
told you himself?” “Oh, yes, a hundred things!” “I don’t want
you to tell me a hundred things, I shall be content with one.” Here the conversation was
interrupted. We were at dinner—there was a large party, and the subject was again
renewed at table. But afterwards in the drawing-room,
Mr.
Drury came up to me and said, “I have been thinking of what you were
saying at dinner. I do not know any harm of Byron but what he has told me of
himself.”
Mr. Harness’s testimony to the good points in
Byron’s character is especially valuable as it comes
from one who was not in the least blinded by the brilliancy of his genius. So delicately
sensitive, indeed, was Mr. Harness’s nature, that he always, as he
confessed, felt Byron’s poetry to be a little too “strong”
for him. He attributed a large part of Byron’s reckless conduct in
after-life to the misfortune of his ill-assorted marriage. “It was brought
about,” he observed, “by well-meaning friends, who knew that
Byron wanted money and thought they were consulting his best
interests.” He formed the alliance, as is often the case, be-
cause other people liked it; but they did not take into
consideration how many elements are required to constitute the happiness of sensient human
beings.
Lady Byron was a person entirely deficient in tact and
reflection, and made no allowances for the usual eccentricities of genius. In some periods of our
history she might have aspired to a real crown of martyrdom, for she was a Puritan in creed, and
an unflinching advocate of her own views.
Miss Mitford
justly asks, “Why did she marry Byron? His character was well
known, and he was not a deceiver!” Possibly she hoped to make an illustrious convert
of him, or thought that she might at once share his celebrity and restrain his follies. If so,
she greatly overrated her influence, and ignored the perversity of human nature.
Byron had a childish weakness for dramatic effect and excitement, and it
was his habit to amuse himself at times by indulging in fantastical rhapsodies, full of tragic
extravagance. Harness knew these occasions, and merely lapsed into silence,
and when the poet found that no one was horrified or delighted, he very soon came to the end of
his performance, But Lady Byron was too conscientious, or too severe, to
allow the fire thus to die out. She took seriously every word he uttered, weighed it in her
precise balance, and could not avoid expressing her condemnation of his principles and her
abhorrence
36 | BYRON'S LATER WRITINGS. | |
of his language. This fanned the
flame, increased his irritation, or added zest to his amusement. Whatever crime she accused him
of he was not only ready to admit, but even to trump by the confession of some greater enormity.
Few of us have sufficient taste and delicacy for the office of a censor, or sufficient humility
to profit by rebuke; but in the present case the difficulties were unusually great.
“There can be no doubt,” observed Mr. Harness, “that
Byron was a little ‘maddish.’” He was afflicted
with a more than usual share of that eccentricity which so often turns aside the keen edge of
genius; but he was amiable and might have been led, though he would not be driven.
Mr. Harness had no communication with Byron during the latter years of his life. He nevertheless always
continued to take a kindly view of the character of his old school-fellow and college friend, and
endeavoured to make every allowance for his conduct; but at the same time we must not suppose
that he permitted any personal feeling to interfere with his sense of right, or to prevent his
denouncing the principles advocated in his friend’s later writings. We have already noticed
his disapproval of Byron’s conduct, and as it became more marked, he
spoke in stronger language. Their intimacy then ceased, and Byron recklessly
abandoned himself to those dissipations which ended in his early death. In
| MR. HARNESS APPOINTED BOYLE LECTURER. | 37 |
1822, Mr. Harness was
appointed Boyle Lecturer by the University of Cambridge; and his duty was “to be ready to
satisfy such real scruples as any may have concerning matters of religion, and to answer such new
objections and difficulties as may be started.” Lord Byron’s
works were then at the height of their popularity; and as some of them seemed to be exercising a
very pernicious influence, Mr. Harness selected for special consideration
the poem* in which an attempt was made to represent God as responsible for the origin of Sin.
“By a fiction of no ordinary power,” he observes, “the
rebellious son of a rebellious father is disclosed to the imagination as upon the borders of
Paradise, and within the shadowy regions of the dead, holding personal communion with the
spiritual enemy of man. Each is represented as advocating the cause of his impiety to the
partial judgment of his companion in iniquity. Miserable they are; but still they are arrogant
and stern, remorseless and unsubdued by misery. For them adversity has no sweet or hallowed
uses. While they make mutual confession of the wretchedness their sin has caused them, they
appear to glory in it, as if ennobled by its magnitude and exalted by its presumption. To
their licentious apprehensions all excellence appears corrupted and reversed. They
call good evil, and evil they call good.
Pride is virtue, and rebellion duty. Lucifer is the
friend, and Jehovah is the enemy of man; and while they reciprocate the
arguments of a bewildering sophistry, the benevolence of the Deity is arraigned, as if He
rejoiced in the affliction of His creatures, first conferred an efficacy on the temptation and
then delighted to exact the penalties of transgression.”
Byron had attempted to justify himself by asserting that he
had expressed no sentiments worse than those which were to be found in Milton; but even were this the case (Mr. Harness observed), there would be a peculiar danger in reproducing them in a
specious form, and in times when faith was already obscured: “The danger is heightened
by the peculiar character of the times. Had the allegations of these malignant spirits been
preferred in an age of more general and fervent piety, there had been little peril in their
publication. They had only awakened in the breast of the reader a more entire abhorrence of
the beings by whom they were entertained and uttered. It was thus in the days of
Milton. Every taunt of Satan was
then opposed by the popular spirit of devotion, and armed against his cause the deepest and
the holiest affections of the heart. But the spirit of those times has past. Zeal has yielded
to indifference, and faith to scepticism. We have become so impatient of the re-
| BYRON'S FRIENDSHIP FOR MR. HARNESS. | 39 |
straint of Christianity, and so
indulgent to every argument that endows our inclinations with an apology for sin, that few and
transient are the feelings of religious gratitude which are offended by the impieties of
Cain or Lucifer,
and their appeal against the dispensations of Almighty Providence is calmly heard and
favourably deliberated; for, in the skilful extenuation of their guilt, we appear to listen to
the arguments that soothe us with the justification of our own. There is also a danger in the
manner with which these antiquated cavils are revived and recommended. United with the
dramatic interest and the seductions of poetry, they obtain a wider circulation. They gain an
introduction to the studies of the young; they pass into the hands of that wide class of
readers, who only find in literature another variety of dissipation, and who, after having
eagerly received the contagion of demoralizing doubts, would indolently cast aside the cold
metaphysical essay that conveyed their refutation.”
Byron’s friendship for Mr.
Harness, who even during their intimacy did not scruple to reprove and oppose his
principles, was perhaps the most pleasing episode in his private career; and his accusers should
know that, during the whole of their correspondence, he never penned a single line to his friend
which might not have been addressed to the most delicate woman.