The Last Days of Lord Byron
        William Parry, Account of Men and Stores sent to Missolonghi, 1824
        
        
          
        
        
          
        
       
      
      
      
      
     
     
    
    Account of Men and Stores, &c. &c., sent for
                                        the Greek 
                                        Service, viz.
    
      
        | 
           
            
            Artificers for on year.
           
         | 
        
          No. of Men and Stores
         | 
         | 
        
          Probable Cost
         | 
         | 
      
      
        | 
             
         | 
          | 
        £ | 
        
          s.
         | 
        
          d.
         | 
      
      
        | 
           Fire-master and constructor 
         | 
        1 | 
        250 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Clerk 
         | 
        1 | 
        250 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Foreman of cartridge-makers 
         | 
        1 | 
        200 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Founder and vice-man 
         | 
        1 | 
        105 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Tinman 
         | 
        1 | 
        105 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Smith 
         | 
        1 | 
        105 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Turner of wood and metal 
         | 
        1 | 
        105 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Wheelwright and carriage maker 
         | 
        1 | 
        105 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Carpenter 
         | 
        1 | 
        105 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
             
         | 
         | 
         | 
         | 
         | 
      
      
        | 
           
            
            Artillery.
            
            These were given by Mr. Gordon.
           
         | 
          | 
          | 
          | 
          | 
      
      
        | 
           Howitzer, brass, 4⅖ inch, with carriage and limber
                                            complete 
         | 
        1 | 
          | 
          | 
          | 
      
      
        | 
           Gun,  ditto, long three-pounder,
                                            with carriage complete 
         | 
        1 | 
          | 
          | 
          | 
      
      
        | 
           Forge-cart. with tools complete 
         | 
        1 | 
          | 
          | 
          | 
      
      
        | 
           
            
            Munition, &c. for ten Mountain Guns.
           
         | 
          | 
          | 
          | 
          | 
      
      
        | 
           Gunpowder, whole barrels of 100lbs. each, L.G, and S.G,
                                            Tower proof 
         | 
        61 | 
        220 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Portfires(dozens)
                                         
         | 
        20 | 
        12 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Tubes (quill)
                                         
         | 
        6,000 | 
        13 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
    
    
    
    
    
    
      
        | 
             
         | 
        
          No. of Men and Stores
         | 
         | 
        
          Probable Cost
         | 
         | 
      
      
        | 
             
         | 
          | 
        £ | 
        
          s.
         | 
        
          d.
         | 
      
      
        | 
           Slow match (lbs)
                                         
         | 
        40 | 
        1 | 
        10 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Cartridges(flanner serge)
                                         
         | 
        4,000 | 
        30 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Shot, round(three-pounder)
                                         
         | 
        4,000 | 
        42 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Bottoms of wood for three-pounder round   shot (strapped)
                                         
         | 
        4,000 | 
        30 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Pickers for vents 
         | 
        12 | 
        0 | 
        8 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Spikes for ditto 
         | 
        20 | 
        0 | 
        15 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Drills, new pattern, for ditto 
         | 
        2 | 
        0 | 
        10 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Lint-stocks 
         | 
        2 | 
        1 | 
        10 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Thumb-stalls 
         | 
        20 | 
        0 | 
        5 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Tube boxes with straps 
         | 
        12 | 
        2 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Grease(Firkins)
                                         
         | 
        1 | 
        2 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Cartouches of leather 
         | 
        10 | 
        5 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Measures, copper, for powder(8 oz.)
                                         
         | 
        10 | 
        1 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Aprons of lead 
         | 
        10 | 
        1 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Tampions with collars 
         | 
        10 | 
        1 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Punches for vents 
         | 
        20 | 
        1 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Barrels, Budge 
         | 
        2 | 
        1 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Head spong (spare) 
         | 
        40 | 
        5 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Hammers claw 
         | 
        20 | 
        2 | 
        10 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Powder horns, NP(with straps)
                                         
         | 
        10 | 
        2 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Tarpaulins, gun 
         | 
        10 | 
        10 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Funnels, copper 
         | 
        10 | 
        1 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Wheels, spare, for three-pounder mountain   guns (pairs)
                                         
         | 
        6 | 
        36 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
             
         | 
         | 
         | 
         | 
         | 
      
      
        | 
           
            Laboratory and Carriage Manufactory, &c. on a
                                                small scale.
           
