The Autobiography of William Jerdan
Cyrus Redding, Letter regarding Peter Pindar, in the Athenaeum, 1852
“St. John’s Wood, May 17.
“In your number of the 8th instant some anecdotes
respecting Peter Pindar (Dr.
Wolcot) are extracted from the Autobiography of Mr. Jerdan. A
previous knowledge of the Doctor by my family induced me, when I came a youth
to London, to visit him. From the close of 1805, down to the time of his death
in 1819, I spent an evening weekly when I was in London at his house. I
remember his sisters also, who were alive in 1813. Mr.
Jerdan is not correct in his statements. The facts of his
alleged trick on the publishers are these:—Wolcot’s
works having a prodigious sale, Walker
the bookseller was deputed by some of the trade to offer the Doctor a sum of
money, or an annuity, for the copyright of them all. The Doctor chose the
annuity of 250l. He had suffered all his life from
asthma, but less in his latter years than before. A fit was on him on the day
when Walker called about the business,—and the
bibliopolist went away, and told (I think) his wife, that the Doctor could not
live long, and it might soon be too late to conclude the bargain. The Doctor
heard of this, and when Walker came with the draft of the
document, he coughed ‘double time,’ on purpose to play off the joke
upon him,—and the bookseller naturally hurried through the business. The Doctor
used to repeat the anecdote as a good joke against the booksellers. He was not
in a ‘dying condition.’ He never ‘wiped the chalk off his
face,’ which, with his mahogany complexion, chalk would hardly have
whitened,—
nor did he ‘dance out of the
room’—neither had he ‘one foot in the grave.’ He used, after
he was eighty years of age, to say in jest that he had got the best of the
bargain with the bibliopolists,—living so many years more than they reckoned
on,—and always concluded by speaking of his cough. He was a man far above such
a trick as chalking his face to entrap those with whom he dealt. In money
affairs he was scrupulous. He was one of the most open, candid men that ever
lived,—fond of a joke, and making one sometimes out of little.—The anecdote of
the pension, as told by Mr. Jerdan, is equally erroneous.
I had the previous story from his own lips. Wolcot came
from Cornwall to London about 1782. He began to write soon afterwards,—and the
King’s first fit of illness occurred in 1789, and lasted but a short
time. The second attack was in 1811. Wolcot wrote little
or nothing worth mentioning after the latter year. The ‘laudable anxiety
of Ministers’ to protect the King by pensioning Peter
Pindar thus falls to the ground,—though it is true the statement
is very generally made. The truth is,—Peter did not offer his assistance to the
Government. Mr. Jerdan contradicts himself. If the pension
was offered to prevent annoyance to the King, it could
hardly have been granted to Peter on his own solicitation!
All the world knows that Charles II. bade a
writer, legally attached for a lampoon, to abuse him, and then the ministers
would not trouble themselves about his diatribes. Peter
was more bitter against the ministry than against the King. He told too many
truths of them. He disliked Pitt,—whom he
deemed a renegade from his father’s principles, and a tacit libeller of
his memory. The first Pitt was the
Doctor’s hero,—and his first verses were written to that Mr.
Pitt, ‘On his
recovery from a fit of the gout.’ These verses were published
in ‘Martin’s
Magazine’ about 1756, and are dated from
Fowey in Cornwall. His praises of Chatham were
unbounded:—his dislike of the son was proportional. Peter
was offered a pension more than once, but he could not be a dependant and write
for the Government. The last time the offer was made he was depressed in mind
and in circumstances. He had thought of retiring into Cornwall, and giving up
his pen. This was not known to the Treasury,—but it so happened that an offer
of a pension was renewed at that very time. Peter was not
to write for the Government, and he stipulated that he would not write against
it. Mr. Yorke was the go-between, if I
recollect rightly. Peter finally agreed to write no more
articles on political personages—in fact, to keep silent about the Ministry. A
pension of 300l. per annum was to be his. He had
received the first quarter’s allowance but a few days, when, in the
temper of those times, a messenger from the Treasury called and hoped, now the
Doctor saw the Ministry were in earnest, he would use his pen on their side.
‘You know the stipulation was to be my silence,’ said
the Doctor indignantly, ‘I’ll be d—d if I will write for you; I
won’t be a prostitute,—go and tell this to your Ministers.’
It happened that a sum of money about which the Doctor had been depressed in
mind from his hopelessness of obtaining it, was paid over to him. He at once
enclosed back the amount which he had received from the Treasury. ‘Peter can live without a pension’ was the result.
So began and ended the pension affair,—as related by himself.—I will trespass
upon your space by an anecdote which has not been told, out of many that I know
of this remarkable man. The Prince of Wales
always had slips of the Doctor’s works from the printer, while they were
in the press. When he became Prince Regent, a messenger was sent to the Doctor
to know what the Prince was indebted to him for the proof
slips, None had been sent for years, because the Doctor had not written
anything worth sending. ‘I thought it a sufficient honour that the
Prince read my works in that way. I never expected to be insulted by such a
demand so long afterwards,’ said Wolcot.
‘My orders are peremptory, Doctor.’ replied the
messenger.—‘I hare nothing to do with my writings now, nor with
money transactions relating to them. You must go to
Walker the bookseller.’ The messenger
went, the Doctor instructing Walker to make out a regular
tradesman’s bill for the Prince Regent, to the farthing, and give a
regular receipt for the sum when paid. Some little time afterwards the
messenger called on the Doctor with a fifty-pound note, the account being forty
odd pounds and some shillings,—‘The change was of no
consequence.’ The Doctor despatched the messenger to
Walker again—saying he would not have the
Prince’s money. It was a trading affair on both sides, and he must go to
the traders. ‘Was not this very pretty?’ said
Wolcot; ‘the Prince had my squibs about his
father to read openly at his own table, and then fearing that I may blab
the fact, now he is become Viceroy, he thinks if he pays me for the rags
all will be right.’ Weltje, of the Prince’s household, supplied the Doctor
with materials for many of his squibs. The tale of the shaving of the royal
cooks originated in a fact. The order was given, but withdrawn. It was founded
on an accident of a trivial character,—which Wolcot
altered and made the subject of one of the richest comic poems in any language,
exalting the insect hero— “‘To draw of deep astronomers the ken, The Georgium Sidus of the sons of men.’
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William Pitt the younger (1759-1806)
The second son of William Pitt, earl of Chatham (1708-1778); he was Tory prime minister
1783-1801.
Cyrus Redding (1785-1870)
English journalist; he was a founding member of the Plymouth Institute, edited
Galignani's Messenger from 1815-18, and was the effective editor of
the
New Monthly Magazine (1821-30) and
The
Metropolitan (1831-33).
John Walker (d. 1817)
London bookseller from the 1770s; he was the brother-in-law of George Robinson and Common
Councilman of the Ward of Farringdon Within. He published John Wolcot.
Louis Weltje (1745-1810)
Comptroller and cook to the Prince of Wales.
John Wolcot [Peter Pindar] (1738-1819)
English satirist who made his reputation by ridiculing the Royal Academicians and the
royal family.
Charles Philip Yorke (1764-1834)
Tory politician, the son of Charles Yorke (1722–1770); he was MP for Cambridgeshire
(1790-1810), secretary at war (1801-03), home secretary (1803-04), first lord of Admiralty
(1810-11). He was F.S.A. and vice-president of the Royal Society of Literature.