         | 
         | 
         | 
         | 
         | 
      
      
        | 
           Furnace, blast, with moulds for casting shot and shells,
                                            and every other article required for laboratory purposes 
         | 
        1 | 
        100 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Lathe, common, with tools complete 
         | 
        1 | 
        100 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Ditto ditto small ditto ditto 
         | 
        1 | 
        40 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Forge, with tools complete 
         | 
        1 | 
        70 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
    
    
    
    
    
    
      
        | 
             
         | 
        
          No. of Men and Stores
         | 
         | 
        
          Probable Cost
         | 
         | 
      
      
        | 
             
         | 
          | 
        £ | 
        
          s.
         | 
        
          d.
         | 
      
      
        | 
           Smith’s bench, with vices and tools, complete 
         | 
        1 | 
        50 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Copper-smith, and tinman’s forge, with tools,
                                            complete 
         | 
        1 | 
        50 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Brass moulds for driving portfires, fuses, signal rockets,
                                            lead balls, and other laboratory purposes 
         | 
        0 | 
        70 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Iron bar  Round (tons)
                                         
         | 
        2 | 
        21 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
            Flat (do.)
                                         
         | 
        2 | 
        20 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Ditto, plated sheet(do.)
                                         
         | 
        2 | 
        32 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           CompositionSaltpetre, ground in
                                            barrels of  
                                             100lbs. each 
         | 
        8 | 
        30 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Sulphur, ditto, ditto, ditto 
         | 
        4 | 
        12 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Charcoal, ditto, ditto, ditto 
         | 
        6 | 
        14 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Rosin(cwt.)
                                         
         | 
        10 | 
        12 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Pitch(do.)
                                         
         | 
        10 | 
        10 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Tallow, Russia(do.)
                                         
         | 
        10 | 
        25 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Spirits of wine(gal.)
                                         
         | 
        20 | 
        10 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Oil, sweet(do.)
                                         
         | 
        10 | 
        6 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Flannel serge(yds.)
                                         
         | 
        200 | 
        13 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           PaperFine, for small arms
                                                cartridges(rms.)
                                         
         | 
        40 | 
        23 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Coarse, for packing(do.) 
         | 
        30 | 
        12 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           For cannon cartridge(do.) 
         | 
        30 | 
        30 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Instruments, gauges, provette plates, and other articles
                                            too numerous to mention, but indispensably necessary for laboratory and
                                            artillery purposes 
         | 
        0 | 
        300 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Tin sheet, and copper sheet, and other articles 
         | 
        0 | 
        100 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
      
        | 
           Case-shot, musquet-ball, three-pounder, ready for immediate
                                            service 
         | 
        0 | 
        100 | 
        0 | 
        0 | 
      
    
    The whole expense of the articles, &c. might be
                                    somewhere about 3500l.
    
    Anonymous, 
“The Last Days of Lord Byron” in The Literary Magnet
                                             Vol. 4  (June 1825) 
 “More last words of John Baxter!” our readers will exclaim: we have already Medwin’s Conversations; Dallas’s Recollections; Gamba’s Residence; Childe Harolde’s Wanderings; and a host of others, in
                    all shapes and sizes, from the ponderous quarto, to the pigmy “pocket edition.” If
                    we required any further evidence of the extent of the illustrious subject’s talents, or
                    the probability of his immortality, than what his works are capable of bestowing, we should
                    regard the never-dying interest that is attached to every thing concerning him, as the
                    completest evidence of the permanency of his literary fame. Mr.
                        Parry writes in a bold seaman-like style, and his work bears with it a very
                    evident air of identity. In Medwin’s and
                        Dallas’s books, we have too much of the poet; in the volumes
                    before us, the man stands upright in the various lights and shades of his character. Lord Byron neither required the fulsome adulation of the Dragoon
                    Captain, nor the sage apologies of Mr. Dallas, to make us believe, that at
                    the bottom he was a really good, but dreadfully misled, man; and that had his life been spared,
                    there was no doubt but what the finer qualities of his soul would have endeared him to the
                    world which he so eminently adorned. From the intelligence Mr.
                        Parry’s book affords us, we entertain no doubt, that had medical aid been
                    procured at the period of the lamentable catastrophe, the life so dear to Greece, liberty, and
                    song, would have been saved.  . . .
 
    [Henry Southern], 
“Personal Character of Lord Byron” in London Magazine
                                             Vol. 10  (October 1824) 
 It is said that his intention was  not to remain in
                    Greece,—that he determined to return after his attack of epilepsy. Probably it was only
                    his removal into some better climate that was intended. Certainly a more miserable and
                    unhealthy bog than Missolonghi is not to be found out of the fens of Holland, or the Isle of
                    Ely. He either felt or affected to feel a presentiment that he should die in Greece, and when
                    his return was spoken of, considered it as out of the question, predicting that the Turks, the
                    Greeks, or the Malaria, would effectually put an end to any designs he might have of returning.
                    At the moment of his seizure with the epileptic fits prior to his last illness, he was jesting
                    with Parry, an engineer sent out by the Greek committee,
                    who, by dint of being his butt, had got great power over him, and indeed, became every thing to
                    him. Besides this man there was Fletcher, who had lived with
                    him twenty years, and who was originally a shoemaker, whom his Lordship had picked up in the
                    village where he lived, at Newstead, and who, after attending him in some of his rural
                    adventures, became attached to his service: he had also a faithful Italian servant, Battista; a Greek secretary; and Count
                        Gamba seems to have acted the part of his Italian secretary. Lord
                        Byron spoke French very imperfectly, and Italian not correctly, and it was with
                    the greatest difficulty he could be prevailed upon to make attempts m a foreign language. He
                    would get any body about him to interpret for him, though he might know the language better
                    than his interpreter.  . . .
 
    
    
    
    [John Gibson Lockhart], 
“The Last Days of Lord Byron” in Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine
                                             Vol. 18
                                             No. 103  (August 1825) 
 This man now tells his story of what he saw and heard of Lord Byron’s behaviour and conversation while in Greece. He makes no
                    ridiculous professions of accuracy. He plainly says, the idea of noting down what
                        Lord Byron was pleased to say to him in private conversation never
                    once entered his head. But he adds, and who can doubt it, that finding himself thrown into
                    close contact of this sort with a man of Lord Byron’s extraordinary
                    genius and celebrity, whatever things of any importance were said by Lord
                        Byron did make a strong, an indelible impression on his mind. And, with-
                    out pretending to give the words—unless when there is something very
                    striking indeed about them—he does profess himself able and determined to give the
                    substance. We need, indeed, but little of such professions, to make us
                        believe, that the conversations which he relates did substantially take place between him
                        and Lord Byron. They carry the stamp of authenticity upon their front.
                        The man that said these things was a man of exquisite talent—of extraordinary reach
                        and compass of reflection—of high education and surpassing genius. This is enough for
                        us. Mr Parry is an excellent person in his own way,
                        but he is plainly as incapable of inventing these things, as if he had written himself down
                        on his title-page, “Author of Ahasuerus, a Poem.”
                 . . .
 
    [John Gibson Lockhart], 
“The Last Days of Lord Byron” in Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine
                                             Vol. 18
                                             No. 103  (August 1825) 
                    Mavrocardato was, and is, universally admitted to be the
                    most accomplished of the Greek statesmen, and he was at this period the President of the
                    Provisionary Government; yet this agent of the Greek committee rates Major Parry, for giving Mavrocordato the
                    title by which he had always been distinguished, and which Lord
                        Byron, nay, even Sir Thomas Maitland,
                    never thought of refusing him. But this was not all. He openly took part with the faction
                    opposed to Mavrocordato and the existing Greek government; and why? Why,
                    because Mavrocordato, a man of sense and education, who has travelled in
                    Western Europe, and speaks her languages, and has read her books, was thoroughly aware of the
                    unfitness of a free press for Greece in her actual condition, and accordingly discountenanced
                    the setting up of a paper at Missolonghi; whereas Odysseus, a robber captain, in arms in reality against the Greek government as much
                    as against the Turks, had no objections to let Stanhope
                    print as many papers as he liked in Athens, which city the said Odysseus
                    refused, according to the language of Colonel Stanhope’s own eulogy,
                    “to surrender to a weak government;” in other words, was keeping possession of, in
                    opposition to the authorities which  he had the year before sworn to
                    obey—the very authorities, too, be it observed, under which alone Colonel
                        Stanhope was at the time acting. Odysseus knew that his
                    wild barbarians could no more read a Greek newspaper than they could fly over Olympus, and
                    therefore he cared not what Stanhope printed, so he and his people got,
                    through Stanhope’s means, a part of the loans transmitted from
                    England, for the support of the Greek government and cause.  . . .
 
    [John Gibson Lockhart], 
“The Last Days of Lord Byron” in Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine
                                             Vol. 18
                                             No. 103  (August 1825) 
These passages cannot, we think, fail to gratify our readers. The view
                        they give of Lord Byron’s kind, natural temper,
                        frank and engaging manners, and noble self-possession in the midst of all the irritations
                        of disease and disgust, must go far we think to convince the most sceptical, that the
                        epithet of Satanic was not the happiest which a contemporary poet
                        might have applied to the author of Child
                            Harold. . . .
 
    [John Gibson Lockhart], 
“The Last Days of Lord Byron” in Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine
                                             Vol. 18
                                             No. 103  (August 1825) 
 The following is a most important passage indeed. In it we have Lord Byron
                    detailing, in a manner the sincerity of which it is impossible to doubt, his own views
                    concerning the ultimate prospects of Greece; and surely the exposition is such, that it could
                    have come from no mind in which sense, wisdom, and genius,  were not equally inherent. It
                    is the only thing upon the subject that we have ever been able to think worth a second reading.  . . .
 
    [John Gibson Lockhart], 
“The Last Days of Lord Byron” in Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine
                                             Vol. 18
                                             No. 103  (August 1825) 
 Our readers must turn to Mr Parry’s
                    own page for a great deal more of Lord Byron’s table
                    talk. They will find many sound English sentiments, even in regard to the English politics of
                    the day—they will find views as to America equally just and liberal—they will find
                    the most contemptuous allusions to the soi-disant
                    liberals with whom Lord Byron had come into personal
                    contact, such as old Cartwright, Leigh Hunt, &c.; and upon every occasion an open avowal of the deepest
                    respect for the aristocracy of Britain, which these poor creatures have spent their lives in
                    endeavouring to overthrow.  . . .
 
    [John Gibson Lockhart], 
“The Last Days of Lord Byron” in Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine
                                             Vol. 18
                                             No. 103  (August 1825) 
 Of all this, and also of the affecting narrative which Mr Parry gives of Lord
                        Byron’s last days, strictly so called, we shall quote nothing. The main
                    outline of his illness is already sufficiently before the public; and these new details are so
                    painful, that though we do not wish not to have read them, we certainly shall never torture
                    ourselves with reading them again. The spectacle of youth, and rank, and genius, meeting with
                    calm resolution the approach of death, under external circumstances of the most cheerless
                    description, may afford a lesson to us all! But Mr Parry has painted this
                    scene with far too rude a pencil; and, indeed, the print which he has inserted of Byron on his miserable bed, and almost in the agonies of death,
                    attended by Parry himself and Tita,
                    ought to be omitted in every future edition. It is obviously  a got-up thing—a mere
                    eyetrap—and for one person whose diseased taste it pleases, will undoubtedly disgust a
                    thousand who ought to be acquainted with this book.  . . .
 
    [John Gibson Lockhart], 
“The Last Days of Lord Byron” in Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine
                                             Vol. 18
                                             No. 103  (August 1825) 
 In order that our article may terminate pleasantly, we have reserved wherewithal
                    to wind it up, Parry’s description of an interview
                    which he had with the personage whom Colonel Stanhope
                    mentions as “the finest genius of the most enlightened age, the immortal Bentham.” We shall give the sailor’s rough sketch
                    of the Patriarch without note or comment—in truth it needs none; and, we have no doubt,
                    posterity will not disdain to hang it up alongside of the more professional performance of that
                    other fine genius of our enlightened century—the immortal Hazlitt—in his noble gallery of portraits,
                    entitled “The Spirit of
                            The Age.”  . . .
 
    Anonymous, 
“The Last Days of Lord Byron” in The Gentleman’s Magazine
                                             Vol. 95  (June 1825) 
 The Author before us appears to be a man of strong natural sense, with an honest
                    old soldier’s heart, and all that John Bullism about him, which evinces a sturdy
                    determination to speak his  mind, in utter disregard of person or party. Now as we like to
                    see good rather than evil, we are glad to find that though Byron was often politically tipsy, and talked nonsense about his country, the
                    King, America, &c.; yet in his conduct on the Greek subject, the usual wisdom of the
                    hereditary Senator was conspicuous. There was not a fault in his advice concerning the Greek
                    cause. He stands, as a Statesman, as superior to the rest, as the Trajan column does to a
                    milestone. He avowed an intention to study the art of war, probably to become another Napoleon; at all events to be a Washington. All this was in his nature. He was a charger of high blood, and men
                    rail at him because he was unfit for a cart-horse. It is to men of such a character that the
                    world is to look for the enthusiasm and perseverance requisite to effect great objects; and
                    whatever may be the results of their ambition, it is certain that Providence only works grand
                    changes by single men, not by bodies of men, and ultimately merges all in monarchy. Republics
                    have only short lives, and seldom merry ones.  . . .
 
    Anonymous, 
“The Last Days of Lord Byron” in The Gentleman’s Magazine
                                             Vol. 95  (June 1825) 
 The work opens with a long account of clumsy mis-management in transmission of
                    the stores; and the introduction to Lord Byron. His
                    behaviour to the Author was kind and condescending. The room was hung round with weapons like
                    an armoury, abore which were shelves furnished with books, an hieroglyphic of his
                    Lordship’s politics, which were to furnish Greece with arms and independence, and then to
                    leaven it with learning. His politics were very simple, but truly wise. Let one single object,
                    (he said,) the expulsion of the Turks, be first regarded. Newspapers and
                    the press would now only create faction, and do mischief. They are only to be considered as
                    secondary things. Col. Stanhope’s opposite sentiments
                    created the coolness between them. Bloodshed and anarchy, said the wise Member of the Upper
                    House, will be the consequence of discussing theories of government, before independence is
                    obtained. His Lordship was perfectly correct, for in a short time the wiseacres published a
                    Tirade against Kings,  which, said the Peer, was the very way to bring the
                    Holy Alliance down upon them. Add to this, that the German Officers who came to assist, were
                    men of punctilious etiquette, and always quarrelling about rank; and mechanics sent out at an
                    expence of three hundred and forty pounds, did only fourteen days work, at the cost of
                    something more than four pounds one shilling a day. Pp. 66, 67.  . . .
 
    Anonymous, 
“The Last Days of Lord Byron” in The Gentleman’s Magazine
                                             Vol. 95  (June 1825) 
 For every object, public or private, his Lordship was expected to be paymaster;
                    a mutiny might cost him his life; what he received from England were a Wesleyan preacher,
                    bugle-horns, printing presses, and religious tracts. Arms, powder, and shot, were inferior
                    considerations*. With all his noble-minded sacrifices, he was harassed with crazy counsels;
                    worried out of his patience and sleep; and doomed to eat nothing for several days but cheese,
                    fish, vegetables, and bread. In short, at his outset in life, he was all but murdered by
                    calumniators; and now he had to encounter the insanity of his countrymen, who employed the
                    funds collected for the liberation of Greece, in propagating their own political and religious
                    tenets, instead of furnishing the indispensable materials of war.  . . .
 
    Anonymous, 
“Parry v. Hunt” in The Times
                                             No. 13,306  (15 June 1827) 
                    William Fletcher—I was in the service of the late
                        Lord Byron upwards of 20 years, and was with him up to
                    the time of his death. I now receive a pension from his family for my services. I first saw
                        Parry at Greece, at Missollonghi. He lived in the
                    same house with Lord Byron. I was not much in the habit of seeing him, and
                    had not an opportunity of knowing whether he was drunk, more than I heard from report. He
                    sometimes appeared the worse for liquor. I have seen him in Lord
                        Byron’s company; he generally called him Captain
                        Parry. I have heard Parry speak of Colonel Stanhope. Some men were sent to attack a Turkish brig off Missolonghi.
                        Parry came home to his house on that occasion, and did not get out
                    again, but said he wanted to shave and dress. This was early in the evening, and it was a
                    considerable time before he came down again. He went into his room at the back of the house. I
                    don’t know where he went when he had shaved. The brig was afterwards in flames.
                        Parry was sent to, and discovered to be asleep. I did not see him go
                    out before the brig was in flames. I have seen Parry once since my return
                    to England. Since I have been subpœnaed here as a witness, I have seen him frequently.
                    Having been here in attendance a long time, and feeling a want for something to eat, I went to
                    get some bread and cheese. Zambelli was with me, and
                        Parry came in, and was very polite to us. I do not know whether the
                    word rogue was used. Parry addressed himself to me, but I do not recollect
                    the words he made use of; they were meant to imply that he had always been my friend.  . . .
 
    Anonymous, 
“Parry v. Hunt” in The Times
                                             No. 13,306  (15 June 1827) 
I remember a Turkish
                        brig coming a-ground off Missolonghi. We were then all in that place. I heard that
                            Parry was applied to on that occasion to lend his assistance. He
                        was at Lord Byron’s house. Several of us were ordered by him to
                        go in a couple of boats, with guns, to attack the brig. Parry did not
                        go with us; was to come round by land with some Greek soldiers. He did not come round. He
                        said he would come to our assistance when he sent us out. He had a blue coat on, but I do
                        not know whether he was shaved or not. . . .
 
    Anonymous, 
“Parry v. Hunt” in The Times
                                             No. 13,306  (15 June 1827) 
 — Zambelli, a Hungarian.—I
                    lived in the service of Lord Byron at Missolonghi, and had
                    the care of liquors and provisions in his house. I knew Parry at Missolonghi, and have twice known him absolutely intoxicated. He was,
                    on those occasions, asleep with the bottle by his side lying on the floor, and Lord
                        Byron called to me to take him away. Those are the only times when I have known
                    him affected by liquor. I cannot say how many bottles he drank on those occasions. I recollect
                    a Turkish brig being on shore when Parry came into the house and went up
                    stairs. He did not go out of the house again that day. The brig was not burning before he came
                    into the house. It was burned while he was in the house.  . . .
 
    Anonymous, 
“Parry v. Hunt” in The Times
                                             No. 13,306  (15 June 1827) 
                    Colonel Stanhope.—I am a Lieutenant-Colonel in the
                    army. I went out to Greece, and saw Parry there; he
                    lived in my room, and ate his meals at my table. He was in the habit of drinking to excess. He
                    was a sot, and a boaster, and frequently spoke of making Congreve rockets, in which, he said,
                    he had made an improvement, of which Colonel Congreve
                    had taken the merit. He said he would take Lepanto by a fire-kite, and destroy the Turkish
                    fleet. He never carried any of his plans into execution. I have read the Last Days of Lord
                        Byron. Parry is not capable of writing such a work.
                    He is a man of a strong natural mind, but uneducated. He does not speak grammatically correct.
                    He frequently spoke of his great science as an engineer. I saw the brig on shore, and was
                    there. The brig was on shore four or five miles from Missolonghi, and the Greek officers
                    applied to Lord Byron and myself to lend assistance; we
                    despatched artillery and the greater part of the soldiers and townspeople immediately proceeded
                    there; we were for some time under the bombardment of this vessel. After having been stranded
                    for two days, and seeing the impossibility of getting her off, her crew set her on fire, and
                    escaped in their boats to another Turkish vessel which had been hovering in the offing.
                        Parry never made his appearance all the time. Lord
                        Byron treated him as a fool, a buffoon—not as one of these fools that have
                    so often graced the tables of the great. Parry called Lord
                        Byron Hal, and
                    he called him Falstaff.
                 . . .
 
    Anonymous, 
“Parry v. Hunt” in The Times
                                             No. 13,306  (15 June 1827) 
                    Mr. Bowring.—I acted as Secretary to the Greek
                    Committee. Parry was recalled by a vote of the committee
                    of the 3d of July. I should consider him incapable of writing such a book without some
                    assistance. I have not seen him in a state of actual drunkenness, but when he has drunk rather
                    too much. After his return, he showed me the materials from which this work was formed, but I
                    did not look them over. I should think them, however, insufficient to have made the book.  . . .
 
    Anonymous, 
“Parry v. Hunt” in The Times
                                             No. 13,306  (15 June 1827) 
                    Mr. Knight.—This book was published by Knight and
                        Lacy. I am not of that house. Parry applied to me early in 1825. He was announced as
                        Captain Parry, and I fully expected to have seen that Captain Parry who had been so frequently towards the North
                    Pole. He, however, undeceived me, and said he came from Greece, and that he wished to publish
                    something relative to Lord Byron. Having said this, he left
                    a portfolio for my perusal, and we had no further conversation at the time. In a few days he
                    called again, and I returned the papers. They consisted of a few official documents, containing
                    technical particulars, terms of war, and estimates of ammunition, and several Greek newspapers,
                    with a few sheets, purporting to be the journal of Captain Parry. They
                    amounted altogether to about 40 or 50 folios. I have read the book which he has published, and
                    towards the end, in the appendix, there are some expressions similar to those I saw in the
                    papers he brought to me. The body of the book does not contain a line of what was in those
                    papers. If he were the writer of the journal put into my hands, he could not be the author of
                    this book. My interview with him was very short; but from what I saw of him, and from his
                    conversation, I should not think him capable of writing this book.  . . .
 
    Anonymous, 
“Parry v. Hunt” in The Times
                                             No. 13,306  (15 June 1827) 
                    Mr. Lacy.—I am a partner in the house of Knight
                    and Lacy. We published this book for Mr. Parry. He said
                    he had received some assistance in the arrangement of the work from another gentleman.  . . .
 
    Anonymous, 
“Verdict against the Examiner in the Case of William Parry” in The Examiner
                                             No. 1011  (17 June 1827) 
 * In one of the editions of Shakspeare is an engraving (after Stothard) representing Antient Pistol cudgelled by Fluellen. Perhaps as humorous a
                            subject might be found for that admirable artist’s pencil in some of the
                            situations attributed by the witnesses to our valiant Major; for instance, the lying
                            asleep after a debauch, embracing the bottle, as described with significant gestures by
                            the witness Zambelli; or the elaborate shaving
                            and dressing, while his men were proceeding to assault the Turkish brig.  . . .
 
    Anonymous, 
“Verdict against the Examiner in the Case of William Parry” in The Examiner
                                             No. 1011  (17 June 1827) 
 The Chief Justice too, observing on
                        Parry’s conduct in the
                    affair of the Turkish brig, intimated, that one neglect of duty ought not to fix the character
                    of cowardice on any man:—but his Lordship knows, that a single neglect on the day of
                    battle cost the unfortunate Byng his life, and that Lord Sackville
                    was disgracefully driven from the service for once imputed fault on the field of Minden; yet
                    both these men had given repeated proofs of noble courage. Where, however, are William Parry’s proofs?  . . .